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  • Baroness Cox for battle

    World Magazine
    Dec 3 2004

    Baroness for battle

    COVER STORY: Whether speaking before Parliament or sneaking supplies
    across militarized borders, Baroness Caroline Cox, WORLD's Daniel of
    the Year, has defended the persecuted poor. "When God gives you a
    vacuum, you fill it" | by Mindy Belz

    Most English grandmothers wouldn't know an MRE if they met one.
    Caroline Cox has military rations down to a science. The
    vacuum-packed portions from the United States are cheaper than ration
    packs supplied by the British Army, she admits, and preferable,
    anyway, because each one contains a miniature bottle of Tabasco
    sauce.

    Spice is not what you first expect from a demure 67-year-old
    parliamentarian with 10 grandchildren. Mrs. Cox is a titled woman,
    after all: deputy speaker of the British House of Lords and a
    baroness. She has a flat in northwest London and a getaway in a
    14th-century manor home in Dorset. She serves on boards of this and
    that, including vice president of the Royal College of Nursing, and
    has honorary academic degrees from universities on three continents.
    But neither resumé nor pedigree nor the wine-colored pantsuit and the
    black velvet headband tell the full story: Caroline Cox is more
    Amelia Earhart than Miss Marple and arguably has guts enough to
    supply a platoon of Marines.

    Her first helicopter flight into the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh
    territory was shot down over Azerbaijan. It was "a sacramental
    moment," she recalls, as crew, passenger, and supplies made a soft
    landing in snow - but that did not stop her from making 58 more trips
    to the war zone, most recently six weeks ago.

    Danger is a steady diet for the president of Christian Solidarity
    Worldwide, who regularly forsakes the gilt halls of Westminster Abbey
    in pursuit of persecuted Christians and other wretches. Reaching them
    requires - literally - crossing militarized borders, hiking forbidden
    mountains, and fording bridgeless rivers.

    In 2004 Mrs. Cox traveled also to war-torn Nigeria three times, to
    Indonesia, Burma, and North Korea. Between those journeys, she spoke
    at churches, missions conferences, human-rights forums, and other
    events in the United States, Canada, and Australia. Between speaking
    tours she promoted a new book about Islam and the West (slated for
    U.S. publication next month), joined a new British panel monitoring
    religious freedom, advised on Muslim-Christian reconciliation in
    Indonesia, and founded a new humanitarian aid organization.

    The list of accomplishments, the feats of daring - and the endless
    reservoir of energy they imply - are not the only reasons WORLD selects
    Mrs. Cox as its seventh Daniel of the Year. Others in this season of
    war have risked (and lost) their lives on battlefields. Others in
    this election year have staked their careers and their fortunes on
    bold rhetoric. Mrs. Cox, in five decades of public service from the
    tenement wards of central London to the peerage seats of Parliament,
    has with courage and boldness confronted fiery furnaces stoked for
    Western civilization, chiefly Marxism and now militant Islam. She has
    risked her reputation in their defeat, not only with rhetoric in
    royal courts but with literal bandages on the battlefield.


    Caroline Cox likes to tell audiences that she is "a nurse by
    intention but a baroness by astonishment." She was born in 1937 to a
    prominent surgeon and a schoolteacher in London and studied to be a
    nurse. Working the night shift in a London hospital, she met
    internist Murray Cox. They courted in a nearby rhubarb patch, read
    poetry to one another, married, and had three children.

    A stint with tuberculosis forced her into six months' convalescence;
    she spent the time studying for advanced degrees in economics and
    sociology and moved into teaching, eventually heading London
    University's nursing program. The academic world provided her first
    up-close encounter with Marxism as it flourished among the
    intelligentsia. In one department where she taught, 16 of 20 faculty
    members were communists.

    For nine years, she says, she challenged the Marxist education
    philosophy - "hardline indoctrination with academic intimidation." The
    scholastic warfare led to co-authoring a book, The Rape of Reason.
    Published in 1975, it helped to inspire a Tory resurgence, catching
    the attention of Fleet Street columnists and Whitehall mavericks,
    including Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, who in 1982 recommended
    Mrs. Cox to Queen Elizabeth for a lifetime seat with title in the
    House of Lords.

    Parliamentary status, Mrs. Cox says, is evidence of God's sense of
    humor. "I don't really like politics," she confesses, "and I am
    pathologically shy." In college she was president of the debating
    society but claims she never said a word.

