Monday, October 30, 2006

The Tennessee Annual Conference Committee on Hispanic Ministries Supports A Way for Conference Churches to Assist in Hispanic Ministry this Christmas

Through Christmas Outreach 2006 Manos Hispanas Ministries reaches families throughout the Upper Cumberland.

You don't need to speak the language to bless a family. All you need to do is get your Sunday School class, the youth group, or even your family to donate a Christmas Laundry Basket filled with food and supplies (ingredients for basket of goodies is listed below) and you will be speaking the international language of love

The deadline to have the basket ready is Friday December 15.

You can bring your basket or send your donation to:
Manos Hispanas Ministries office
157 E Broad Street (located just beside Cookeville First United Methodist Church)
P.O. Box 459
Cookeville, TN 38503
If you have any questions please call us at (931) 526-2177 ext. 219, and we would love to provide an answer.

On December 15th at 6:00p.m. Manos Hispanas Ministries volunteers will get together, as every year, to set up the baskets and wrap the present. You are invited to participate – just bring a dish to share with others.

On December 16th we will meet at 8:00 a.m. for prayer and worship and at 9:30 a.m. we will open our doors to hand out the baskets. There will be music and activities for the children, but most importantly families will be blessed with a good present for Christmas.

You will need to assign your donation or basket to one of four different outreach ministries:

1.- Connection(Bilingual Congregation) and Food Pantry- Cookeville

2.- Family of God Church- Monterey

3.- Cumberland Hispanic Ministry- Crossville

4.- Hispanic Community of Faith- Smithville

Each basket for Hispanic Families needs to include the following items:

* of course a Laundry basket
* 1 Toilet paper package
* 1 Pine cleaner
* 1 Salt
* 2 bags of Maseca (Tortilla Flour)
* 1 white flour 5lbs
* 1 Sugar 5lbs
* 1 Oil 48oz
* 10 Tuna cans 6oz
* 2 Mac & Cheese 7.2oz
* 1lb of Tomatoe sauce
* 1lb whole tomatoes
* 1 la banderita tortillas 82.5 oz
* 1 Fiesta brand chile de arbol 1/12 oz
* 1 Fiesta brand corn hosk 6 oz
* 1 Chicken flavor bovillo 7.9 oz
* 2 rice great value 2lbs
* 1 pinto beans 1lb
* 1 La costena Jalapeno 1lb
* 1 veggies medley 14.5oz can
* 1 great value instant coffee 80oz
* 1 Palmolive dishwashing liquid 19oz
* 1 Chili pods ancho 50oz
* 1 body soap
* 1 great value white hominy 6lbs
* Estracel scrubs sponge 2x

The cost of every basket is approximately $60 dollars. If you are unable to fill a basket you are welcome to send a check for that amount made out to Manos Hispanas Ministries (Mailing address listed above). The need is great this winter and groups are also urged to bring blankets, winter jackets (both adult and children sizes) and toys for children.

"Nothing But Nets" campaign raises money to fight malaria

A UMNS Report
By Deborah White*

More than 100,000 insecticide-treated bed nets will be delivered to Nigeria in November as part of a new malaria prevention campaign called Nothing But Nets.

Partners in Nothing But Nets include the United Methodist Church, the United Nations Foundation, Sports Illustrated, the National Basketball Association, Millennium Promise and the Measles Initiative. The United Methodist Board of Global Ministries and United Methodist Communications are coordinating the church's participation in the campaign, which will include a major initiative for youth groups.

The goal is to raise funds to eradicate malaria in Africa, where the mosquito-borne disease causes the death of one-fifth of all children under 5 years old. Hanging nets over children while they sleep is a simple, inexpensive way to kill the mosquitoes or keep them from biting.

The idea for Nothing But Nets came from Sports Illustrated columnist Rick Reilly, who encouraged readers to donate money to the U.N. Foundation after he learned that 1 million children die from malaria each year and that bed nets could save lives. In a May 5 column, he wrote, "If you've ever cut down a net, jumped over a net, watched the New Jersey Nets, worn a hair net, surfed the net, or loved fishnets, send 10 bucks and maybe you could save a life."

In just a few months, more than 17,000 people sent $1.2 million. Reilly plans to join a delegation from Nothing But Nets to distribute nets in Nigeria and to meet children who will benefit from them.

