Baptist Global Response

Connecting people who care with people in need

Archive for the ‘aid work’ Category

Teen’s vision brings clean water to Darfur village

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Click to view high-res image and caption

Click to view high-res image and caption

Joshua Guthrie was a troubled teen. Like many others of his generation, the 16-year-old high school sophomore was troubled by the needless suffering of so many people in so many places. Hunger and poverty. War-time atrocities and sex trafficking. AIDS orphans and genocides.

Then Joshua read Do Hard Things, a best-selling book by twin brothers Alex and Brett Harris, at 20 years old only barely out of their teens themselves. The book challenges young people to rebel against “the myth of adolescence” – the notion that teens are by nature irresponsible, immature, and rebellious. “By breaking the mold of what society thinks we are capable of, teens can achieve so much more than what’s expected,” the brothers say. “We’ve seen ‘average’ teenagers transformed from channel changers to world changers who are accomplishing incredible things.”

The book rocked Joshua’s world.

Read the rest here!

Written by Admin

March 20, 2009 at 6:16 pm

Preventing starvation in India

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News has just been posted about a project in India that is preventing starvation in villages where floods wiped out crops and food supplies. Through their World Hunger Fund, Southern Baptists are providing a month’s food for 104 families and assisting 24 farmers with crop planting.

For more information on this and other new projects in Central and South Asia, click here.

Written by Admin

March 2, 2009 at 8:15 pm

Helping refugee families return home

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Southern Baptists are helping a group of 600 families in Central Asia who have returned home after many years in refugee camps in neighboring countries. They have come back to nothing and are having to start rebuilding their lives in the midst of winter.

Field partners are using Southern Baptist relief and hunger funds to meet critical needs for food, shelter, and heating during January. Food parcels containing flour, peas, rice, cooking oil, beans, and sugar are being distributed. Coal, blankets, and a tent have been given to each family.

A prayer request from the field partner: “Ask God to bless these families who are ‘going home’ after such a long time. Pray that these material things will help them realize how much God loves them and cares about their lives.”

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Contributions to the Southern Baptist World Hunger Fund make projects like this possible. For information about the World Hunger Fund, please visit the Baptist Global Response website.

Written by Admin

February 5, 2009 at 3:18 pm

Gaza relief effort underway

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Southern Baptist food relief is making its way into the Gaza Strip to help people suffering in the aftermath of a three-week Israeli military offensive earlier this year.

A total of $92,000 from the Southern Baptist World Hunger Fund will deliver food to about 10,000 people during the course of this next year, according to Abraham Shepherd, Baptist Global Response area director for Europe, the Middle East and North Africa. Since Southern Baptist field partners and volunteers are unable to enter the area, the project will be conducted in partnership with local believers in Gaza.

The food distribution is part of a larger cooperative effort involving five Christian groups. Those other ministry partners will provide food for the effort as well, but also will distribute clothing, window glass, household goods, blankets and other necessities that are in short supply.

“The Gaza Strip has been experiencing a humanitarian crisis for many years, prior to the war starting in December 2008,” said the project’s local director. “Last year, it was reported that the Gaza Strip had the highest unemployment rate in the world. More than a million people have been suffering due to drastic shortages of food, cooking fuel, medical supplies, and other essentials. The recent war has only increased the devastation and hardships for the people of Gaza.”

Details are still being worked out in regards to logistics, due to the nature of the local conflict there, said BGR’s executive director, Jeff Palmer. “However, it looks as if most food can be purchased locally and distributed quickly and efficiently to those in need.”

The project’s leaders hope the relief effort will not only demonstrate the love of Christ for the hurting Palestinian people but also provide a springboard for long-term improvements in the quality of life for Gaza residents. 

“We do not envision that Gaza will be a self-sustaining area for many years,” the local director said. “It is our hope this project will lead to the development of micro-enterprises and community projects that will lead the people of Gaza to be more self-supporting.”

With technical support from Shades Mountain Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala., an Internet site, Christian-relief-for-Gaza.org, has been set up to provide information about the relief effort. That site currently suggests several points at which Christians can pray for the crisis:

“Pray that the current cease fire holds. Even more importantly, pray for a just and lasting peace,” the site says. “Pray for healing for those who were injured. Ask God to make available the treatment they need. Pray for the many children whose parents were killed.  Ask God to provide for them.”

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Contributions to the Southern Baptist World Hunger Fund make projects like this possible. For information about the World Hunger Fund, please visit our Giving page.

Written by Admin

January 30, 2009 at 2:56 pm

Georgia relief work still making a difference

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Southern Baptist relief efforts in the Baltic Sea country of Georgia are continuing to make a real difference for families whose lives were upended in August 2008 by fighting between Russia and Georgia.

A field partner shares this update with Baptist Global Response:

“This summer Georgia underwent a traumatizing crisis. Thousands of people were left without homes, refugees within their own country. Most of these arrived in the capital city with what they could carry and the clothes they had on their backs. Hungry, shocked, homeless, despairing people, began filling school buildings empty for the summer as well as abandoned hospitals.

“Immediately churches around the world began to pray for this nation. Funds were provided for hygiene products for refugees. Funds also were allocated from the Southern Baptist World Hunger Fund to supply necessary food products for feeding large numbers of people in Gori.”

