Baptist Global Response

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Archive for the ‘World Hunger Fund’ Category

Ministry reaches out to families ravaged by HIV/AIDS

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By Pamela Swithin

PIETERMARTIZBURG, South Africa – The HIV/AIDS pandemic sweeping African nations is destroying entire families – from grandparents to children. One Christian ministry, with the help of Southern Baptists, is making a difference in the lives of thousands of adults and children.

These two older women care for 20 children whose parents died of AIDS. The World Hunger Fund helps support a feeding project that helps families like this.A feeding project conducted by Tabitha Ministries in Pietermartizburg, South Africa, aims to alleviate much of the suffering caused by this deadly disease by providing food and assistance to adults and children who are infected and affected by HIV/AIDS.

Most of Tabitha Ministries’ work is done in the surrounding community of Sweetwaters, where thousands of people are infected with HIV. Tabitha Ministries itself ministers to more than 4,714 children and 1,500 adults in that area. Because so many more people in Sweetwaters are in need, Tabitha Ministries focuses its limited resources on those whose needs are most desperate. A six-month segment of the feeding program used money provided by the Southern Baptist World Hunger Fund to help 645 people children and adults with no income at a cost of about 40¢ per day.

Providing food is an important ministry strategy, according to project director Gail Trollip, not only because of the pervasive hunger in Sweetwaters, but also because AIDS patients cannot fight the disease and maintain their anti-retroviral drug treatments unless they are getting a certain level of nutrition.

“Due to the devastation caused from the AIDS pandemic, many adults and children in Sweetwaters are sick and dying from the virus,” Trollip said. “When an adult becomes ill, he is no longer able to provide for himself and has no income. When it is a child, they are unable to care for themselves, as there are no longer adults to provide for them as a result of their deaths from the virus.”

Tabitha Ministries’ community efforts are built around 29 volunteer caregivers who travel Sweetwaters’ streets, checking on patients. Some of those caregivers – called “Mobile Moms” – are women who have been specially trained to work with children, many of whom live in child-headed households because their parents’ lives were claimed by AIDS.

An important aspect of the ministry is that children who are forced into the position of being heads of their household often resort to immoral or illegal ways to provide food and care for their siblings, Trollip said. Providing food relieves some of that pressure so they don’t have to struggle to survive.

In several ways, the project exemplifies the compassion of Christ for people in need, Trollip said.

“This project only responds to those who are the poorest of the poor,” Trollip said. “These are the people who are unable to work due to the fact they are sick. The project allows children to attend school instead of going out to find ways to make money or find food for themselves and their siblings. The project is able to help keep people healthier due to better nutrition and the ability to have food in order to take their ARV’s.  This project also responds to the nutritional needs of the HIV-positive caregivers, as well as the 24 AIDS orphans living at Hope Center.”

Tabitha Ministries has been working in the Sweetwaters community for almost 10 years, and each year the ministry grows as the number of those infected with HIV grows, Trollip noted. The volunteer caregivers and Mobile Moms live in the community and bring to light families in need – ones who are infected and dying from the disease and can no longer work or take care of themselves. The provision of food and assistance to these patients is essential to alleviate their suffering and for their survival.

“This ministry is a truly biblical one,” said Susan Hatfield, who with her husband, Mark, directs work in Sub-Saharan Africa for Baptist Global Response. “It helps orphans and widows in their distress, visits people who are sick and helps those who are destitute.”

The fact that Southern Baptists care enough to give to their World Hunger Fund literally makes the difference between life and death for those who receive the aid, Trollip added.

“Our grateful thanks to Southern Baptists for past assistance,” she said. “This has enabled us to serve and share Jesus with the people who are in desperate need, both physically and spiritually in the Sweetwaters Community.”

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Pamela Swithin is a collegiate correspondent for Baptist Global Response.

Donations to HIV/AIDS response projects can be made on the BGR Giving page.