The U.N. Foundation asked the United Methodist Church to join Nothing But Nets because of decades of work through the Community-Based Malaria Prevention Program of the Board of Global Ministries. The most recent project, started in Sierra Leone last December, focuses on community-based primary health care, education and creating a "net culture."

"All of this work makes the denomination a natural partner for the Nothing But Nets campaign," said Bishop Thomas J. Bickerton, president of the Commission on Communication, which governs United Methodist Communications. "Not only do we want to eradicate malaria, but we also want to get our young people involved in mission work."

United Methodist youth groups that raise money for Nothing But Nets will be eligible for prizes at Youth 2007, an international event for United Methodist youth in Greensboro, N.C., July 11-15. Fund-raising awards will include a trip to Africa to distribute bed nets, a trip to New York to tour the United Nations and a variety of NBA gear.

A cell phone text-messaging network will provide campaign updates to youth. They can send a text message to 47647, type "Nets" in the text field and hit "send" to be added to the network.

"One of the benefits of being a partner in Nothing But Nets is that we're giving a tool to congregations that may be struggling to reach youth. This is an avenue that will speak to youth," Bickerton said.

"In sports, we're always dealing with nets. It struck me as the simplest way to save lives," Reilly said in an interview. "I think it's so cool the church is involved."

More information is available by going to the United Methodist Church section of www.nothingbutnets.net or the denomination's official Web site at www.umc.org.

*White is associate editor of Interpreter magazine. This report first appeared in slightly different form in the magazine. Both Interpreter and United Methodist News Service are ministries of United Methodist Communications.

Church confronts killer diseases in Angola

By Kathy L. Gilbert*

LUANDA, Angola (UMNS) - Sometimes malaria can kill a child before anyone even knows the child has been infected.

The Rev. Domingos Kafuanda says the recent death of an 8-year-old girl in his congregation was a grim reminder of how deadly malaria can be.

The child was singing in the children's choir on Sunday. "She was happy and playing," he says. "We got word she died the next day of malaria."

People sometimes ignore a headache and fever that may be the first symptoms of being infected, he says.

"Malaria can be in your body for a long time. Children can have fever one day and be feeling well the next; that is why it is so important to be tested," he says. "Her death really moved the church and reminded us we need to be vigilant about prevention and testing."

The complications are that not every mosquito carries malaria, and sometimes it is just impossible to avoid getting bitten.

Kafuanda, a United Methodist district superintendent for the Angola West Annual (regional) Conference, was bedridden with a high fever from malaria just two days before he spoke to United Methodist News Service about the killer that claims so many lives in this southwest African country.

He says he sleeps under a mosquito net and is well aware of the danger, "but sometimes you have to get out from under the net, and sometimes mosquitoes get inside."

Breeding grounds
Neighborhoods that lack potable water, adequate sewage systems and are overcrowded create the perfect breeding grounds for misery.

Dr. Pedro Francisco Chagas and Dr. Laurinda Quipungo sat down with a United Methodist delegation from the Board of Global Ministries and United Methodist Communications to talk about the problems they face every day in another part of the country at the Malanje Provincial Hospital.

"We have a population of 1.2 million in 14 municipalities," Chagas says. "It is a dream of mine to have one doctor for every 10,000 people." Right now that dream is far from coming true, he says.

Setting priorities is hard because the problems are so many, he says. The top diseases the doctors face are malaria, respiratory problems, gastric problems, AIDS/HIV and sleeping sickness. The greatest threat is to children under 5 and pregnant women.

"If a child has a fever, the first thing we must assume is malaria," says Quipungo, a pediatric doctor who is also the wife of Bishop Jose Quipango, United Methodist leader of the East Angola Annual (regional) Conference.

Along with fever and headaches, other symptoms are coughing and convulsions, sometimes followed by a coma. Children often become anemic, which weakens their ability to fight off the disease. Cerebral malaria attacks the brain, and the person never fully recovers, Quipungo says.
"Sometimes parents see the hospital as the last alternative, and it is too late when they bring in their children."

No protection
Jose Vieira Dias Van-Dunem, the vice minister of health for Angola, says 30 years of war have left the country without much protection from deadly diseases.

"Resources are not elastic," he says. "Many resources went to the war and were not used for health or potable water. In the last four years, that is becoming the past."

