Difference between revisions of "Template:Humanitarian Aid Updates"

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'''LDS Church Continues Aid to Japan'''
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'''LDS Church Helps Refugees of Syria's Civil War'''
  
[[Image:ldschurchJapan.jpg|250px|thumb|alt=Mormon aid to Japan|left]]
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[[Image:Mormon_Aid_to_Syrian_Refugees.jpg|300px|thumb|alt=Mormon Aid Syrian Refugees|left]]
[[The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]] has a world-recognized pattern for quickly providing emergency response in cases of disaster.  Latter-day Saints do not choose congregations to attend, but are assigned to "wards" organized geographically.  A system of leadership organized among its lay clergy enables fast communication from the bottom up ([[Home Teaching]], [[Visiting Teaching]]) and the top down.  The Mormon leadership in Northeastern Japan worked tirelessly after the 9.0 earthquake of March, 2011, to account for missionaries serving in the area, members, and facilities of the Church, and then to assess needs of all citizens and decide how to quickly get aid in to stricken areas.
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As an insurgency in the nation of Syria displaces tens of thousands of refugees, many of these have fled to neighboring Jordan.  LDS Charities of [[The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]] has donated over $590,000 worth of supplies for these refugees, plus another $588,000 to be allocated in the coming months.
  
The LDS Church is often the last to leave devastated areas.  Help is still being provided to victims of the 2004 tsunami that took the lives of over 200,000 people in southeast Asia.  In like fashion, LDS still continues to give aid in Japan.  Two recent efforts include the donation of a new industrial size ice maker to fishermen in a small village near Sendai, and the restoration of a Shinto shrine in Tagajo.
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:“Our focus has been on the particular needs of women and children,” Sharon Eubank said, citing numbers from a recent New York Times story indicating that half of the refuges are under 12 years of age, and women in the refugee camps outnumber the men two to one.
  
The 11 March 2011 tsunami destroyed all but one of 84 fishing boats in a local fishing cooperative near Sendai.  Although some boats have been prepared, there has been no access to ice to preserve the fish after they are caught.  Now the local fishermen are able to go back to work and support their families.  A [[Mormon Missionaries|Mormon missionary]] from Alpine, Utah, Elder Masahisa Watabe, discovered the need.  Elder Watabe is serving as a senior missionary along with his wife.  He was born and raised in Sendai, but had not returned for many years. When he returned to help rebuild, he met a prominent friend in the community and learned about the fishermen.  The gift was announced on June 15th by the Presiding Bishop of the LDS Church, [[H. David Burton]].  The ribbon-cutting ceremony for the huge ice maker, a cold-storage unit and three refrigerated trucks took place on September 1, 2011.
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:“As the crisis unfolded in Syria it became more difficult for people to stay there,” Eubank said.
  
:"The ice machine is capable of making 3.3 tons of ice a day. Prefectural Fishing Cooperative President Shinetsu Kikuchi called the gift “a large step for people in the fishing industry” as he presented a plaque of appreciation to the Church." [http://ldsmag.com/church/update/article/8683?ac=1]
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:“More and more people started coming across the border into Jordan. At first they were absorbed into the cities and towns, but soon the cities couldn’t absorb any more. The refugees were straining the country’s infrastructure."
  
Also near Sendai is a terribly damaged Shinto shrine, which was recently restored by eighty Mormon missionaries.  The shrine is the Yawata Shrine in Tagajo, just outside Sendai. Missionaries from the Church’s Tokyo mission rode a bus all night to spend the next day clearing out debris and salvaging the shrine’s treasures. The Yawata Shrine is hundreds of years old and is designated as a Historical Legacy Site in Japan.
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:“In June there were 400 infants in the camps under four months old,” she said. “They were desperate for diapers and formula…”
  
The March tsunami washed over the shrine, flooding it, and washed cars into the grounds and scattered and destroyed sacred artifacts.  Priests at Meiji Shrine in Tokyo invited LDS Church leaders to describe how the Church conducts its humanitarian efforts around the world. The presentation was made to 50 Meiji priests and employees. It was organized by Moriyasu Ito, a Meiji priest who studied at [[Brigham Young University]]. 
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:“For LDS Charities, Eubank said, “there is no expectation or even hope that there will be some reciprocal benefit for the church” from the humanitarian efforts.” [http://www.deseretnews.com/article/865565323/LDS-Charities-gives-million-dollar-humanitarian-effort-for-Syrian-refugees.html]
  