Written by kainos

October 20, 2009 at 4:26 pm

Roma children flourish with WHF meals

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By June Lucas

SKOPJE, Macedonia – Roma children commonly watch from the public school yard as their classmates purchase snacks during the lunch hour. Many of the Roma children will wait several more hours for their single meal of the day – which most likely will consist mainly of bread.

The Roma are among the poorest people in Europe. In Macedonia, the unemployment rate among the nearly 200,000 Roma is around 80 percent. Children from these families commonly suffer malnutrition, evident in anemia, hair loss, loss of skin color, and increasing occurrence of tuberculosis. Bread, which is both inexpensive and filling, makes up the bulk of their diet, but it does not provide the protein and many of the vitamins the children need.

A lunch program, supported by Southern Baptists through their World Hunger Fund, helps fill the rumbling stomachs of nearly 400 Roma schoolchildren each day.

The meal program, modeled on the Headstart program in the United States, was identified as a way to counter the effects of hunger on Roma schoolchildren. Children who are hungry throughout the school day also suffer from lack of concentration and attention span and decreased retention of material. Through the initiative, conducted in partnership with Baptist Global Response, 400 Roma children were provided three meals a week, consisting of milk, an egg, bread and chocolate-covered raisins or peanuts.

The lunches are served in two education centers that help prepare Roma children for school and assist them with homework once they begin school. One center serves about 300 children daily in Topana, the oldest Roma community in Macedonia’s capital, Skopje. The other center, located in Shutka, the largest of Skopje’s Roma communities, hosts 75 to 100 children a day.

Field partners working with the project are going to be able to literally measure the impact of the program.

“One of the things we are doing in conjunction with this project is compiling statistics of various physical measurements – height, weight, arm measurements, general physical health – as well as looking at scholastic results,” project director Betty Easter said. She explained the measurements were taken at the start of the project in March, again in June and in September, and also will be taken at the end of the meal program. A report detailing the impact of the project will be written from those measurements.

Emily Harrison, who also helps with the project, said some Roma children initially resisted the meal.

“It took a little while for the children to warm up to us,” Harrison said. “There were many days in the beginning where the more prideful ones refused to eat. But after some time, they began to show a little more gratitude and desire to be there.”

Harrison said Igber, an older woman from the community, helped facilitate a friendlier relationship between the Roma children and the field partners involved in the project. Igber played music for the children and encouraged them to dance before the meal, and her storytelling kept the children quiet as they ate.

The meals have opened up relationships that extend into the larger Roma community.

“I love serving these kids,” Harrison said. “My favorite job is handing them their dessert on the way out. Usually it’s a piece of fruit, but getting to look each one in the face and say ‘Bye’ or ‘Have a great day’ or ‘See you later’ is so fun.

“After about a month of it last semester, I started to notice the kids would look me in the face right back …. Now it has grown to be where they will yell my name and chase me down in the street to say ‘Hi.’ Oftentimes when I am stopped, talking to a child or two, their parent will cross our path and invite me into their home.”

The initiative is an excellent example of the way Southern Baptist gifts to their World Hunger Fund open the door for disadvantaged children to discover lives of meaning and purpose, said Jim Brown, U.S. director for Baptist Global response.

“Every dollar given to the World Hunger Fund is used solely for ministry purposes, because Southern Baptists cover administrative costs through other giving channels,” Brown said. “Through ministries like this meal program, children in need experience the love of God for themselves – because people who care are willing to give.”

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June Lucas is a collegiate correspondent for Baptist Global Response. For information on giving to the World Hunger Fund, please visit the BGR Giving page.

Written by kainos

October 15, 2009 at 2:37 pm

Relief teams gear up for Philippines

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Southern Baptists are gearing up a major disaster response in the wake of a typhoon that flooded the homes of 2.3 million people in the Philippines.

Read about it here.

‘Major’ disaster response underway for Philippines

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MANILA, Philippines – Southern Baptists are gearing up a major disaster response in the wake of a typhoon that flooded nearly 2 million homes in the Philippines.