Angola won its 16-war of liberation from Portugal in 1975 but was thrust into a long civil war that lasted from 1976 to 2001. Thousands died, infrastructures were destroyed across the country, and more than 2 million people were displaced.

The government's top priorities are promoting education, health and national unity, and fighting poverty, Van-Dunem says. The church has a major role to play.

Angola had the deadliest outbreak of Marburg disease ever recorded in 2005. When the fatal disease, associated with fever and bleeding, swept through the country last year, Van-Dunem says he went to see the African religious leaders. He told them to tell people to stop the African tradition of kissing and touching the dead body because the disease was spreading as a result.

The word got out and the disease was stopped.

Churches can help with education, he says.

In seven of the 18 northern provinces, sleeping sickness is a major problem. The disease is spread by the bite of a tsetse fly, and 40,000 people die every year in regions of Sub-Saharan Africa. Van-Dunem says the fly is attracted to black or dark blue cloth so the government has made traps of dark cloth to catch the flies.

"People are stealing the traps to make clothing for their children," he says. "Then the children become the traps for the flies.

"We as Africans listen to our elders," he says. "Our relationship with churches is very important, but we have to be greedy, we want more."

How to help
The United Methodist Church is responding in many ways to the killer diseases. People interested in getting involved can help provide health care, mosquito nets and clean water through the Advance for Christ and His Church, a church giving program. Donations can be sent to UMCOR Advance #982009, Malaria Control, and other vital Advance ministries in four ways:
Online. Go to http://gbgm-umc.org/give/advance.

Local church. Checks should be made payable to the local church. Write the name of the ministry and the Advance code number on the check.

Mail. Checks can be made payable to "Advance GCFA" and sent to: Advance GCFA, P.O. Box 9068, GPO, New York, NY 10087-9068. Write the project name and its Advance code number.
Telephone. Call (888) 252-6174 to make a credit-card donation.

Other Advance ministries in Angola, along with their project numbers, include Agriculture and Animal Restocking Project, #15082T; Bishop Emilio de Carvalho Theological School, #14383M; Evangelization, #15061A; Help Me Fishing, #14384O; Illiteracy Program, #15081A; Library Construction and Books for Children, #14974N; and Medical Center, #15010N.

*Gilbert is a United Methodist News Service news writer.

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

'Sew for Peace' reaches out to Iraqi children

By Kathy Noble

Chaplain Richard Denison stood in the town square of Assyria, a poor Iraqi community located just outside the camp where the 193rd Special Operations Wing of the Pennsylvania Air National Guard unit was stationed.

As he distributed soccer balls and sweat suits to the children gathered there, the question came from a little girl.

"Mister, do you have any dresses?"

Denison had to say "no," but the child's question gave him an idea.

In civilian life, Denison is pastor of Paxton United Methodist Church in Harrisburg, Pa. He had been seeking something for people at Paxton to send "that the (Iraqi) people would actually use or that would do some good, something that showed we cared about them as people."

Grabbing his digital camera, he "took some pictures of the girls in what I thought looked sort of like nightgowns." A few hours later, he sent the photos to Ellen Shatto, lay leader of the Paxton church, along with an e-mail asking, "Can we have the ladies make up something that looks like this?"

A few months later, the women sent 28 dresses and matching sandals to Iraq. "End of story, or so we thought," Shatto says. But then a second e-mail arrived from Denison, saying he had learned of plans to build a school in Assyria to serve 900 girls.

The Paxton church women knew they needed help to fill the second request, so they launched "Sew for Peace." As of this month, the ministry of United Methodist women from 11 congregations in the Central Pennsylvania Annual (regional) Conference has sent more than 700 dresses.

Called to make peace
Every Thursday, the Paxton women meet to cut out the dresses and prepare kits with the pieces and instructions to make one dress appropriate for the Muslim culture. Other women pick up the kits, assemble the dresses and return them to the Paxton church for shipping. Local media coverage of "Sew for Peace" has brought donations, which help provide the fabric and cover shipping costs.

"As Christians we are called to be peacemakers," Shatto says. "It is our fervent hope and prayer that these acts of kindness will paint a different picture of Americans to these young girls, and that as they grow and become mothers themselves, they may see America as the truly Christian caring nation that we are, and teach their children these same attitudes. Only then can we hope for a more peaceful world for our children and grandchildren."

Delivery of the first shipment of dresses - which arrived in Iraq shortly before Denison was to return home in November 2005 - was complicated.