:Representatives of the LDS Church "explained the Church’s global relief efforts and the extensive contributions made in Japan, which include large cash donations, supplies of gasoline, food, water, blankets, clothing, hygiene kits and large pieces of equipment, such as the aforementioned ice-making and storage facilities for fishermen. The Church has sent more than 18,000 volunteers who have given approximately 160,000 hours of service in the disaster zone."
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::“LDS Charities has been a valued and trusted partner in assisting us to meet the needs of those coming in to Jordan seeking relief,” said Ayman R. Al-Mufleh, secretary general of the Jordanian Hashemite Charity Organization. “This is a strong and important partnership and we are grateful for it.”
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The Jordanian government had begun establishing refugee camps in May, but they were soon overflowing.  It is important to understand that many Iraqis had fled the Iraq war by going to Syria, so Syria was already housing refugees when her own troubles began. 
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:“We’ve been working in the Middle East for 10 years,” Eubank said, “so we already had volunteer couples on the ground there who had established relationships and infrastructure through their work on our wheelchair project, our neonatal resuscitation project and the other humanitarian efforts we are making in the area.”
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:Working in coordination with the Jordanian government, full-time LDS humanitarian missionaries Jim and Karyn Anderson and Bret and Ruth Ann Youngberg immediately started buying supplies and assembling hygiene kits to meet a need that was growing every day. Because there are so few Latter-day Saints in the area — there are fewer than 200 Mormons in Jordan, and the church does not proselyte there as it is not officially recognized by the government — the humanitarian missionaries worked closely with other local religious groups, including the Greek Orthodox Church and the Latin Catholic Church, as well as students from the University of Jordan to put the kits together.
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With winter coming, there is special concern for refugees who arrived with only the clothes they were wearing:
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:“Many of these people cross the border with just what they are wearing,” Eubank said. “We’ve sent boots, blankets and coats for those who are in need of winter clothing. We’re still coordinating with the government, trying to anticipate future needs.
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Because of the dusty summer, and coming wet weather, the LDS Church has sent material to lay over the ground to help with dust and muddy conditions.  Such foresight is rare among charitable organizations.
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Eubank explained that the Church of Jesus Christ will again be partnering with Islamic Relief to extend aid into the future.
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:“We don’t care about your religion or your ethnicity or anything else,” she said. “If you need help, we are trying to respond.
 
   
 
   
 
Donations for LDS Church relief efforts can be made at [http://give.lds.org/emergencyresponse LDS Emergency Response].  
 
Donations for LDS Church relief efforts can be made at [http://give.lds.org/emergencyresponse LDS Emergency Response].  

Revision as of 01:15, 2 November 2012

LDS Church Helps Refugees of Syria's Civil War

Mormon Aid Syrian Refugees

As an insurgency in the nation of Syria displaces tens of thousands of refugees, many of these have fled to neighboring Jordan. LDS Charities of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has donated over $590,000 worth of supplies for these refugees, plus another $588,000 to be allocated in the coming months.

“Our focus has been on the particular needs of women and children,” Sharon Eubank said, citing numbers from a recent New York Times story indicating that half of the refuges are under 12 years of age, and women in the refugee camps outnumber the men two to one.
“As the crisis unfolded in Syria it became more difficult for people to stay there,” Eubank said.
“More and more people started coming across the border into Jordan. At first they were absorbed into the cities and towns, but soon the cities couldn’t absorb any more. The refugees were straining the country’s infrastructure."
“In June there were 400 infants in the camps under four months old,” she said. “They were desperate for diapers and formula…”
“For LDS Charities, Eubank said, “there is no expectation or even hope that there will be some reciprocal benefit for the church” from the humanitarian efforts.” [1]
“LDS Charities has been a valued and trusted partner in assisting us to meet the needs of those coming in to Jordan seeking relief,” said Ayman R. Al-Mufleh, secretary general of the Jordanian Hashemite Charity Organization. “This is a strong and important partnership and we are grateful for it.”

The Jordanian government had begun establishing refugee camps in May, but they were soon overflowing. It is important to understand that many Iraqis had fled the Iraq war by going to Syria, so Syria was already housing refugees when her own troubles began.

“We’ve been working in the Middle East for 10 years,” Eubank said, “so we already had volunteer couples on the ground there who had established relationships and infrastructure through their work on our wheelchair project, our neonatal resuscitation project and the other humanitarian efforts we are making in the area.”
Working in coordination with the Jordanian government, full-time LDS humanitarian missionaries Jim and Karyn Anderson and Bret and Ruth Ann Youngberg immediately started buying supplies and assembling hygiene kits to meet a need that was growing every day. Because there are so few Latter-day Saints in the area — there are fewer than 200 Mormons in Jordan, and the church does not proselyte there as it is not officially recognized by the government — the humanitarian missionaries worked closely with other local religious groups, including the Greek Orthodox Church and the Latin Catholic Church, as well as students from the University of Jordan to put the kits together.

With winter coming, there is special concern for refugees who arrived with only the clothes they were wearing:

“Many of these people cross the border with just what they are wearing,” Eubank said. “We’ve sent boots, blankets and coats for those who are in need of winter clothing. We’re still coordinating with the government, trying to anticipate future needs.”

Because of the dusty summer, and coming wet weather, the LDS Church has sent material to lay over the ground to help with dust and muddy conditions. Such foresight is rare among charitable organizations.

Eubank explained that the Church of Jesus Christ will again be partnering with Islamic Relief to extend aid into the future.

“We don’t care about your religion or your ethnicity or anything else,” she said. “If you need help, we are trying to respond.”

Donations for LDS Church relief efforts can be made at LDS Emergency Response.


Official LDS Humanitarian Services website
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