San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Faith communitie­s can help build faith in COVID vaccine

- By Eboo Patel and Paul Brandeis Raushenbus­h

Throughout American history, religious communitie­s have often been the first to respond to disasters, putting people on the ground to offer material support, healing and hope to those most immediatel­y affected.

This is not surprising. Faith groups of every background come with deep networks that can be quickly mobilized. Motivated by an ethical mandate to care for those in need, they administer care whether or not those affected are part of their own faith community.

Dr. Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said that the next few months may present the greatest health crisis in our nation’s history. The daily death toll from COVID-19 has passed 3,000 people, and every day 200,000 fall ill, putting hospitals near capacity.

Unlike the natural disasters we’re used to facing, the current crisis is not restricted to one place, but has hit every corner of America. It is affecting small, rural towns as well as suburbs and cities. And yet it has been particular­ly devastatin­g for the poor, the elderly, and Black, Native American and Latino population­s.

In this terrible moment, the vaccines that have been developed are nothing less than a modern miracle. America’s diverse faith communitie­s can play a central role in facilitati­ng the distributi­on and administra­tion of the vaccines.

A critical piece of the work ahead is gaining trust between these communitie­s and medical leaders and government agencies. There is no network in American civic life better poised to help broker that trust by providing the spiritual framework and the moral mandate for taking the vaccine to protect ourselves and our neighbors.

Faith communitie­s can also provide an unparallel­ed logistical network to help in the distributi­on of the vaccine over the next six months. There are 350,000 individual congregati­ons in the United States, plus 227,000 faith-based nonprofits, many waiting to be tapped to do this work.

The safe and effective distributi­on of the vaccines cuts to the core of religious groups’ mission, but people of faith also have a particular standing in the battle to bring the pandemic to a close as quickly as possible. Since early spring, congregati­ons have been asked to restrict in-person gatherings, including the holiest days of Easter, Yom Kippur and Eid, not to mention rituals connected to births, deaths and rites of passage.

Clearly, religious communitie­s have not been of one mind about these restrictio­ns, and unfortunat­ely, the pandemic has been politicize­d in unhelpful ways. Depolitici­zing the response is part of the work ahead. Sensitivit­y is also required as we think of the history of vaccinatio­ns in this country, and how varied religious and racial communitie­s feel about receiving vaccines, especially Black and Native American communitie­s.

With thousands of lives on the line, however, America’s diverse religious communitie­s are prepared to unite and meet this moment. Those who are charged with the distributi­on of vaccine should look toward the power of religious communitie­s as a primary resource for the crucial work ahead.

Eboo Patel is founder and president of Interfaith Youth Core and author of “Out of Many Faiths: Religious Diversity and the American Promise.” The Rev. Paul Brandeis Raushenbus­h is IFYC’s senior adviser for public affairs and innovation. They write for Religion News Service.

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