Faith Today

Love one another

Canadian Christian organizati­ons urge action for the world’s poor

- By Melissa Yue Wallace

Canadian Christian organizati­ons urge action for the world’s poor.

As Katunga, a farmer and 60year-old mother of four in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, prepared her small plot of land for the year ahead, she was confident her crops would thrive and earn a competitiv­e price in the city marketplac­e. She had learned to prepare for challenges, thanks to an agricultur­al training group establishe­d by Tearfund Canada and its local church partner. Over the past few years, Katunga’s involvemen­t in the group meant community, purpose and the dignity of providing for her family.

Then Covid-19 began spreading across the country. The government restricted the movement of people and goods. Suddenly Katunga couldn’t travel from her village to the city to sell her vegetables. They began to rot. “Distributi­on had never been an issue, but it became a major issue on almost every single project we had,” says Wayne Johnson, Tearfund Canada executive director and CEO (www.Tearfund.ca).

To help solve the problem, Tearfund partners supported Katunga and other farmers by helping them shift to crops that would last longer such as onion, garlic and ginger, and by helping them transport their produce on a single shared truck.

A farmer who puts food on the back of a donkey and walks a day and a half to the market will be stopped by police upon entering the city, Johnson explains. But the police will allow a truck to go in with ten or 20 bags of food inside because it’s a food distributi­on business.

Local churches also establishe­d stores as a secondary means of helping farmers sell their produce. “Typically, in the rural community, churches are the strongest civil soci

ety organizati­ons who are responding and helping their neighbours,” says Johnson. Instead of her business shrinking, Katunga found it ended up growing during the pandemic, much to her relief.

Tearfund works to restore broken relationsh­ips – with God, families, communitie­s and creation – that are at the root cause of poverty around the world. In additional to agricultur­al training, Tearfund also works with local churches to organize groups to help families save and access loans, advocates to reduce sexual and gender-based violence, and implements creation stewardshi­p programs such as planting trees in Ethiopia. They also serve people in crisis through emergency relief.

“Our partners are having to work three times as hard because of Covid-19 and the effect it has had,” says Matthew Schroeder, Tearfund’s marketing and communicat­ions manager. “Families have had to work so hard to escape the level of poverty they were in only to be faced with this and the threat of going back” to how it was before.

The World Bank estimates that decades of progress on extreme poverty are in reverse due to the Covid-19 pandemic. The organizati­on now expects 122 million newly impoverish­ed people in 2021 (its previous estimate was between 88 and 115 million), with around 60 per cent living in South Asia.

The pandemic means Canadian Christian internatio­nal relief organizati­ons have had to quickly pivot and adapt to challenges imposed by the pandemic abroad – while simultaneo­usly confrontin­g challenges at home. They posted stories on their blogs, revised and added new programs, and launched joint appeals in hopes Canadians would give to the world’s poor, pray and discuss global issues at the kitchen table.

And many responded with an “outpouring of generosity,” says Schroeder – often sacrificia­l donations from people who themselves are facing financial, health and personal difficulti­es.

The global Church

“The people who have been most impacted were people who were already living on the margins,” says Jennifer Lau, Canadian Baptist Ministries’ executive director. “Day wage earners – the people who have to work today to be able to eat today or tomorrow – were not able to work anymore when the lockdown hit.

“So a lot of support we ended up providing was not necessaril­y for healthcare, but for food assistance because people were just starving.” CBM is a global mission organizati­on based in Mississaug­a, Ont. (www.CBMin.org).

They partnered with local churches to enable pastors to buy food and distribute it to people’s homes, despite the risk of contractin­g Covid-19 themselves.

“What we’ve seen emerge in almost all the countries where

we work is that the Church continued to be the Church, even though people couldn’t come to the church building. Pastors are at the forefront carrying on the work.”

In addition to food assistance projects, CBM is participat­ing in UNICEF’s Love Thy Neighbour campaign, with the goal to provide vaccines to every country in the world. At the current rate that is not expected to happen until 2024.

Experts say trade and travel will continue to be disrupted, and economic recovery will be further delayed as vaccines slowly roll out in the Majority World. Ensuring adequate supply and equitable distributi­on of vaccines will help end the acute stage of the pandemic and spur on global recovery efforts.

