Franklin Graham On Samaritan’s Purse Central Park Hospital: We Don’t Discriminate. Period.
It was a culture clash waiting to happen.
Almost as soon as Samaritan’s Purse assembled a 68-bed field hospital in Central Park’s famed East Meadow, New Yorkers sounded the alarm about the evangelical humanitarian relief organization headed by Franklin Graham.
Pointing to the conservative Christian organization’s statement of faith, which all its health care specialists are expected to sign, they wondered if LGBTQ patients would be treated equally.
The 11-point statement of faith declares, “we believe that marriage is exclusively the union of one genetic male and one genetic female.”
Many New Yorkers were outraged. City Council Speaker Corey Johnson said he found it “extremely troubling” that Graham’s organization was involved in the city’s relief effort, and Mayor Bill De Blasio, a champion of LGBTQ rights, was immediately pressed to ensure the relief organization was “truly consistent with the values and the laws in New York City.”
Franklin Graham has long been a champion of biblical marriage, marriage as a lifetime commitment between one man and one woman. All Samaritan’s Purse heath care workers (doctors, nurses, pharmacists, lab technicians) must sign the organization’s statement of faith, he told Religion News Service, but, he said, “We don’t discriminate against anybody we help.”
“We provide our services to everyone regardless of race, ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation. We don’t discriminate. Period.”
The field hospital housed in a series of white tents is intended as a Christian mission. The idea is to treat overflow patients from Mount Sinai Hospital as it grapples with a surge of coronavirus cases. The prestigious medical center on Fifth Avenue and 98th Street does not have oversight over the field hospital.
Some 391 people in New York state died of the coronavirus on Tuesday, Mar. 31, alone. That brings the total number of people in the state infected with the virus to 47,349, with about 12,226 hospitalized.
De Blasio said he would send people over from the mayor’s office to monitor the Central Park hospital. New York Attorney General Letitia James added in a statement, “We will remain vigilant to ensure discrimination does not occur at this — or any other — facility.”
New York City is regarded as one of the most LGBTQ-friendly cities in the United States. Last year, the city passed an ordinance that allows a third gender option, “X,” on birth certificates, giving transgender and gender-nonconforming city residents new recognition.
Samaritan’s Purse is used to working in more socially conservative developing countries. It is based in Boone, N.C., and is unapologetic about its evangelical beliefs.
The organization may best be known for its shoebox ministry, Operation Christmas Child, that sends Christmastime packages filled with personal care items and small toys to needy children all over the world. But Samaritan’s Purse is equally as active in its disaster relief efforts.
The first field hospital set up by Samaritan’s Purse was deployed in 2016 in response to the earthquake in Ecuador. The organization also set up an emergency field hospital about 12 miles from Mosul, Iraq, during the 2016-17 battle for the city. Last year, it installed a field hospital in the Bahamas in response to Hurricane Dorian.
Graham estimated the New York City hospital costs about $1.3 million. It is outfitted with a respiratory care unit, including up to 10 intensive care beds with ventilators, plus a pharmacy and a lab.
“We hire men and women who believe in Jesus Christ,” Graham said. “But we don’t force our beliefs on anyone. We don’t use our faith to try to force someone to believe the way we believe. Jesus never did that. He healed people willingly and freely.”
Graham said health care workers are hired as contractors and available to pray with patients, too. But he said that if someone in his hospital requested prayers from a rabbi or an imam his staff would accommodate them.
This is not the first time Graham’s outfit has run into increasing resistance because of his support for Christian values.
In February, Graham was forced to seek out alternative venues for a spring tour in the United Kingdom after all eight venues reneged, saying his views on homosexuality were incompatible with the values of the British people. Graham responded by saying he would sue the sites where he had signed contracts to preach.
The tour has since been postponed.
Graham took the latest uproar in stride.
“Every time we do anything, there’s someone who’s second-guessing and trying to throw a fly in the ointment,” he said. “It’s disappointing but it’s not going to stop us.”
On Wednesday, the field hospital treated its first patient.