Within two weeks, Southern Baptist disaster relief teams from Texas, Oklahoma, and Kentucky were being organized and initially helped feed approximately 1,200 people were being fed every day. Between 400 and 500 people still are being served onsite five days a week, according to the report.

By April most of the refugees are expected to be in housing. Unemployment, however, continues to be a serious problem.

Government officials and local citizens have expressed deep appreciation for what the church is doing for the community and the refugees, the field partner reported. A television crew also has interviewed locals about the project.

The speed and magnitude of the relief response was due, in large measure, to the generosity with which Southern Baptists give to the World Hunger Fund, the field partner said.

“Others working here wondered how we could have resources and teams available and in place so quickly,” the partner said. “Because Southern Baptists give every October to hunger relief and 100% of that gift goes straight to those in traumatic crisis situations just like here, we were able to immediately utilize these funds. Also, every year disaster relief team training takes place so that those trained are prepared to arrive in, live in, and minister in such devastating circumstances with very short notice.  When others are running out, these teams are running in.  What a strong and strategic arm of the church is this work!”

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Contributions to the Southern Baptist World Hunger Fund make projects like this possible. For information about the World Hunger Fund, please visit BGR’s Giving page.

Southern Baptists exploring relief opportunities in Gaza

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Southern Baptist workers are monitoring the situation in the Gaza Strip and looking for opportunities to conduct relief efforts there now that Israel has agreed to open a corridor for humanitarian assistance.

On Jan. 7, Israel announced it would cease hostilities for three hours each day to allow relief supplies to flow through a humanitarian corridor into the Gaza Strip. The announcement followed 12 days of intense fighting, first from the air, then on the ground.

“The situation on both sides of the conflict is bad — especially for the people of Gaza,” said Abraham Shepherd, Baptist Global Response area director for Europe, Mid-East and North Africa. “We have been in constant contact with various networks and individuals in the region, trying to coordinate efforts and be on standby for long-term sustainable relief.”

Southern Baptists already have been involved in two humanitarian projects in Gaza through Baptist Global Response, and that should open the way for permission to participate in war-time relief, Shepherd said.

Shepherd asked Southern Baptists and other Christians to pray for people in the area who are suffering and for humanitarian efforts.

“Please pray for wisdom, as we meet and discuss coordination of efforts,” Shepherd said. “Please pray for readiness in assessing the various options when it comes to our point of entry and the relative security situation.”

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Contributions to the Southern Baptist World Hunger Fund make projects like this possible. For information about the World Hunger Fund, please visit our Giving page.

Food relief entering Zimbabwe

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Lori Funderburk, BGR prayer strategist, writes:

Five hundred food parcels are making their way into Zimbabwe with BGR partners.  They will be distributing food parcels to one of the poorer parts most affected by the situation there.  Please pray that the food will get to those most in need.  Pray that people will see the love of God through the distribution of these parcels.  Ask Him to multiply the use of these foods as those who receive them try to stretch them out to cover their needs for longer periods of time.  Ask God to intervene on their behalf as the country of Zimbabwe continues to collapse.

For information about the food parcel project, click here.

Written by Admin

November 18, 2008 at 7:01 pm

Please pray for In-Home Care Kits

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This just in from BGR prayer coordinator Lori Funderburk:

A shipment of BGR In-Home Care Kits has arrived in Zambia, but the process to clear the container through customs seems to have hit a big snag. 

Customs has demanded several original documents before they will consider duty free status.  Most every other country accepts faxed or scanned copies of these.  BGR is now trying to get these sent from the USA and South Africa.  Until they arrive the container remains in customs. 

Pray that these documents can be sent ASAP and that they will arrive quickly.  Also pray for Mark Hatfield, BGR Area Director for Africa, as he travels to Zambia on Tuesday.

Written by Admin

November 10, 2008 at 3:39 pm

Prayer point – Zambia

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Mark Hatfield, BGR’s director for Sub-Saharan Africa reports that the container with In-Home Care Kits headed to Zambia was to arrive in the capital of Lusaka over the weekend. 

“This coming week will be important in the clearing through Zambian customs,” Mark writes.  “Please pray that the process moves forward easily and that duty free status is granted.”

Written by Admin

November 2, 2008 at 7:52 pm

Pakistan earthquake assessment underway

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Southern Baptists are assessing relief needs in the aftermath of a strong earthquake in southwestern Pakistan that killed at least 150 people in the pre-dawn hours of Oct. 29.

Thousands of homes were destroyed or buried by landslides that also have blocked roads, according to news reports out of the region. Pakistan’s government is using helicopters to ferry troops and medical teams into the quake zone.

Many survivors will be faced with near-freezing nighttime temperatures. Government officials reported they were distributing tents, blankets and food into the quake zone. A Southern Baptist assessment team will work to identify which needs they can help with and look for communities not being adequately reached by relief efforts.

“We are closely monitoring the situation and waiting to hear from our field partners on the ground,” said Jim Brown, director of the U.S. office for Baptist Global Response. “We ask all Southern Baptists to pray that God would preserve life and speed rescue efforts. Pray that God would work in this crisis to help people understand how much he loves them and wants them to experience lives filled with hope and purpose.”

Written by Admin

October 29, 2008 at 2:32 pm