"With the situation over there, it was even difficult to get permission to get outside of the (camp) gate. With the war and the fighting, we had to figure out how to pass out the dresses and assure the children would be safe," he says.

Eventually a convoy of armored vehicles was positioned around the square where the children could walk between them. "If there was a bomb, the armor would protect them. We stationed people to watch so no one would attack us," Denison says. As the children came, "I'd hold up the dresses and say, 'This looks about your size.'"

Loving one's enemies
"Sew for Peace" is about "loving your enemies as Jesus did," Denison says. "We had no idea who these children were. We didn't ask questions. It was one of those things you did because it was the right thing to do."

Denison grieved the deaths of two friends killed while he was on duty in Afghanistan in 2002.

Three years later, in Iraq, he had to take cover by running for bunkers. As he passed out dresses in Assyria, he saw some Arabic writing on a wall and asked what it said. "Death to Americans" was the answer.

Denison has reflected often on Jesus' command to "love our enemies, to try to figure out what it means in a situation like this."

"This is one little project," he says. "It's not like it's going to change the world, to make world peace. It is one way one the Christian community can witness to what Christ taught, to witness even to a community who doesn't believe what we do, who may hate us for our beliefs.
"We're to love them anyway."

*Noble is editor of Interpreter magazine, the official ministry magazine of the United Methodist Church published by United Methodist Communications. A version of this story originally appeared in the September-October issue of Interpreter, available online at www.interpretermagazine.org.

Thursday, October 12, 2006

Camp shares hope, love with the children of inmates

By Sandra Brands*

CABOT, Vt. (UMNS) -- When they arrived, the children were fearful, withdrawn and silent. By the time they left the weeklong summer camp, they were just a bunch of kids who had a great time.

The 21 children, who attended Camp Agape at Covenant Hills Christian Camp in Cabot, all had something in common: at least one parent was serving time in a Vermont correctional facility.

"It's a tough population of kids," said the Rev. David Murphy of Shelburne (Vt.) United Methodist Church and director of Camp Agape. "The first night, I was watching the children at dinner, and I wondered what had we gotten into -- it was pandemonium. By Wednesday night, dinner was going well. It was great to see that happen."

Of the 27 children who arrived Aug. 20, only six had to be sent home, "some because of health issues, some for behavior issues," he said. "Even the ones who went home benefited from the experience.

"We know they're going back to where they came from, and some of those environments may not be good, but our hope is that they would have this kernel of warmth or hope or a sense of God's love - whatever they came away with - that would be a sustaining piece," he said.

Ultimately, that is the purpose of Camp Agape and others like it. Aimed at children 8 to 12, the camp provides a positive experience to youth so that they learn they are part of the community, that there are alternatives to violence and that there's more to life than survival.

"We are doing this to be an intervention for these children," said the Rev. Joy Lowenthal, pastor at Waterbury (Vt.) United Methodist Church and a member of the camp planning committee.

"Camp Agape is designed to help break the cycle of generational incarceration and to help children discover Christ."

Changes evident
Murphy said every night, he and wife, Judy, carried glow sticks as they visited children in their cabins. "There were no lights on," Murphy said, "and some of the kids were uncomfortable, so we went around every night to say, 'Hi, how's it going?'"

At the beginning of the week, the children were reserved. None of them thought of offering hugs to anyone, Murphy said. That soon changed. After seeing David and Judy hug their daughter, a counselor at one of the cabins, the girl campers started asking for hugs.

"By Thursday, all the girls wanted a hug and were hugging each other," Judy said.

"One of the campers was very shy," David said. "By the end of the week, he was getting up in front of everyone and singing a song he wrote."

Though camp started off a little ruggedly as the children adjusted to their new surroundings, the counselors and camp leaders quickly learned to deal with emotional anxiety, depression and rainstorms. On the second day of camp, the staff gathered to pray for guidance.

"I felt things start to change," Judy said. "It was very powerful. You could feel God's presence with us."

Even the weather improved, she said.

"The coming together of the staff was an absolute miracle, and we really had to depend on God and each other," David said.

Outgrowth of Kairos
This is the first year the camp has been offered in Vermont. The first Agape Camp was held 12 years ago by the Episcopal Church after the Rev. Jacqueline Means, then a prison chaplain, called for a camp catering to the children of prisoners.

