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COOPERATIVE BAPTIST FELLOWSHIP | WWW.THEFELLOWSHIP.INFO
January/February 2006
One year later: Fellowship continues Southeast Asia tsunami relief
D
ec. 26, 2004 should have been a day like any other. At least it started out that way. Fishermen set out with their boats to sea.
Women woke their children. Life was normal. But in an instant — a roaring wave, a rush of water — life changed for coastal residents of Southeast Asia.
Global Missions coordinator. The Fellowship has also helped Individuals and groups “We are deeply grateful to repair or purchase fishing from churches volunteered all whose on-going support boats to enable fishermen to in the area, helping with through the Offering for return to their livelihood. construction projects and in Global Missions enables medical clinics that treated The Fellowship continues our personnel to partner with to be on the local churches field, and whose and internagenerosity has tional groups provided resources such as Habitat so we can for Humanrespond to these ity, Mercy devastating needs.” Foundation Needs in the and others for region are still new housing great. Rebuilding is projects. a slow process, but The rainy the Fellowship has season brings Generous contributions from Fellowship Baptists and churches committed to meet further comhelped fisherman devastated by the tsunami take steps to regain their livelihood. long-term needs. plications. Some tents LEARN – For thousands of tsunami continually sit in puddles of more information on tsunami survivors. water. The Fellowship helped relief, visit www.thefellowship. “Because of the outpouring provide wooden floors, which info/disaster/tsunami. To make of love and concern from CBF give temporary relief by lifting an online contribution to these partners and friends, shattered tents and allowing water to efforts, visit www.thefellowship. lives are being restored, new flow underneath. info/Landing/giving.icm and hope is being engendered, and In India, where many give to the Offering for Global those who felt they had no churches were damaged or Missions. future are slowly embracing destroyed by the tsunami, the courage to face another Fellowship is funding new By Carla Wynn, CBF day,” said Jack Snell, interim church buildings. Communications
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Stretch Ledford photo
meters of the Indian Ocean. More than 225,000 people When buffer zones were lost their lives, bringing a proestablished, these families lost found sense of suffering and their land. The new village will loss to those who survived. include a community center An ocean away, Fellowship with specialized programming Baptists saw the destruction, such as day care or various and they responded. More skill training. than $2.56 million was More than An ocean away, contribFellowship Baptists saw 45 schools have uted to the been helped the destruction, and Fellowship’s through rethey responded. Asian Rebuilding or sponse fund, supplies such as which is aiding in tsunami books, clothing and shoes. relief and development projLivelihood kits specific ects in Southeast Asia. As of to occupations have been Dec. 6, more than $885,600 provided to get carpenters, has been distributed to help fishermen, farmers and in a multitude of restoration, mechanics back in business, rebuilding and development thus providing an income for projects, which will continue their families. More than 1,300 through December 2007. kits were distributed this fall. The tsunami flooded many wells and destroyed other means of obtaining clean water. Through drilling new wells and constructing water towers, clean water MONEY GIVEN last sumis being made available to mer to the Jimmy and Rocommunities. In one area salynn Carter Offering for where only 17 percent of Religious Liberty and Huwater storage tanks were man Rights is being put to functional, repairs have use to help hilltribe immirestored the system to serve grants in Thailand obtain approximately 3,000 people. legal status in that country. The Fellowship has also “This offering has been provided water purification extremely timely,” noted tablets in India and larger Rick Burnette, one of CBF’s purification systems capable of Global Missions field percleaning 600 gallons of water sonnel. “We don’t think it per hour. A new affordable was merely coincidental.” well-drilling technology has Rick and his wife, Ellen, been introduced by CBF and work with various hilltribe Thanks to money given to the Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter Offering for Religious its partners in Sri Lanka with people as liaisons with the Liberty and Human Rights, Rick Burnette, left, is able to help Thailand hilltribe the intention of using this in Palaung and Kachin minor- immigrants to obtain legal status in that country. to distant sites to work. As immar over the last two decades other areas needing water. ity networks, assisting commigrants, it has been difficult for and have settled in Thailand near munities in finding ways to In Sri Lanka, the them to get documentation to the border with Myanmar. They make a living, including susFellowship is partnering to allow them to work. live in villages that are squeezed tainable agriculture, and dealbuild a new 77-house village Recently, Thailand opened by neighboring citrus plantaing with related rights issues. that will house “squatter” up an opportunity for some tions and national park land and Many of the Palaung and families, who lived on of these immigrants to obtain depend on the ability to travel Kachin fled civil unrest in Myanborrowed land within 100
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Carter offering makes resident status possible for Thailand hilltribe immigrants
Stretch Ledford photo
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alien resident cards which offer significant residence rights. But the cost to register is generally beyond their means — about 5,100 baht, or approximately $123 at the current rate of exchange. “That is a lot of money for most Palaung families,” Rick noted. “They make somewhere between a dollar to two dollars a day.” Using $10,000 of the Carter offering along with another $30,000 in donations from churches and individuals, the Burnettes, working with a Christian development project, have set up a revolving fund for those eligible to get this documentation. Currently, the Thai government has said immigrants are eligible if they came to Thailand before Oct. — Continued on page 8