In
July the United Church of Christ issued a $250,000 emergency relief appeal as a
result of a drought causing food shortage affecting more than 10 million people
in East Africa. We continue this
effort as part of our Mission: 1 campaign, asking all of our churches to
act as one to support our brothers and sisters who are suffering from this devastating
famine.
One
Great Hour of Sharing emergency relief grants were shared with Church World
Service, Action by Churches Together, and other UCC partners in Somalia, Kenya
and Ethiopia to support immediate emergency food relief. The United
Church of Christ is a member communion of Church World Service and an affiliate
of the ACT Alliance.
The
following is an update from our partner ACT Alliance.
Surviving the
drought, and preparing for the next one
Sep 22, 2011 By Tim Shenk
As you drive
east from Nairobi, the Kenyan countryside becomes progressively drier. Long
grass becomes yellow and eventually disappears. Bare, reddish soil is all you
can see in the barren fields.
An elderly man eyes the camera at a distribution of food in a refugee camp near Mogadishu. ACT distributes water, food and sheeting for shelter in the refugee camp near the capital Mogadishu. (Photo Credit ACT/DKH/Christoph Pueschner)
This is the East
African drought, a vast disaster stretching across Kenya, Somalia, Ethiopia and
beyond. Two years with scarcely any rain have withered fields and pastures,
putting more than 12 million people in need of humanitarian assistance.
In Kaikungu, a
rural community of about 6500 people in the Mwingi district, Eastern province,
spiky green sisal plants are about the only crop that survives. In normal
years, farmers grow plenty of peas, corn, beans and sorghum, but the drought
has forced the community to seek food aid.
Nevertheless,
local farmers are working hard to become self-sufficient. Since 2007,
humanitarian workers from ACT members Church World Service and the Anglican
Church of Kenya have been helping the community build structures to capture and
store water.
These include a
borehole well, two concrete tanks filled from a hilltop water catchment and six
"sand dams" which hold water in seasonal streambeds under a thick
layer of sand.
If not for these
water points, life in the community would be far more difficult. Local people
walk anywhere from 30 minutes to an hour to fetch water, instead of the
grueling, daylong treks people make in other drought-affected communities.
Water has made
it possible for some families to grow vegetable gardens and to keep a few
livestock long into the drought. Jessica Mutinda, 28, told me that without
local water points, her family's four cattle, 10 goats, four sheep and two
donkeys would already be dead.
Because of water
points, relief workers can report that severe malnutrition is still rare in
Kaikungu but the same cannot be said for the rest of Mwingi district.
Recently, 250
local people gathered in Kaikungu to dig silt out of the community's sand dams,
restoring their capacity to hold water. To support their work and meet
immediate needs, ACT members provided each participant packages of corn, beans,
salt and cooking oil. The food will last their families about a week. Weekly
distributions are planned for the next five months.
The next rains
should come in October, with another six months until crops can be harvested.
These seasonal rains cannot come too early for the millions of people in this
region who depend on rainwater for subsistence. In Kaikungu, at least, it might
not be too late.
Ms. Susan M. Sanders Minister and Team Leader Global Sharing Of Resources Wider Church Ministries 700 Prospect Ave. Cleveland,Ohio 44115 216-736-3210 sanderss@ucc.org
Ms. Phyllis Y. Richards Program Associate Global Sharing Of Resources Wider Church Ministries 700 Prospect Ave. Cleveland,Ohio 44115 216-736-3215 richardp@ucc.org