Indigenous Workers in Nepal in Prime Position to Aid Earthquake Victims
From Christian Aid Mission (www.christianaid.org) For Immediate Release
Contact: Amie Cotton APR, +1 (434) 327-1240, Amie@christianaid.org
KATHMANDU, NEPAL (ANS – April 30, 2015)
-- The earthquake in Nepal on Saturday (April 25) is an ongoing
disaster of intense and widespread magnitude that has hit millions of
people with long-lasting effects. While many organizations are rushing
aid to the Himalayan republic, Christian Aid Mission's South Asia
director said the primary challenge is not gathering food and tents to
send to Nepal.
“During these kinds of disasters, gathering up enough aid is one
challenge, and getting it to the people is another,” said the director,
Sarla, who is traveling to her native country this week to encourage
ministry leaders and assess damages. “In some of these areas, access is
only on foot.”
The indigenous ministries in Nepal that Christian Aid Mission assists
are well-positioned to distribute aid to survivors of the 7.8-strong
earthquake that took the lives of 5,500 people and injured at least
10,000 others. With rains and landslides cutting off road access to many
areas, local Christian workers know how to get aid to people deprived
of their homes and to come alongside the shell-shocked survivors in
their trauma, she said.
The ministries that Christian Aid assists can cheaply purchase food, water, and tents from local sources, she added.
Rains hit many areas after the earthquake, and with the monsoon
season approaching, there are fears that disease will spread rapidly.
One native ministry leader, Bhai Anugraha, reported that when his team
went to Bhaktapur outside of Kathmandu, they found diarrhea was already
rampant.
“There are at least 100 people living in a single tent of 20 feet by
12 feet,” he said. “The weather is not good either; it has been
continuously raining. They do not have toilets. It is a mess. We were
the first ones to provide at least some help.”
Near the tectonic plates that created the largest mountains in the
world, the Himalayas and their highest peak at Mt. Everest, earth
shifted with a deafening rumble. That sent masonry from humble homes to
heritage sites crashing to the ground. With shaking from India (72 dead)
to China (25 dead), the earthquake and scores of aftershocks have
affected 10 million of Nepal's 33 million people. They have lost loved
ones, homes, businesses, or farms from the quake or its after-effects,
such as landslides.
The
total death toll could exceed 10,000, Prime Minister Sushil Koirala
said, and at least 450,000 people are reported to have been displaced
from their homes.
In Gorkha District, at the epicenter 83 kilometers (51 miles)
northwest of the capital city of Kathmandu, Barpak village was leveled,
Sarla said.
“Of the 1,200 houses, only four are still standing,” she said. “In
Gorkha, people are walking out of the village. Also, many churches were
lost in the Sindhupalchok area.”
A Nepalese ministry leader in Kathmandu, Gopaljee, was guest-speaking
at a church in the capital when the quake hit; he and the 70 people in
attendance survived the rocking and swaying, but he said a church
meeting on the seventh-floor of a building in the Copan area of
Kathmandu ended in catastrophe.
“All of a sudden, with the earthquake it came down, and 28 people died,” he said.
Two nearby worship sites were destroyed, and in Ramechap in western
Nepal, three people died when two other church buildings came down, he
said.
“A lot of relief agencies are working in different places, but they
cannot cover all of the affected areas,” he said. “We talked to people
from Ramechap, and we said, 'OK, we're going to Ramechap. Not all of the
roads are paved – it was rainy; it was very difficult. From a certain
point onward the members of our team had to
walk.”
Churches in Nepal meet on Saturday, and many Christians in Kathmandu
and surrounding areas survived because they were in worship centers
built to code rather than in aged homes when the quake struck at 11:56
a.m., Sarla said. A ministry leader based in Kathmandu thanked God that
his church, 600 members sitting on the floor of a two-story concrete
structure, suffered no injuries or deaths.
“It struck while we were at the end of the worship service, before
the benediction and final prayer,” Sita Poudel said. “The building shook
very hard for almost three minutes; it was a very frightening
experience.”
Poudel requested prayer for those who lost loved ones and property, and for those involved in rescue and relief efforts.
“The disaster is enormous and widespread, and it is hard to even
imagine the scale of damage,” he said. “The scale of the disaster is
beyond our capacity or comprehension, but we will have to act to help
however we can during this hour. You are welcome to partner with us in
relief and rescue.”
Christian Aid Mission's history with Nepal goes back to the origins
of the organization – and the introduction of Christianity to that
country. Organization founder Bob Finley prayed in 1948 that he would
see people come to Christ in Nepal during his lifetime, at that time a
Hindu monarchy with no known Christians.
In 1951 Prem Pradhan of Nepal traveled to India, heard the gospel,
and then returned home to preach Christ. He is widely recognized as the
first apostle to Nepal. Christian Aid assisted Pradhan, who continued in
his ministry after completing a six-year jail sentence for preaching
Christ. Today the estimated number of Christians in Nepal is nearly 1
million.
Christian Aid's South Asia director, whose maternal grandparents'
home survived Nepal's last epic quake in 1934, as well as the April 25
shaking, said she is eager to see how the organization can help
Christian workers minister to victims of the disaster in the name of
Christ. Some of the ministries are in remote areas,
such as Gorkha, where the quake has cut off communications.
“I'm
just really praying for the people in Gorkha; they're right near the
epicenter,” Sarla said. “And they're not going to be the priority to get
the government help.”
The immediate challenges are daunting, and long-term needs will stretch the ministries' capacity.
“The monsoons are coming, so it's probably going to get worse – after
that, Kathmandu will have the danger of all kinds of diseases, because
you have mosquitos and other problems,” Sarla said. “And in the
aftermath, rebuilding will be hard, because there are no support systems
in the country. The Nepali diaspora will send
help, but those in the affected areas are going to need support long-term to rebuild.”
To help indigenous missionaries meet needs, you may contribute online at www.christianaid.org/Gifts/Basket.aspx, or call 434-977-5650.
If you prefer to mail your gift, please send it to Christian Aid
Mission, P.O. Box 9037, Charlottesville, VA 22906. Please use Gift Code:
702DIS. Thank you!
Photo captions: 1) A church planter, identified only as a graduate of
Nepal Bible College in Kathmandu, was one casualty of the earthquake
(Photo: Christian Aid Mission). 2) Relief efforts in Nepal (Photo by
United Nations Development Program). 3). This woman miraculously
survived the earthquake.
Christian Aid Mission is an evangelical missionary
organization based in Charlottesville, Virginia, that assists indigenous
missionary ministries overseas through prayer, advocacy and financial
support. Since 1953, Christian Aid Mission has identified, evaluated and
assisted more than 1,500 ministries in more than 130
countries
that are reaching the unreached for Christ in areas of the world where
there is no witness for Christ, where Christians suffer from poverty or
persecution, or where foreign missionaries are not allowed. Today, we
assist more than 500 ministries overseas with tens of thousands of
indigenous or native missionaries in the field. These ministries are
currently working among more than 1,000 people groups in 100+ countries
around the world. For more information, please visit www.christianaid.org .
** You may republish this and any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service
(www.assistnews.net)
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