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'... As we forgive our debtors.'

Can the true spirit of debt forgiveness be fulfilled if strings are attached by the creditor? Religious thinkers weigh in, as G-8 leaders consider relief for debtor nations.

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But the counterpoint is that "when one is altruistic, one has a right to expect a certain quid pro quo," an even exchange, from the beneficiary, says Rabbi Tzvi Hersh Weinreb, executive vice president of the Orthodox Union, a network of about 1,000 Orthodox synagogues. "If the creditors are giving something substantial away ... there's nothing wrong with getting certain advantages from that," as in the case of opening markets in debtor nations to American goods.

Some religious viewpoints see conditions on debt relief as necessary for an improved world order that more fully reflects a biblical ideal.

"Without conditionality, evangelicals wouldn't support debt relief," says Richard Cizik, vice president for government affairs for the National Association of Evangelicals. Evangelicals have recently built upon the efforts of the Jubilee 2000 movement and its offshoot, the Jubilee USA Network, which have rallied for international debt relief for the past decade. At last week's ecumenical London Forum, Mr. Cizik signed an agreementurging debt relief and increased aid. "We aren't interested in propping up corrupt governments, and shouldn't be," he says. "The whole thrust of scripture in fact is that honesty, integrity, and faithfulness ... will give you entitlement to a greater amount of blessing; so I don't see a contradiction here [with] the jubilee tradition."

Setting conditions to ensure that funds help alleviate poverty in developing nations is also a must in the view of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, according to Gerry Flood, counselor to that group's international policy committee. Others who see physical well-being for all as a core characteristic of the jubilee vision agree.

But some point out a difference between conditions designed to improve people's lives and those designed to benefit the country forgiving the debt.

"The biblical tradition of canceling debt is designed to aid the debtor and keep the debtor out of perpetual poverty.... It should not be an occasion for the lender to try to get something for himself out of that process," says George Monsma, an economist at Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Mich., and a former development missionary in Africa.

For Presbyterian Church (USA) elder Michael Kruse of Kansas City, however, the big goal of jubilee is to establish "shalom," or peace. This would mean striving for "a country that is life-affirming, that creates prosperity...." Creditor nations might better attain that end by actually maintaining their note, says Mr. Kruse, a consultant with a background in international development.

"[It's a] simplistic idea that if we just cancel the debt, that's going to solve the problem," he says. "It may be the opportunity for debt forgiveness [in the future] is what keeps us able to hold leverage over some rather corrupt people or other systems that have gone wrong in these countries. So canceling the debt may be the worst thing [we could do] right now."

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