Polio and religion

The tale of a transformation from resister to advocate

PP2, Pastor of the Kitawala Filadelphie sect in the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s Katanga Province V.Petit / UNICEF DRC

This week, the Democratic Republic of the Congo confirmed that no children have been paralyzed by wild poliovirus in that country since December 2011. Persistent efforts by local health authorities have yielded this progress, but too many children still remain unvaccinated in the country, and success is by no means secure.

Some of these children went unvaccinated because of individuals like “PP2” – a charismatic pastor of the Kitawala Filadelphie Sect – who counseled his religious followers to refuse vaccination against polio. Now he has begun to change his approach; but the road to acceptance has been neither short nor easy. From hours spent passing a Swahili Bible back and forth in search of the final word on vaccinations; to a surprising decision to send young members of the sect away for medical training; to secret vaccinations in the dark of night – we trace, in this three-part series, the path of an unlikely alliance with a man who calls himself “The Elephant King.”

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More often than not, the road to a meaningful triumph is a bumpy one.