Now the criminal justice officer for the Episcopal Church, Means cited statistics that showed a child with a parent in prison has a 70 percent chance of also ending up in prison. There's a 90 percent likelihood that children with two parents in prison will end up incarcerated.

The Agape Camp idea caught on, and camps have been offered in dioceses and at ecumenical campgrounds in Mississippi, Oklahoma, Maryland, Connecticut, North Carolina, Texas and New Mexico.

Though inspired by the Episcopal model, the basis of Camp Agape in Vermont is rooted in Kairos, the international prison ministry.

"In Vermont, we've had to stop doing the Kairos program because long-term inmates have been sent out of state to places like Kentucky," said Chris Kapsalis, a member of Shelburne United Methodist Church and lay leader of the Green Mountain District of Troy Annual (regional) Conference. A member of the Vermont Kairos ministry, Kapsalis said the transfer of long-term prisoners out of state led to efforts to find new ways to serve the prison population.

Some of the members of the Kairos group belonged to the Episcopal Church, and they had heard about camps being offered to children of inmates. They brought the concept to the group in fall 2005.

Three denominations cooperate
Though the Episcopal camp near Burlington was unable to host a new camp in 2006, there was space available at Covenant Hills Christian Camp, a joint program of the Troy Conference of the United Methodist Church and the Vermont Conference of the United Church of Christ.

With help from the Roman Catholic diocese, the three denominations spent the next few months raising money for the camp, transportation for campers and supplies. Working with the Vermont Department of Corrections and other social agencies, the committee offered children the opportunity to attend the August camp without any costs.

Each child received a backpack filled with supplies donated by Troy Conference United Methodist Women. They also received sleeping bags and Camp Agape hats, sweatshirts and T-shirts.

"These kids feel abused by the system," Kapsalis said. "It's like they're incarcerated along with their parent. The children are part of our community and the objective of (Camp Agape) is to provide a place where they can experience love."

"I think everyone sees the problem with generational incarceration and wants to help change it," Lowenthal said. "They do know (these camps make a) difference in the children's life. They are just glowing at the week's end. They've received love -- it just overwhelms everyone."

The camp was so successful that plans are under way to offer it twice next summer. The Murphys are looking forward to it.

Said David: "We don't know if we'll be directors - we haven't been asked - but we'll be involved."
*Brands is director of communications for the United Methodist Church's Troy Annual Conference.

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

Georgia men repair, give away cars

By Heidi Robinson*

AUGUSTA, Ga. (UMNS) -- A mechanical lift raises the 1990 Volvo sedan some five feet off the floor of the garage. Woody Rodgers pulls a wheel to inspect the new brakes and inspects the undercarriage.

"Should be good for another 40,000 miles," he says, as he pops the wheel back in place.
Rodgers and his partner have mounted new tires, relined the brakes and installed a new exhaust manifold on the 16-year-old Volvo.

"It's a car I'd take on a trip today," Rodgers says. "It's been checked and double-checked."

The labor and time lavished on this car will never show up on an invoice; and, the professional tools and expensive lift aren't part of a capital investment in Rodgers' own shop. Rodgers and a band of brothers who call themselves the Mechanics Ministry at Wesley United Methodist Church in Augusta will give this car away to a total stranger.

"It's a great feeling to be able to see the impact it makes on somebody's life. Just the joy these people have when they receive a car," Rodgers says.

A fresh start
On the other side of town, Robert Rich, 29, is ready for some joy. Formerly homeless, Rich and his children have had a long, hard road putting their lives back together. Rich knows that today he will have a car of his own and that reliable transportation could be the key to stability for his young family.

"This is going to be a fresh start for all of us," says Rich, sitting next to the school pictures of his son and daughter. His wife left the family, and he is their sole provider. Rich works as a dispatcher at an Augusta taxi company.

"You're constantly asking yourself questions like: 'Am I going to be able to get to work today?' Or, 'Are me and the kids going to have to walk in the rain to the babysitter's house?'" Rich says. "So having dependable transportation is a breath of fresh air. Amazing."

When a ride is not available, Rich says, he walks his two children to a baby sitter and then walks five miles to work. He says he cannot understand what motivates this group of men to find and fix a car for someone they've never met.

"If I can do anything for them, I would do it. I want to teach my children to do this for other people," he says. "I couldn't sleep last night. I am so excited, and nervous about this."

