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Summer 2007 |
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Memorial |
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The Rev. Dr. J. Harry Haines, director of the United Methodist Committee on Relief from 1966 to 1983, died March 29, 2007 at the age of 89 | |||||||||||
He suffered a heart attack in Eugene, Oregon, where he and his wife Loma, lived in retirement. “Harry Haines was a saint, a model of Christian Commitment, hard work, and inspiration,” said the Rev. R. Randy Day, chief executive of the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries, the parent organization of UMCOR in New York. “For years he was Mr. United Methodist Relief, rallying the church to aid people affected by natural disasters, wars, and poverty.” During his term as staff chief of UCMOR, Dr. Haines was also President of Church World Service. Haines, a native of New Zealand, was a missionary in China in the 1940s and later in Malaysia. He then worked in the division of interchurch aid, refugees, and world service of the World Council of Churches. At UMCOR, he was an advocate for service to those in need and for education about the impact of poverty and political oppression on millions of people. He was a man of great energy and contagious hope,” Day said. “He wrote widely on the themes of mission and humanitarian assistance and their inseparable identities. He was a dynamic speaker, and loved nothing more than to visit congregations to tell them the story of how the church responds to disasters and humanitarian needs.” He wrote seven books published by Abingdon Press, a part of the United Methodist Publishing House, including an analysis of China and its 20th century political revolutions. Haines continued to be active on behalf of mission after his retirement. Before he retired, Harry Haines spoke in Shasta District at least three times on the work of UMCOR and Church World Service. Haines was a strong supporter of economic self-development of people in poor countries and among the marginalized in more affluent regions. He was quick to observe the growing global gap between the richer North and the poor South. In 1984, shortly after his retirement, Haines made an urgent appeal to the church “to realize that we’re living in a bitterly divided world and we have limited resources; therefore, we have to be specialists sin designated areas in the least developed countries. J. Harry Haines was born June 29, 1917. He and his wife, the former Loma Housley, the daughter of missionaries, married in 1944. Two of their four sons preceded him in death. The surviving sons are Dr. John Haines of Eugene and David Haines of San Francisco. Haines received his early schooling in New Zealand, Australia and England, and he received degrees from Western Maryland University, Westminster, and what is today Wesley Theological Seminary. He held membership in several United Methodist annual conferences during his ministry. At the time of his death, he was a member of the Oregon-Idaho Conference. Haines served for 38 years – including 21 as a missionary- with the Board of Global Ministries and its predecessor organizations. A celebration of his life is scheduled for June 30 at John G. Shedd Institute for the Arts in Eugene. Messages may be sent to Mrs. Loma Haines at Cascade Manor, 65 W. 30th Avenue, Eugene, OR 97405. John C. Goodwin, former chief photographer for the Board of Global Ministries, said after Dr. Haines’ death: “Once, in the car pool, as we crossed the George Washington Bridge, I asked Harry his secrets for effective public speaking. He listed three points: Be absolutely sure of your facts; be transparently sincere; and say it with gusto!” |
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