Zilda
Arns, Nobel Peace Prize nominee and founder of the International
Pastoral da Criança, was killed Tuesday in the 7.0-magnitude
earthquake that struck Haiti.
The 75-year-old
Brazilian pediatrician and aid worker was killed while walking
the streets of Port-au-Prince alongside two soldiers. She was
in Haiti studying the implementation of her program -- which
is one of the world’s most successful at reducing infant
mortality -- on the island.
Born to
German immigrants, Arns was the 12th of 13 children. Her brother,
Cardinal Paulo Evaristo Arns, retired archbishop of São
Paulo, Brazil, was one of five siblings who had priestly or
religious vocations.
In a note,
Cardinal Arns stated, "I received with sorrow the news
that my very dear sister has suffered with the good people of
Haiti the tragic effects of the earthquake."
He continued:
"May God in his mercy receive in heaven those who on earth
fought for children and the defenseless. It is not the moment
to lose hope."
A mother
of five and a widow since 1978, Arns dedicated her life to Christian
charity. In 1983, shortly after she lost her husband, she started
the pastoral care of children program at the request of the
Brazilian bishops' conference.
The program
has one of the greatest success rates worldwide in reducing
infant mortality rates. It currently has some 261,000 volunteers
in Brazil (the majority women), who take care of more than 1.8
million children (from birth to 6 years of age), and 95,000
pregnant women, in more than 42,000 communities and 4,066 municipalities.
In a previous
interview with ZENIT, Arns explained that the program teaches
families "very simple things -- they are generally people
with very little education -- but indispensable for the children's
health: nutrition of pregnant mothers, breast feeding, oral
hydration, vaccinations."
She continued:
"We take care of the education of 1.6 million children
from birth to 6 years of age. Moreover, every year we teach
32,000 adults, almost always mothers, to read and write."
Legacy
Due to the program's success, representatives from other countries
visited Brazil to learn about its methods in order to develop
a similar model for their own homelands. The International Pastoral
da Criança network now includes 20 countries in Africa,
Asia and Latin America and the Caribbean that have implemented
the program.
She had
been visiting Haiti to discuss plans about implementing the
program in the poor communities there.
Arns also
helped the bishops' conference develop a pastoral program for
AIDS victims, which currently cares for 100,000 patients, supported
by 12,000 volunteers from 579 municipalities in 141 dioceses
of 25 Brazilian states.
In response
to Tuesday's tragedy, the conference sent its secretary-general,
Bishop Dimas Lara Barbosa, to Port-au-Prince.
In 1997,
Arns received the Humanitarian of the Year prize from the Lions
Club International. She was honored by Rotary International
with the "Paul Harris" medal in 2001. The following
year she was chosen by the Pan American Health Organization
for the "Public Health Hero of the Americas" prize.