Bishop, Adoptive Son: IOCC Having Lasting Impact In Ethiopia
When David Mesfin ponders the great needs in Ethiopia, he's glad that
International Orthodox Christian Charities (IOCC) is seeking long-term
solutions for his homeland. "The help should be not only in terms of
food but also in terms of education - teaching Ethiopians to be more
self-sufficient," he said. "Then they can pass that legacy on to the
next generation." Mesfin remembers when he first came to America as a
13-year-old Ethiopian boy. It was 1988, and the Ethiopian famine of
1984-1985 was still fresh in people's minds. "People would come up to
me and ask, 'How come you don't look as skinny as they do on TV?' "
Mesfin recalled. "They thought all of Ethiopia was a drought nation."
Fifteen years later, Mesfin, 29, of Long Beach, Calif., doesn't worry
about public perceptions of his native land anymore. He's more concerned
with helping Ethiopians. That's why he supports the efforts of IOCC to
prevent the recurrence of famine in Ethiopia through programs of
agricultural and vocational training.
In the face of another food crisis in Ethiopia, IOCC currently is
expanding its work with the Ethiopian Orthodox Church and other
partners. An IOCC project supported by the Greek Ministry of Foreign
Affairs calls for the development of small-scale farms in northern
Ethiopia and the training of young people in vocational and agricultural
skills. IOCC also is addressing the scourge of HIV/AIDS in Ethiopia
with a three-year, $6 million project of prevention, education and
hospice care for orphans.
Mesfin, a native of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, came to the United States
after being adopted by His Grace Bishop Dimitrios (Couchell), Ecumenical
Officer of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America and a longtime
supporter of IOCC. Bishop Dimitrios, accompanied by the noted
nutritionist Dr. George Christakis, traveled to Ethiopia in 1985 to
deliver $160,000 in monetary assistance for the Orthodox Church's famine
relief efforts. While there, Bishop Dimitrios learned about Ethiopian
children who were attending a Greek-run school in Addis Ababa. "At that
time, they asked me to please
try to find some parents for these orphans, who were mostly of mixed
background," Bishop Dimitrios said.
One of those children was Mesfin, whose maternal grandfather was Greek.
"The bishop asked me if I was interested [in being adopted], and I said,
'Oh, yeah.' It was an opportunity for me to go to school and to turn
around and help my community," Mesfin said. Bishop Dimitrios stayed in
Ethiopia for 10 days, visiting refugee centers and orphanages. He
laments the fact that IOCC did not exist in 1985, and he still feels a
special connection with his adoptive son's homeland today. "It makes me
follow events in Ethiopia more closely," he said. "Often I talk with
David about the situation, and whenever anything comes across my desk
about Ethiopia, I send it to him."
Mesfin remembers little about the 1984-1985 famine that took the lives
of nearly 1 million Ethiopians. "I was pretty young. Where the famine
took place was primarily in the north. It didn't affect us as severely
in the city," he said. "It was only after coming to the United States
that I found out the true scope of the famine." Dr. Christakis, a
specialist in nutrition-related illnesses, said the beauty and fertility
of Ethiopia belied the intense suffering he witnessed during the 1985
trip with Bishop Dimitrios. "I came away with the conclusion that
Ethiopia, with the right resources, could probably feed all of Africa,"
he said.
Mesfin spent his teen-age years with Bishop Dimitrios in St. Augustine,
Fla. "We became like father and son. We're best friends now," said
Mesfin, who eventually moved to Southern California to study graphic
design. Today, he is president of Visualmorph, a graphic design firm in
Torrance, Calif. His mother, brothers, uncles and cousins still live in
Ethiopia, and his sister moved to the United States three years ago.
Mesfin is active with the Ethiopian community in Los Angeles, raising
money for IOCC and other organizations with humanitarian programs in
Ethiopia. "I think IOCC is doing the right thing in working with the
Orthodox Church in Ethiopia," he said. "You can be more effective, and
you'll have a lot more support, by working through the Church."
IOCC, the humanitarian aid agency of Orthodox Christians, recently
joined seven other international relief agencies in a public call for
long-term solutions to break the grip of poverty and recurring famine in
Ethiopia. To learn more about IOCC's relief and development programs in
Ethiopia and 14 other countries, please visit www.iocc.org.