President Carter’s resolute, humble leadership saved millions, serves as a guide for the world
Jan 09, 2025
At WHO’s headquarters in Geneva, a bronze statue stands outside the main entrance of an African boy walking ahead of his blinded father, guiding him with a long stick they both hold. This poignant artwork depicts how onchocerciasis, an ancient disease commonly known as river blindness, impacts many of the world’s poorest people. Several replicas have been installed around the world, including notably the Carter Presidential Center in Atlanta, Georgia. The statue conveys many things: service, hope, the pride possessed by people who many see as vulnerable. Above all, it underscores how access to health is essential to enable each of us to live with dignity, no matter income or birthplace.President Carter, who I was privileged to have worked with closely for two decades, embodied and championed all this, and more. While attending services in Washington D.C. celebrating President Carter’s life, I will pay tribute to the lasting legacies he left with the partnerships and programs that protect millions from the global threats of disease and war. President Carter saw afflictions like river blindness, malaria and Guinea-worm disease as debilitating drivers, and results, of poverty and insecurity. In the 1980s, around 3.5 million people lived with Guinea-worm disease in Africa and Asia, a debilitating condition with no vaccine or treatment. It is caused by drinking stagnant water infected by parasites that, once ingested, grow into long worms that burrow, painfully, out of the patient’s body through their skin. President Carter understood this disease preyed on the world’s poorest but could be fought with strategies owned by affected communities and countries, and implemented with simple tools: in this case, a filter to separate the parasites from collected drinking water at source. In 1986, the World Health Assembly called for the disease’s eradication. The Carter Center, which the president founded with his late wife, Rosalynn, and Emory University, would play a leading role. It supported heads of state and health departments in affected countries, and collaborated with global partners like WHO, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Gates Foundation to mobilize needed resources. Since 2000, the disease has been eliminated from Southeast Asia, with around a dozen reported cases today in Africa. Global eradication is in sight, a result that ranks as one of President Carter’s most important post-presidential achievements.While serving as Minister of Health in Ethiopia, I first met President Carter during his visit to inspect the health projects his Center was supporting in the country. What impressed me then, and the many times we met after, was his humility and commitment to service. He strategically leveraged his position as a President of the United States to open doors to governments around the world and help build country-led solutions.That meeting in Addis Ababa, some 20 years ago, was immensely important personally. It started a close relationship, built on shared goals of achieving health for all, respecting individual dignity and human rights, and pursuing peace. I was humbled in 2011 to be the first non-American recipient of the Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter Humanitarian Award. I also appreciated the President’s support of my campaign to become the first African elected Director-General of WHO. The impact the Carters have had on people’s wellbeing extends to mental health. Their Center has drafted policy, reduced stigma and raised the importance around mental health in the U.S. and beyond. In 2023, First Lady Carter was presented with the WHO Award for Global Health to recognize her lifetime achievement in working on mental health issues.Importantly, President Carter recognized the links between health and peace. The Carter Center, he once said: “Always considered peace and health to be interrelated. The right of people to live in peace and the right of people to have adequate health care, and to have their children survive, are inseparable basic rights of a human being.” By bringing Egypt and Israel together to forge the historic Camp David Accords, and their 1979 peace deal, he showed it is possible to end war and build secure futures for people tired of conflict. The need for this in the Middle East today has never been stronger.In 1995 during Sudan’s civil war, President Carter astutely negotiated a six-month ceasefire to give health workers the space and security to undertake Guinea-worm disease, river blindness and other health programs.During and after his presidency, President Carter also demonstrated the political and moral leadership of the United States over and again, and its role in advancing global security, collaboration and health to protect everyone, in America and around the world.These examples, and more, are prescient for today’s volatile world. The divide between rich and poor has never been wider, nor has wealth been so concentrated in the hands of so few. And the perils we collectively face – wars, outbreaks and climate change – have never felt more pressing. But President Carter’s example, as a leader, a humanitarian and a human, can guide us through these unclear times. I urge us all to follow his lead.The post President Carter’s resolute, humble leadership saved millions, serves as a guide for the world appeared first on The Atlanta Voice.