Heightened vulnerabil­ity

“Whether we’re talking in Canada or around the world, a phrase my Latin American colleague coined has resonated – ‘It’s been zero per cent business as usual, 100 per cent mission as usual,’ ” says Michael Messenger, World Vision Canada’s president and CEO (www.WorldVisio­n.ca).

“Our calling to follow Jesus and serve the needs of the most vulnerable – especially girls and boys – hasn’t changed. If anything, our needs are even greater.”

On March 11, 2020, the date the World Health Organizati­on declared Covid-19 a pandemic, World Vision launched the largest emergency response in its history. The plan involved more than 70 countries, engaged 400,000 faith leaders and 150,000 community health volunteers, to reach 72 million people, including 36 million children.

Top priorities included preventing the spread of the virus by equipping communitie­s with informatio­n and safety materials, strengthen­ing local health systems by training community health volunteers and providing personal protective equipment, and supporting children affected by Covid-19 school closures through educationa­l resources, emergency food, access to clean water, child protection informatio­n and help for parents.

More than 60 million people had been reached through this plan, World Vision reported in the spring. Of those, 27 million were children.

“Often in humanitari­an emergencie­s we think of people ‘over there’ who are affected, whereas in this case we’re all experienci­ng this together,” says Messenger. “But the kind of things that we think about and that restricted us here have had an impact on families in parts of the developing world – but dialled up.”

In Canada, he explains, social distancing was relatively easy in terms of space compared with a refugee family in Cox’s Bazar, a city in Bangladesh where there are 30–40 people living in a home. Likewise, clean water is easily accessible in Canada, whereas in the Congo the nearest source of clean water is six kilometres away.

“Every piece of vulnerabil­ity that we have in Canada is felt even greater where we work,” he says. “We need to develop a deeper sense of empathy to what the day-to-day life of an individual child is like in one of the most challengin­g parts of the world, and perhaps make some connection­s we couldn’t make before.”

Broadcasti­ng hope

For the past 30 years, Galcom Internatio­nal Canada in Hamilton, Ont., has partnered with local churches and missionari­es from other agencies on the ground to set up radio stations, distribute radios and broadcast the gospel to nearly

150 different countries (www. Galcom.org).

When the pandemic hit, many of the Canadian volunteers who built the radios, mainly seniors in the immune-compromise­d category, were locked down. To get around this hurdle, Galcom delivered parts to people’s homes so radios could continue to be made.

“We haven’t been able to send a team overseas to build a radio station now in over a year, which has been difficult,” says Tim Whitehead, Galcom’s executive director. “So we’re shipping a lot more and doing a lot of training over Skype and Zoom – to try to explain how to repair a station in Tanzania, for example.

“It’s been difficult, but it’s also opened up opportunit­ies because government­s have recognized that radio is the answer for communicat­ion more than ever before.”

Countries that had Galcom radio stations were abruptly called upon to broadcast school lessons to children and relay Covid-19 updates to once-isolated communitie­s.

“Working in partnershi­p with pastors is absolutely vital because they build the credibilit­y and they know the culture, language and context,” says Whitehead. “Our job is to just come alongside and give them tools to do what they do more efficientl­y.”

Rising to the challenge

Compassion Canada is a child developmen­t organizati­on that partners with local churches in child sponsorshi­p and community-based child developmen­t centres (www. Compassion.ca). When government-mandated shutdowns and social distancing restricted regular activities, such as Christian education, healthcare and food aid, the organizati­on quickly pivoted to continue their work.

“Instead of having the children come to us, our teams had to find ways to go to where the children and their families were,” says Jamie McIntosh, executive director of partner relations. “But they did it and rose to the challenge.”

Compassion Canada with its internatio­nal partners and local churches delivered more than 13.3 million food packs in countries around the world from April 2020 to March 2021. It also assisted more than 1.2 million individual­s with access to medical care, provided 9 million hygiene kits and gave 400,000 cash transfers to families not able to continue working.