Repairing lives
Members of the Mechanics Ministry receive donated cars from members of their church, and Augusta families. Two men repair each vehicle.

"They're not just fixing cars, they're repairing lives," says the Rev. Greg Porterfield, pastor of Wesley Church.

Cars are given to individuals who need reliable transportation to either get a job or keep their employment. Rich will receive the 110th car the Mechanics Ministry has restored.

Scott Long, a founder of this group, waits at the church for Rich to arrive. Long says the men who work on each car are always present when the vehicle is passed to its new owner.

"We're doing what we're supposed to do. We've all got so much, we've been blessed. You just have to give back," Long says. When a van rolls up to the church, Rich gets his first glance at his new car.

"I just can't wait to be able to take it to a car wash or change a tire because that means you actually have your own car," he says. His hands shake as he exits the van.

Long and Rodgers shake hands with Rich and help him sign the title. The Volvo has a new owner.

Rich says this experience makes him see the world differently.

"These are the first people who have looked at me and seen I am doing the best I can. It reminds me to never give up, to keep praying and to keep the faith."

More information on the Mechanics Ministry at Wesley is available by calling Pat Williams at (706) 869-0888.

*Robinson is a freelance producer based near Cleveland, Tenn.

Winter poses 'ticking time bomb' for quake survivors

By Paul Jeffrey*
MANSEHRA, Pakistan (UMNS) - As winter approaches the north of Pakistan once again, many of those left homeless by the crippling earthquake in October 2005 are growing increasingly frustrated and newly afraid.

"I want to start my life here again, but there is no work," said Shams Shah Zaman, a quake survivor in the remote village of Khanian. "Soon the snow will begin, and our tents are too thin to withstand the winter. How are we supposed to live here? The army doesn't want to let us return to the city, but how can we stay here in the mountains?"

A government program to reconstruct housing has not been without its challenges. Most private relief groups, according to Zaman, don't venture far from the region's few roads.

Church World Service is among the organizations that work in isolated communities, and the director of the agency's Pakistan and Afghanistan country program agreed that time is running out.

"There's only a small window of time before winter hits, and there will be at least 200,000 people without proper shelter," said Marvin Pervez. "We can't count on this winter being mild like last year. We're faced with a ticking time bomb."

CWS is a member of Action by Churches Together, the Geneva-based global alliance of churches and church agencies working in emergencies. The United Methodist Committee on Relief, another ACT member, has assisted the earthquake survivors through CWS, the International Blue Crescent, Church's Auxiliary for Social Action and other groups.

Heavy rains in recent weeks have underscored the urgency of Pervez's warnings. At least 400 people have been killed and thousands of families displaced by flooding and mudslides, and the staff of the CWS earthquake reconstruction and rehabilitation program has provided plastic sheeting, blankets, tents and food packages to affected families.

In several places, the rains have washed away steep hillsides, which last year's quake had left riddled with cracks, the soil loosened. Many families, casting a wary eye on the precarious mountains, have not returned to their former homes, preferring to wait and see what slides away with the heavy rain.

The new rains illustrate the vulnerability faced by those seeking to remain in their remote villages. Food, animals and fodder were taken away by the quake, and many returning families, busy constructing makeshift shelters this year, have had little time to plant new crops.

Neighboring families or villages that once helped out in times of adversity are similarly affected.

Controversial program
Much of the mounting frustration stems from a decision by the government to impose a policy ban on housing construction by nongovernmental organizations and instead provide cash directly to survivors to rebuild their own homes.

In March, the government's Earthquake Reconstruction and Rehabilitation Authority announced an installment plan to pay affected homeowners between $1,250 and $3,000 each, which is said to cover two-thirds the cost of a simple family home. The program's $2 billion cost is paid by international donors.

Yet the plan has left many confused and has created new difficulties. Since many villagers lost their identity documents in the quake, they weren't able to cash their first checks at the bank. Those with the right connections provided check-cashing services for a hefty fee as high as 40 percent. And many families used their first checks to purchase clothing and other supplies rather than bricks and cement.

To Pervez, the housing program is good in theory but problematic in practice. "In many places, people are being left to fend for themselves," he said.

Although the government agency's decision took CWS and other nongovernmental organizations out of the business of helping survivors rebuild their homes, the ecumenical agency - which has been working in Pakistan since 1954 - has wasted no time in providing other critical services in the quake-ravaged north.

