Archive for the ‘Kenya’ Category
Life-saving gifts
In this new video, residents of Kenya’s Rift Valley say ‘Thank you’ for generous gifts to the Southern Baptist World Hunger Fund that made a life-saving relief effort possible.
To give to the World Hunger Fund, click here. For resources to help you promote World Hunger Sunday Oct. 11, click here.
Making a difference for hungry people
A key ministry partner has posted this brief video to communicate the urgency of the hunger problem in Kenya and the critical role played by gifts to the Southern Baptist World Hnger Fund. Every dollar given to the WHF is used 100% for on-the-field ministry. World Hunger Sunday is Oct. 11.
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Hunger is a very real problem all through the drought stricken Rift Valley region of Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda. Thanks to the generous gifts of Southern Baptists to the World Hunger Fund, Southern Baptists are able to plan hunger relief projects to help alleviate some of the suffering. God is blessing these efforts. Pray for good rains this next season. Pray for God to strengthen workers in these food distribution efforts. Pray for opportunities to share not only physical food but spiritual food as well.
Kenya hunger relief efforts top $1 million so far this year
World Hunger Sunday is just around the corner: Oct. 11. With the burgeoning hunger crisis in Kenya, the need for compassionate giving is great. Will you mobilize your church to help? Resources for observing World Hunger Sunday are available here.
NAKURU, Kenya – Starvation continues to stalk millions of Maasai people in Kenya’s Rift valley, and Southern Baptists are launching a new round of hunger relief to help the neediest survive.
Almost a third of the people in Kenya’s Kajiado and Narok districts are in dire need of food, and the new round of relief efforts will stave off disaster for about 180,000 people, according to the Southern Baptist missionary coordinating the project.
Surviving one more month
The women danced and sang, thanking God for the food that kept their families alive for a while longer.
The food, delivered by Charlie Daniels, a Southern Baptist missionary in southern Kenya, literally kept these women and their families from starving to death.
Some will not starve – because you cared
As drought ravages the Maasai homeland in Kenya, families face the specter of starvation. Thanks to the generosity of Southern Baptists who gave to their World Hunger Fund, 180,000 Maasai received a full month’s supply of staple foods.
To read the full story, click here.
Battling famine in Kenya’s Rift Valley
By Kate Taylor
MARALAL, Kenya – While most Americans have never been desperate enough to scrounge for fallen kernels of corn on the dusty ground, famine is a harsh daily reality for millions of people in Kenya. Southern Baptists, through their generous giving to their World Hunger Fund, are providing food relief for thousands of Kenyans on the brink of starvation.
In January 2009, Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki declared the food shortage a national disaster. “Our national assessment is that 10 million people are food insecure and require emergency support,” Kibaki said. “These people will not be able to meet their minimum food requirements between now and the end of August 2009 without emergency methods.”
The food crisis was caused in part by severe drought, as well as the global energy crisis and last year’s post-election violence, which disrupted planting in the country’s breadbasket region, Kibaki said.
Charles Daniels, a field partner of Baptist Global Response in Kenya, said conditions in Kenya’s Rift Valley Province are almost unimaginable to Americans.
“In the Samburu district, we have not seen a drop of rain for months. If drought persists, conditions will worsen,” Daniels said. “As grasslands dry up, there is no pasture for livestock. Cows no longer provide milk, which is vital as a source of food and also money to buy other food staples. The water holes where women walk daily have become little more than cracked and dried depressions of dirt.”
With an allocation of $25,000 from the Southern Baptist World Hunger Fund, desperately needed food staples have been distributed to 4,800 people in Samburu district. Each person received 13 lbs of corn meal, 6.6 lbs of red beans, and .73 lbs of cooking fat.
Those supplies will be enough to sustain the people for a full month, Daniels said. Because Southern Baptists cared enough to give to their World Hunger Fund, people in need have been greatly helped.
“Many Samburu are having a difficult time these days; some more than others,” Daniels said. “While some are still able to walk and wait and survive on a little, others are in real danger. These are the ones we sought out.”
Daniels asked believers to pray for the people of Kenya as they face continued famine and drought – and for the team of Baptist Global Response field partners and national partners who are working hard to give Kenyans an opportunity to experience a full and meaningful life.
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Kate Taylor is a collegiate correspondent of Baptist Global Response. For information on giving to the Southern Baptist World Hunger Fund, please visit our Giving page.
Update on Kenya IDP camps
This note in from Ashleigh Campbell, one of our collegiate correspondents at Union University, summarizing what happened through the IDP camp ministries in Kenya earlier this year:
LIMURU, Kenya – Thousands of Kenyans who had to flee their homes because of the election-related violence in December 2007 are now rebuilding their lives after receiving aid from Southern Baptist workers and more than $56,000 from the Southern Baptist world hunger and general relief funds.
After the presidential elections, violence drove many minority tribal groups from their homesteads and those families looked to police camps, churches and Kenyan Red Cross centers for protection. Southern Baptist workers responded to the immediate needs of four such camps, working with the Kenyan Red Cross to provide food, water, medicine, plastic sheeting for shelter, kitchen utensils and blankets over a period of several months.
“Thousands of desperate, fearful and homeless people were coming into the camps with little to no food and only the possessions they could carry with them,” said Mark Hatfield, who with his wife, Susan, directs work in Sub-Saharan Africa for Baptist Global Response. “People were hungry but afraid to leave the camps because of the potential violence outside. Many were traumatized because of what they had personally experienced or heard others had experienced.”
Southern Baptist workers helped connect Kenyan Red Cross personnel with people who could assist with needs in the camps. They also mentored young workers who had never responded to a crisis situation before.
At first, the food provided by Southern Baptists was the only food the camps had. Clean water was delivered in a 1,000-liter tank for drinking and cooking. Plastic sheeting and firewood also were provided. When other relief efforts brought in staple foods, the role of the workers changed to providing storage areas as well as fresh food. Later on, Southern Baptist relief funds were used to have three pit latrines pumped out, greatly improving camp sanitation.
Two of the four camps are now empty, as most people have resettled locally, returned to their original homes or been transported to their tribal homelands. The people remaining were trying to resettle in the area because it is their tribal homeland. The majority of the children still in the area are in school and some of the adults have been able to find jobs in the area.
“Southern Baptists have made many friends because of this outreach. A great many people have experienced God’s love firsthand as Southern Baptists demonstrated the compassion of Jesus Christ for hurting people,” Hatfield said. “We were able to help families avert disaster and find new hope and purpose in life that they can share with others in turn.”
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For information about donating to the Southern Baptist World Hunger Fund, please visit our Giving page.