Sun, Jul 05, 2009
Charles MacCormack

Opinion

Guest Opinion: 'American Idol' votes can help needy kids win, too

Tucson, Arizona | Published: 04.24.2007
Quentin Joe, an 11-year-old Navajo boy, lives with his mom and four siblings in a one-room dwelling in Chinle, with no running water and few amenities — not even a TV set. He has never seen "American Idol," but this week, more than 30 million "Idol" viewers will meet Quentin on prime-time Fox television.
While Quentin lacks many material things, he shares a quality with all "Idol" contestants: guts. When his family's trailer home caught fire in January, Quentin ran into the burning trailer, not once, but twice, to find and save his baby sister. When asked why he did it, Quentin explained, "She's family."
As "Idol" viewers will discover this week, Quentin's courage is matched with a strong sense of responsibility, commonplace among youngsters forced to become caregivers at an early age.
Quentin hauls water, chops wood and plays a big role in helping his mom manage his family while also attending school every day. Quentin has begun to realize that doing well in school represents his single best chance of escaping the poverty that entraps hundreds of millions of children like him worldwide.
The fact that "American Idol" and its partner, the new Charity Projects Entertainment Fund, are spending any time at all this week considering the Quentins of this world is remarkable enough. But the truth is, they are doing much more. They are pulling out all stops to raise millions of dollars to assist children in need in both the United States and Africa in what could become a milestone in both philanthropy and prime-time television.
This week, when "Idol" viewers vote to make the dreams of their favorite contestant a reality, they will also be voting to give children like Quentin a chance to succeed. Each vote will be matched by a donation to charities to assist poor children in Africa and the United States.
One of the beneficiaries will be Save the Children, for whom I work.
"Idol's" viewers, and society as a whole, already have the means to give poor children better health care and greater educational opportunities. In both Africa and the United States, experts have long recognized that it is public commitment and political will — not science or expertise — that stand in the way of giving children greater opportunities.
In Africa, for example, we could reduce the number of children under 5 who die each day by more than 60 percent if we made low-cost solutions like immunizations, oral rehydration therapy for diarrhea and trained attendants at birth more accessible to children and their families. In the United States, by far the richest nation in world history, one in six children lives in poverty — an appalling percentage considering our resources.
Can "American Idol" help change any of this? We will have to wait and see, but one thing remains certain: We will never create real change for children unless we all work harder to do more.
My hope is that on Thursday morning, when "American Idol" viewers return to school or work after the programs air this week, they will talk with their friends not just about their vote for a contestant, but also about their vote for change in children's lives.
"American Idol" is all about making dreams come true. Quentin's dream: He wants to build houses when he grows up. My dream: to make it happen — not just for Quentin, but for every child in need.
Write to Charles MacCormack at cmaccormack@savechildren.org.