With support from an ACT appeal for more than $18 million, a diverse staff that includes experts from more than a dozen countries is spread throughout affected communities, working to ensure that life will indeed go on.

A critical component of the CWS program is rebuilding the economic infrastructure of rural village life. This means, for example, providing sheep to families that lost their animals when stables collapsed. CWS has sponsored a similar program in Afghanistan, and Mansoor Raza, coordinator of the CWS Disaster Response Program, said it has worked well.

"When we provide three sheep to a woman, it's like opening a bank account," he explained. "As women sell the wool, milk and meat, they gain purchasing power, and as the animals reproduce, it's like building up more money in the bank."

CWS also established training centers in several towns to teach carpentry, plumbing, welding, masonry and electrical skills to men whose lives were disrupted by the quake.

Mohamad Siraj took the course in welding and today has his own bustling shop in Dhodial, a village north of Mansehra. A farmer before, Siraj lost his house to the quake, leaving him and his wife and three children in a miserable camp for the displaced.

Siraj said he spent months doing nothing, just sitting around in front of their tent, before receiving the invitation to the CWS training program. At his graduation, CWS gave him a complete set of welding equipment.

"There's no end to the work to be done, and I work every day making shutters and doors and gates and grills," he said. "I'm making about 300 rupees a day and taking care of my family, and looking at where we can build a house."

CWS is also providing more than 100,000 native trees for communities to reforest hillsides left bare by indiscriminate logging, a need underscored by this year's fatal mudslides.

In coordination with Norwegian Church Aid, another member of the ACT alliance, CWS has worked in several communities to re-establish potable water systems. In places, that means digging new wells and installing hand pumps. In other villages it has meant helping residents lay several kilometers of piping to bring in safe drinking water.

Raza said navigating local water politics can be tricky, but the effort can pay off in communal harmony.

"Our primary purpose is to re-establish channels of water distribution that were destroyed in the quake, but water is intimately linked to local power structures, feudal culture, geography and land ownership," he added. "So while we don't go looking for conflicts, addressing these issues can provide a meeting point for communities to talk about and resolve some outstanding tensions."

Scarred souls
The damage done by the quake goes far beyond the cracked hillsides and shattered houses. CWS has invested significant resources in responding to wounds that are harder to see.

"Injuries aren't only physical. There are scars on the souls of people who lost their sisters and brothers," Raza said. "Time is a healer, but they need someone to talk to, to listen to them. Otherwise they can't restart their daily lives."

CWS runs several medical clinics for survivors, and Dr. Muhmmad Imtiaz Afridi works in the one in Paras, where CWS took over a government-built clinic that had never seen a physician. He noted that while many patients have normal respiratory and other ailments, others suffer symptoms of depression.

"Especially the women come feeling sick because they've lost their children, some of whom they've buried but many of whom still lay under the rubble," he said. "Others have not felt safe in the tent camps. Others are living with relatives, but especially for women and girls who lost their husbands or fathers, they fear their relatives won't support them long, and in our culture they have few other options. We're working on livelihood projects with them, like handicrafts, but for this to have any long-term impact, we need to figure out a way for them to market their products."

According to Saima Abbasi, team leader of the CWS Psychosocial Team, the agency has sponsored crafts fairs for displaced women and arts projects for children, but at the heart of the team's mission is getting villagers to talk about their experience, which at times is difficult because of the growth of dependency during the emergency.

"During the relief phase, NGOs provided everything. These days we often enter a village where people are so dependent that they think we have to give them something," she said. "But we don't. What we offer is intangible; it's love and opportunities for them to share their thoughts and feelings. And they need that just as bad as things.

"When the government took over the shelter program but didn't issue the checks on time, the pressure on families grew, and frustration increased. It's critically important for the health of the communities that people find a safe way to express that."

The team's work sets CWS apart, according to villagers. "Many people come to look at us, but no one stays to listen to us except these people from CWS. They come and ask how we feel. We talk about our families and our lives. Sometimes we get depressed, but then they come and we talk and we feel liberated," said Maruf, a woman in Mangli. Her village is near Balakot, where residents are still living in tents because of fear that what's left of their hillside plots will slide away with the rains or future tremors.

Now that the first anniversary of the earthquake has occurred, CWS is shifting gears, encouraging survivors to become involved in community organization, according to Abbasi. The best therapy now, she said, is for survivors, particularly women, to become involved in the details of installing new water systems and planning other aspects of community life.