    In government she found her voice by speaking for the voiceless.
    Having accurately characterized the problems with Marxism, she set
    about to help its victims behind the Iron Curtain. She signed on as a
    patron for the Medical Aid for Poland Fund. The work took her across
    Europe for weeks at a time, eating and sleeping out of delivery
    trucks as the relief group brought medicine and other supplies to the
    dispossessed in Poland, Romania, and Russia.

    "I'm a great believer in the authenticity of firsthand experience,"
    she told an audience in Australia recently. "It's important to be
    able to say, 'I've been, I've seen, I know how it is.'"

    What she saw under Soviet domination offended both her medical
    sensibilities and Christian sense of justice. She returned from
    visiting state-run orphanages in Leningrad to write a report,
    "Trajectories of Despair," about bright and able orphans shunned and
    misdiagnosed as mentally handicapped. She lobbied openly for Soviet
    regime change from the upper house of Parliament at the height of the
    arms race, when fashionable Europeans were agitating not for an end
    to Soviet hegemony but for dismantling U.S. missiles based on the
    continent. As the Soviet Union crumbled over the next decade, Russian
    medical and social service officials, once bound to silence, welcomed
    her report. She joined with a panel of experts to reform foster-care
    and adoption procedures.


    Such experiences prepared Mrs. Cox for the next global war - against
    militant Islam - long before al-Qaeda struck directly at the United
    States. As Soviet-led oppression gave way to ethnic cleansing, Mrs.
    Cox was ready with relief aid and public advocacy. When
    Muslim-Christian tensions flared into war between the former Soviet
    republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan over a disputed region known as
    Nagorno-Karabakh, Mrs. Cox went to see for herself.

    Muslim Azerbaijan annexed the region, historically home to 150,000
    Armenians. A systematic campaign, backed by Soviet-made missiles and
    air defenses, sought to rid the region of the Christian Armenians, a
    tiny minority long persecuted by Turks in the east and now at the
    mercy of 7 million Azerbaijanis to the west.

    Moscow implicitly sided with Azerbaijanis and used its veto power on
    the UN Security Council to keep international intervention at bay. It
    was the start of an ongoing battle for Mrs. Cox and her allies
    against rogue states using international legitimacy not only to
    oppress stateless minorities (in many cases Christians) but also to
    starve them of outside aid.

    The UN declared Nagorno-Karabakh a "no-go" area for aid. Turkey and
    Azerbaijan closed borders. Hearing of besieged Armenians hiding in
    root cellars, Mrs. Cox made the first of dozens of sorties to the
    remote enclave, setting out from England in cargo planes, then
    switching to smaller craft in Armenia to skirt radar across
    Azerbaijani airspace and the Caucasus. Throughout a conflict much of
    the world ignored, she smuggled cigarettes for the pilots, food for
    Armenians, and needed drugs for doctors performing surgery by
    candlelight and without anesthetics. She counted 17 pilots among her
    friends killed during that period. Still, she kept up steady jaunts
    to the region, often hunkering with families in bomb shelters. Today
    the medical-supply runs have turned into a full-service healthcare
    center in Stepanakert, the capital, with a training center that in
    the last year graduated its first healthcare workers.

    Nagorno-Karabakh taught the baroness to beware of other "no-go"
    areas: southern Sudan, northern Nigeria, East Timor, and refugee
    camps along the Burma-Thai border. Other parliamentarians, she could
    see, were content to read reports about faraway conflicts and give
    speeches about them. Some aid workers, on the other hand, were
    content to transport a plane or two of emergency supplies into a
    conflict zone, easing temporary needs and pricks of conscience but
    accomplishing little toward lasting transformation. The baroness
    recognized her unique position: She could do both.


    In Nigeria this year she put the combo to work, successfully
    embarrassing local authorities into reinstating jobs for 11 nurses
    fired by Muslim hospital administrators in Bauchi state. The nurses
    would not renounce Christianity and wear Islamic dress. When Mrs. Cox
    learned of their cases, she dragged other parliamentarians to Nigeria
    and lobbied endlessly on their behalf.

    Mrs. Cox has made at least 28 trips to southern Sudan to regions
    where the Islamic government forbids UN aid to predominantly
    Christian tribes. She learned from villagers and saw firsthand slave
    raids, villages burned, crops destroyed, and forced Islamicization.
    She met Christians whose first aid request was for Bibles, and rebel
    commanders who walked all night, fording swollen rivers on foot
    during the rainy season, just to meet her.

