Friday, July 10, 2026

WCC NEWS: Webinar addresses human rights and health equity

A webinar on 7 July explored “Human Rights and Health Equity: Addressing Stigma and Neglect Faced by Vulnerable Populations.”
Photo: Marcelo Schneider/WCC
10 July 2026

The dialogue was held in conjunction with the 62nd session of the Human Rights Council, which runs from 15 June–7 July.

The webinar was co-organized by the World Council of Churches, with the NGO Committee on the Status of Women Geneva Working Group on Health, Medical Women’s International Association, International Cancer Expert Corps, Oxford University, World Federation for Mental Health, and United Voices for Global Impact.

Keynote speaker Nicoletta Dentico is an Italian journalist, writer, and senior policy analyst in global health, known for her leadership on global health justice, equitable access to medicines, and civil society engagement in WHO and wider global health governance. 

She spoke about how health inequity exists everywhere—even in places where there is a specific mandate to treat patients as people. “Indeed, this arena of discourse is crucial,” she said. “We are indeed in a crisis of care moment, notwithstanding the many, clear lessons of COVID-19”—a shared trauma. 

“The most important lesson is that we are all vulnerable,” she said, adding that it is important to recognize when religious are playing a very negative role in the context of health inequity. 

Dr Manjit Dosanjh, a scientist and visiting professor of physics at the University of Oxford, moderated the conversation. She said: “Disparities are growing. The ‘have-nots’ are having less and less. We need to actually own the problems and bring in people who live the issues at the grassroots globally and listen to them since those who  live the challenges not only need to be part of the solution, they actually  are best placed to find the solution. We need to leverage the so called ‘technology revolution’ to bridge the gap and not increase the inequities.”

Dr Eleanor Ann Nwadinobi, a Nigerian medical doctor and international expert in health, gender, and human rights, spoke of the factors that amplify vulnerability, including climate change, gender, and many more. “There is a multiplicity of vulnerability, or layers of vulnerability,” she said, noting, for example, in some societies widows can be vulnerable on many levels. “They lose their spouse and, at the same time, lose their social status, lose their property, sometimes lose their children.”

On account of polygamy, in certain parts of Africa, the death of one man may result in multiple  widows. “What does this mean?” asked Nwadinobi. “You have child widows.”

Gracia Violeta Ross, WCC programme executive for HIV, Reproductive Health, and Pandemics, spoke about combatting stigma. “Stigma is a mark that signals we are not desirable,” she said. “It used to be religious.”

She noted that stigma, unfortunately, does not come alone but leads to discrimination and other forms of inequity. 

Dr Gisela Hansen, a clinical psychologist and university professor specializing in addictions, gender, stigma, and mental health, spoke of how health inequity is rooted in a broader structural system. 

“These experiences are not secondary issues at all,” she said. “Today we know what works. We need to listen to the communities. Communities have the expertise.”

Dr Manoj Kurian, director of the WCC Commission of the Churches on Health and Healing, expressed appreciation for the many connections discerned during the conversation. “If we are one body, and one hand is in water, and one hand in fire, can we say we are, on average, fine?” Kurian asked. “We can’t, because there is no averages, actually. We have to be one and in solidarity with each other.”

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The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 356 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 580 million Christians in over 120 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay from the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa.

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EarthBeat Weekly: Church aids relief efforts after deadly Venezuela quakes

Churches aid ongoing relief efforts after deadly twin Venezuela quakes

 

EarthBeat Weekly
Your weekly newsletter about faith and climate change

July 10, 2026


 


A priest gives a blessing as he stands amid rubble at the site of a collapsed building in La Guaira, Venezuela, July 1, 2026, in the aftermath of earthquakes. (OSV News/Reuters/Adriano Machado)

Relief efforts continue more than two weeks after two major earthquakes rocked Venezuela. 

As of Thursday, at least 3,500 were killed from the 7.2 and 7.5 quakes, which took place just 39 seconds apart June 24 in the northern part of the South American country.

Among the organizations working to provide aid and assistance to some of the estimated 7.9 million people in need are Catholic Relief Services and Caritas Venezuela, both part of Caritas Internationalis the universal Catholic Church's global humanitarian network.

CRS has deployed an earthquake response support team, which so far has handed out more than 1,800 emergency food kits, 850 family hygiene kits and 400 baby hygiene kits and sent more than 1,600 tarpaulins for shelters, Brittany Wichtendahl, a CRS spokesperson, told OSV News. In addition, Caritas Venezuela has supplied 5,000 emergency food kits, 3,000 hygiene kits, more than 120,000 liters of safe water and more than 73,000 medical supplies and medicine, as well as nearly 900 tools to assist search and rescue teams as they dig through rubble and debris. 

Read more: Catholic leaders, aid workers respond to Venezuela earthquakes

Pope Leo XIV, who ministered for more than two decades in neighboring Peru, offered prayers soon after the quakes struck. 