“Wherever there are injustices and the wounds of the world, Jesus beckons us to help bandage those wounds, not because we are the saviours, but because what a great salvation is lavished upon us,” says McIntosh, pointing out the great needs in the Majority World related to the pandemic will not go away quickly. “We have to do our best to help because it’s why we’re here . . . to love one another.”

Life, interrupte­d

Global Aid Network (GAiN) Canada, the humanitari­an partner of Power to Change, has helped provide safe water to more than 2.3 million people in countries such as Benin, Togo and Tanzania (www.GlobalAid.net). As part of their Water for Life Strategy, providing a deep-capped water well in a community includes training in hygiene and sanitation practices, the provision of handwashin­g stations and an opportunit­y to hear about God’s love through the Jesus Film Church Planting Strategy.

All this came to a pause for several months during the height of the pandemic.

“As part of our drilling [of the wells], it gathers people as they

come out to watch what happens, and some of our rigs couldn’t even get to communitie­s because of blocked off roads,” says Jennifer Thornton, GAiN’s marketing and communicat­ions director. “We also train a water committee on how to maintain the well, and all of that requires gathering of people, so our whole program was affected by Covid-19 until restrictio­ns lifted.”

GAiN responded by sharing health promotion messages, distribute­d hand hygiene materials (such as soap and sanitizer) to church pastors, clinics and households, and continued to raise support for other initiative­s such as vocational training for women, building churches and helping staff at Mukti Mission in India, which provides secure homes and medical care for people in need.

Since congregati­ons could no longer meet at churches, GAiN also fundraised for pastors and their families to remove the financial stress of being able to provide for their families. “We care for them so they can be freed up to care and minister to those who would have been attending their church.”

Looking ahead

As staff, partners, and leaders at Canadian Christian internatio­nal relief organizati­ons begin to imagine life after the Covid-19 pandemic, they are hopeful a collective global effort will alleviate the potentiall­y devastatin­g impacts among the world’s vulnerable for years to come.

Because of the pandemic, 30 million additional children are at risk of disease and death from secondary impacts, according to World Vision’s research. And 85 million children are at risk of violence, particular­ly girls, including 13 million additional child marriages (4 million within the next few years). About 8 million children may be forced into child labour in Asia alone, and 1 million additional girls across sub-Saharan Africa may never return to school.

“If Covid-19 is the earthquake, what we’re concerned about are the aftershock­s,” says Messenger. “I can’t underestim­ate how profoundly our world has changed, yet we live knowing that in Jesus’ Kingdom, there won’t be heartache. Suffering and conflict will be gone.

“So how will we live according to the values of that future Kingdom today?”

30 million additional children are at risk of disease and death.

 ??  ?? Tearfund worked with Katunga, a farmer in the Democratic Republic of Congo, to adjust her crops and distributi­on method during the pandemic.
Tearfund worked with Katunga, a farmer in the Democratic Republic of Congo, to adjust her crops and distributi­on method during the pandemic.
 ??  ?? In Narok County, Kenya, as schools remain closed, some children are still able to learn vital literacy skills in an open-air classroom thanks to teachers in the region trained by World Vision Kenya.
In Narok County, Kenya, as schools remain closed, some children are still able to learn vital literacy skills in an open-air classroom thanks to teachers in the region trained by World Vision Kenya.
 ??  ?? CBM partnered with local churches to enable pastors to buy food and distribute it; (above) a family in Bolivia receives some food essentials.
CBM partnered with local churches to enable pastors to buy food and distribute it; (above) a family in Bolivia receives some food essentials.
 ??  ?? Women in Peru listen to the gospel on a solar-powered, fix-tuned radio and audio Bible from Galcom Internatio­nal – made by volunteers in Canada.
Women in Peru listen to the gospel on a solar-powered, fix-tuned radio and audio Bible from Galcom Internatio­nal – made by volunteers in Canada.
 ??  ?? When 12-year-old Mitayli’s father was hospitaliz­ed for Covid-19 in Nicaragua, Compassion’s local church partner stood in the gap. They called every day to check in and pray, and increased food package deliveries.
When 12-year-old Mitayli’s father was hospitaliz­ed for Covid-19 in Nicaragua, Compassion’s local church partner stood in the gap. They called every day to check in and pray, and increased food package deliveries.

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