    On one trip to Eastern Upper Nile she and a relief team discovered
    newly displaced Sudanese. "Mothers had babies dying on their
    breasts," she recalls. "Even an immediate supply of food would be too
    late for them. They were just sitting and dying in huge numbers." The
    nurse quickly recognized that thousands of the children had whooping
    cough, but "we had nothing but erythromycin." She watched many of
    them die.

    Such incidents have convinced Mrs. Cox that she never wants to show
    up in a war zone empty-handed. Documenting atrocities and speaking
    out against them for her go hand-in-glove with tangible aid. That
    burden led her this year to help launch the new U.K.-based
    Humanitarian Aid Relief Trust, or HART.

    Success is sweet but no mission is without controversy. During her
    most recent trip to Nagorno-Karabakh, Azeri state television fumed
    about "the separatist baroness," and the foreign ministry sent a note
    of protest via its embassy in London.

    And her own government is not necessarily pleased with her causes.
    "None of the British governments - Conservative or Labor - have supported
    our work in Nagorno-Karabakh," she says, due to British Petroleum
    (BP) oil interests in Azerbaijan. One cabinet minister once told her,
    "No country has an 'interest' in other countries; only 'interests.'"
    Her response: "I am not naive and can understand commercial
    interests; I can understand strategic interests; however, I do not
    think it is in the interest of any nation to let these 'interests'
    override concern for human rights."

    "Plenty of groups go to record the event of persecution, then they
    leave when the persecution ends," said Dennis Bennett, president of
    U.S. relief group Servant's Heart. "But persecution is not an event.
    It takes decades to recover from the physical loss and economic
    devastation. That is why Caroline Cox goes back over and over. She's
    building relationships and trust. She's not interested in Band-Aids,
    not interested in creating a Christian welfare state out of
    persecuted people." Besides drawing attention to the fact of
    persecution, Mrs. Cox has changed the way the church in the West
    thinks about it, Mr. Bennett said. "The Christian church has to
    recognize you don't repair overnight and the problems are not
    answered only by prayer. You have to be interested in long-term
    infrastructure, in making friendships that will be there for
    eternity."

    With upcoming U.S. publication of the book, The 'West', Islam and
    Islamism (published in London by Civitas, due out from The American
    Foreign Policy Council, January 2005), Mrs. Cox (with colleague and
    co-author John Marks) turns to what she now hopes can be a
    "redemptive aspect" to the war on terror and her own experiences.
    With the 9/11 attacks, "suddenly the tragedy of the suffering that we
    see in Islamic countries is not on another planet," she says. "This
    is a wakeup call to stop neglecting the suffering at the hands of
    militant Islam." She believes Christians and other non-Muslims are
    not the only victims of jihadist regimes; so are most Muslims. The
    Islamic regime in Khartoum, for instance, represents less than 5
    percent of Sudan's population.

    "Islam is not inherently a religion of peace," she said. Nonetheless,
    "we have to give the hand of friendship to moderate Muslims." Putting
    that into practice for the baroness meant joining a commission on
    reconciliation in Indonesia headed by former president Abdurrahman
    Wahid. The group is bringing once coexisting Muslims and Christians
    together from embattled parts of Indonesia.

    Like much of Mrs. Cox's work, that mission is charged with tension
    and risk. Mrs. Cox is cautious about family and other personal
    details for fear of exposing her family to threats. A prison sentence
    in Khartoum and death threats in several parts of the world hang over
    her. Asked if her own family worries about her, she says, "Sometimes
    I call them when I am back."

    Returning to England does include time for children and
    grandchildren, and for worship. An Anglo-Catholic and Third Order
    Franciscan, she attends services once a week no matter where she is
    "if at all possible." At home that means the Anglican St. John's
    church in Middlesex. She also finds time for "recuperative exercise"
    like tennis and long walks, even though, as Mrs. Cox describes it,
    she receives much more than she gives on any harrowing journey.

    Each step in her career, she says, has been less about premeditated
    ambition and more about walking through the next door that opens.
    That helps to explain why she not only endures but enjoys long days
    on the field or floor of Parliament where little sleep and inferior
    tea out of Styrofoam cups are the norm. And why, when her husband
    died in 1997, she found even more time for missions and speaking
    abroad. "When God gives you a vacuum, you fill it."

    For her the overall pursuit has changed little since age 11, when she
    chose Joshua 1:9 as her confirmation verse: "Be strong and
    courageous. Do not be frightened, and do not be dismayed, for the
    Lord your God is with you wherever you go." - -
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