Typhoon Ketsana slammed into Manila and surrounding provinces Sept. 26, dumping a month’s worth of rain in just 12 hours. Relief organizations say it is the country’s worst flooding in 40 years. At least 284 people have been reported dead or missing and nearly 380,000 people have sought shelter in evacuation centers, according to news reports.

Southern Baptists are assessing ways to address relief needs in the wake of the storm, said Jim Brown, U.S. director for Baptist Global Response. The organization is communicating with ministry partners in the Philippines and interacting with Southern Baptist disaster relief teams on standby for emergency response.

“Local ministry partners went to work immediately after the storm, providing emergency food and water provided by the Southern Baptist World Hunger Fund,” Brown said. “After receiving preliminary assessment information from local field partners, we are gearing up for a major response in the wake of this typhoon.”

Contributions toward the relief effort can be made here. Updates on relief efforts can be monitored by signing up for BGR’s AlertNet newsletter at http://gobgr.org.

Written by kainos

September 29, 2009 at 7:55 pm

Life-saving gifts

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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.

Written by kainos

September 23, 2009 at 5:56 pm

Making a difference for hungry people

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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.

Written by kainos

August 26, 2009 at 1:01 pm

Kenya hunger relief efforts top $1 million so far this year

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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.

Read more here

Written by kainos

August 21, 2009 at 2:33 pm

Breaking down barriers in the Middle East

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ATHENS – Baptists in a Middle Eastern country are partnering with Southern Baptists to give their neighbors, as the old saying goes, “a hand up, not just a handout.”

In 2007, believers in the country brought their neighbors’ plight to the attention of Southern Baptist humanitarian workers in the region, and together they developed a strategy that would meet short-term needs while helping parents develop skills to better provide for their families over the long term.

Residents of the area struggle to survive, earning only about 40 percent of their country’s normal standard of living. On a day-to-day basis, they can not afford necessities like food, medicine and heat for their homes; their long-term prospects are clouded by the scarcity of jobs and their lack of training. Because the country predominantly follows another world religion, Christians find themselves faced with significant obstacles in reaching out to people in need.

In consultation with Abraham Shepherd, who with his wife, Grace, directs Baptist Global Response work in the Middle East, local Baptists and the Southern Baptist humanitarian workers developed a two-pronged strategy. To meet immediate needs, they provided packets of food – including sugar, rice, oil, eggs, milk, tea, and pasta – essential medicines, heaters and blankets the families could not afford. They also designed a program to train locals in skills that would enable them to improve their standard of living and help them provide better for their families.

The long-term strategy included both educational centers where literacy courses, English classes and computer training are offered. Individuals also were taught how to develop their own businesses. In the component of the program that ran between January and April 2009, an estimated 800 people were helped at a cost of $31.25 each from resources provided by Southern Baptists who gave to their World Hunger Fund.

Another benefit of the program is that while local Baptists were helping their neighbors, they also were developing their own leadership and serving skills. Because relationships are so important in the local culture, local Baptists were able to break down barriers by demonstrating God’s love for their neighbors.

“The object of this project is to work through local believers to reach the poor of this nation,” said the project director. “Our desire is for local believers to have a passion for their neighbors’ needs and be able to reach out in love. As the local believers get involved in sharing, they will be encouraged by seeing what God is doing and what great things he can do.”

Even a small gift to the Southern Baptist World Hunger Fund sets in motion a ripple effect that touches lives for generations to come, Shepherd said.

“By their generous giving to the World Hunger Fund, Southern Baptists trigger a chain reaction of caring that reaches across oceans,” Shepherd said. “It touches people in need and shapes national believers in the lesson of generosity and giving to their neighbors in need.”

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For more information about giving through the Southern Baptist World Hunger Fund, please visit the BGR Giving page.

Surviving one more month

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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.

Read more here

Written by kainos

July 15, 2009 at 8:09 pm

Some will not starve – because you cared

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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.

Written by kainos

July 8, 2009 at 7:46 pm

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