"Praying to the Lord for the eternal rest of the deceased, I renew my spiritual solidarity with their families, the injured, and all who have been shaken by this tragedy," Leo said after the Angelus prayer in St. Peter's Square on June 28. "I also wish to express my gratitude and encouragement to those generously working on search and rescue efforts and providing assistance."

Read more: Pope Leo XIV calls for solidarity, prayers after deadly Venezuela quakes

In many parts of Venezuela, faith leaders who are themselves impacted by the disaster have become its first responders, reports Aleja Hertzler-McCain for Religion News Service. 

That includes Presbyterian pastor Ricardo Corzo Moreno, who in the immediate aftermath was doing two jobs at once: calming his family through the aftershocks and helping launch a 24-hour prayer and collection center for survivors.

Corzo Moreno is among those coordinating faith groups in Venezuela to provide spiritual support along with emergency response and humanitarian aid. 

"Not even in my worst nightmares did I imagine a situation as apocalyptic as the current one," he told Hertzler-McCain. 

Read more: Reeling from Venezuela's earthquakes, churches rush to inspect buildings, distribute supplies

In an essay for Global Sisters Report, MarĂ­a Maura Aranguren, a Sister of our Lady of Consolation, writes that the earthquakes have again shaken her country and plunged its people  into deep grief. 

"The question continues to echo: Where is God? Did God want this to happen? No. God does not want his children to suffer. Yet God is present in the midst of this pain, offering signs of light and hope in every child, father, mother and older adult pulled from the rubble,"  Aranguren writes.

"God is present in every volunteer who has left everything behind to search for survivors; in every sister, brother and priest who has gone to the disaster areas to bring comfort and compassion; in every Venezuelan determined to clear away debris with little more than bare hands; in every person using social media to share information; and in every group gathered in prayer, asking God to bring comfort and keep our faith strong."

Read more: After 2 earthquakes, nuns do their part in Venezuelans' compassionate response



What else is new on EarthBeat:

 

by Sabrina Danielsen, Ellie Simmons

In the face of decades of papal teachings about the reality and urgency of climate change, U.S. sisters have been leaders on environmental action. In contrast, U.S. bishops have largely not been creation care leaders.

Read more here »


 

by Gina Christian, OSV News

As the Trump administration moves to seize a diocesan pilgrimage site for the border wall, bishops from New Mexico and Texas are calling on the faithful to join them for Mass on the mountain.

Read more here »


 

by Joachim Pham

Vietnam is among the five largest contributors to marine plastic pollution globally. For local fishing communities, the consequences are becoming impossible to ignore. Every trip brings encounters with floating debris.

Read more here »


 

by Bridget Moix, Religion News Service

Ordinary families are being asked to carry the costs of an energy system that enriches a few while leaving communities everywhere vulnerable to conflict, instability and rising prices. 

Read more here »


What's happening in other climate news:


Without climate change, U.S. heat wave called 'virtually impossible' —Raymond Zhong for The New York Times

After bold pledge, EPA shelves microplastics testing in U.S. drinking water —Susanne Rust for the Los Angeles Times

US power use to beat record highs in 2026 and 2027 as AI use surges, EIA says —Scott Disavino for Reuters

Native American tribes came together to secure their rights to Colorado River water. Four states are stalling the deal. —Mark Olalde for ProPublica and Alex Hager for KJZZ News-Phoenix

The 'time-consuming' permits dozens of data centers are skipping —Miranda Willson for E&E News

What most battleground House districts have in common: Data centers —Catherine Allen and Noah Baustin for Politico

Specialty farmers adapt harvests, protect crops in face of extreme heat —Joshua A. Bickel for the Associated Press

Washington records world's worst air quality for a city after 850,000 Fourth of July fireworks —Dharna Noor for the Guardian

There's a bit of good news for coral reefs —Katharine Houreld for The New York Times


Final Beat:


In the last EartBeat Weekly, there was a link to a story about recent awards National Catholic Reporter and Global Sisters Report received from the Catholic Media Association. Environmental coverage was well represented. 

Our reporting on the COP30 United Nations climate summit received first place for international news, with freelancer Eduardo Campos Lima reporting from the ground in Belém, Brazil, GSR Africa/Middle East correspondent providing coverage from Kenya and I provided backup from Kansas City.

My reporting on the second Trump administration's attacks on environmental and climate policies took first place in reporting on social justice issues related to caring for God's creation. 

EarthBeat Weekly also earned first place for best electronic newsletter.

Lastly, I was humbled to see a series of my environmental reports earn the top writer of the year honor for English-speaking journalists. You can revisit those stories below: 

As always, thanks for reading EarthBeat.


 


Brian Roewe
Environment Correspondent
National Catholic Reporter
broewe@ncronline.org

 


 


 
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Truth and Action Roundup 7.10.2026

WCC NEWS: Webinar addresses human rights and health equity

A webinar on 7 July explored “Human Rights and Health Equity: Addressing Stigma and Neglect Faced by Vulnerable Populations.” Photo: Marcelo...