Preparing for the next crisis
In many villages shaken by the quake, CWS had carried out an ambitious program of training schoolteachers in disaster preparedness. It paid off.

"Many children were saved because of the quick response of these teachers, and the stretchers and first-aid materials we provided were well used," Raza said. "But the challenge we face now is how to make disaster preparedness a priority for the state, which has to assume its responsibility. We've had no comprehensive hazard mapping in the country, despite all the disasters we have, and there is no country-wide disaster preparedness program."

Yet Raza warned against preparedness that relies too much on technology.

"The only option for the world is disaster preparedness, not disaster response," he said. "After the tsunami, lots of people talked about installing an early warning system in the Pacific. But are the social structures in these countries geared up and prepared? What will they do with an early warning? Are evacuation routes in place? Are communities informed and organized?

Preparedness should be grounded in a people-centered approach rather than in a capital-intensive, technological sort of thing, which is useless to the people."

*Jeffrey, a United Methodist missionary journalist and senior editor of Response magazine, was on assignment in Pakistan for Action by Churches Together

Monday, October 02, 2006

Texans 'still in the storm' one year after Hurricane Rita

By Eleanor L. Colvin*

HOUSTON (UMNS)--Hurricane Rita was more than just a traffic jam. Ask the people of Texas' Golden Triangle who are still struggling to put their lives together one year later.

The hype of Rita's anticipated landfall blew over when the storm didn't strike Galveston as predicted, but it still damaged Beaumont, Port Arthur and Orange, Texas. The testimony can be found in thousands of toppled trees, mangled webs of power lines, and those who evacuated in the seemingly endless line of cars crawling along the roads.

"It was just the most destructive thing I've seen in my public service career of 28 years," said County Judge Carl Griffith on Sept. 24, the first anniversary of Hurricane Rita. Griffith was speaking at an interfaith community remembrance service, "Shelter from the Storm," held in Beaumont.

Still stormy
"Some of the people are still right in the middle of the storm," said the Rev. Joy Richards, pastor of Aldersgate-Trinity United Methodist Church in Port Arthur. "It's not over for them, they're not in their homes. It's still total chaos."

Chaos has become a very common feeling for those like Richards, who returned to the area after being evacuated for weeks and attempted to patch together remnants of their lives. The sanctuary of Aldersgate-Trinity was pristine, she recalled, but the office area was completely destroyed. The church, which sustained more than $800,000 in damage, did most of its own repairs to help stretch the insurance money.

Assisting those who visited the prayer wall at the remembrance service, Richards said she came to stand in solidarity with those who are hurting because she knows recovery is a long-term process.

"They say it will take two to four years to put everything back," she noted. "We're still hauling the garbage off. You can see, item by item, things are getting better. But not everyone has gotten relief."

Angela Baker, director of the Rita Recovery Center run by the United Methodist Texas Annual (regional) Conference, knows all too well that not everyone is recovered. "We still have 900 people on our waiting list," she reported.

The Rev. Bob Stumph, a member of the Southeast Interfaith Organization, a group that conducted a door-to-door survey in the Golden Triangle, said one obstacle to recovery is the startling amount of uninsured losses.

"Forty-nine percent of damaged homes had no insurance," Stumph said. "People are trying their best to live in homes with leaky roofs and mold. They have no way of helping themselves."

Forgotten storm
The Rev. Jacqui King, pastor of St. Paul's United Methodist Church in Port Arthur, was one of three featured speakers at "Shelter from the Storm." She gave voice to what many Southeast Texans have declared during the past year.

"This storm was often called 'the forgotten storm,'" she said. "Even if you're not rebuilt yet; even if your house still has a blue roof on it - remember 365 days ago you were stuck in traffic, somewhere praying that your home would be safe. God knew where you were then, and he knows where you are now."

King opened her speech with the music of gospel recording artist Israel and the New Breed singing "I Am Not Forgotten."

"We are part of a storm that some people have forgotten about," she added. "But we thank God that our suffering did not kill us - knowing that suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope, and hope does not disappoint us."

To send a work team to the Southeast Texas disaster recovery zone, contact the Rita Recovery office at (409) 892-0140 or e-mail volunteers@umcortexas.com.

*Colvin is the director of communications for the Texas Annual Conference.