A Worshipping, Praying, Learning, Nurturing, Sharing Community Jan 06, 2009 - 02:16 PM
Search   
Main Menu

Current Book Club Book
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/031601429X/newcreationlu-20


Music Downloads

Login




 


 Log in Problems?
 New User? Sign Up!

Online
There are 1 unlogged user and 0 registered users online.

You can log-in or register for a user account here.

Lutheran World Relief Expands Response To Niger Food Crisis
Posted by: Admin on Aug 17, 2005 - 05:41 AM
Church News Baltimore, August 10, 2005—Lutheran World Relief is scaling up its response to the Niger food crisis, as the implementing partner of an appeal through Action by Churches Together (ACT) International, a global coalition of churches and faith-based agencies working in relief and development.

“With a 30-year history in Niger and established relationships with our local partner agencies, LWR was a natural choice to implement the ACT appeal,” said LWR president Kathryn Wolford. “By working on behalf of our partners in ACT, we will be able to nearly double the reach that we would have on our own.”

As the implementing agency of the ACT appeal, LWR is seeking $763,185 to expand its existing programs in Maradi, Tillaberi and Tahoua, which are among the areas worst affected by the food crisis. LWR and partners will provide supplemental food rations, purchased from local markets in Niger and neighboring markets in Nigeria , to approximately 93,000 people. These food rations will meet the most immediate needs and bridge the gap until the World Food Program food distribution pipelines reach these communities.
With an agency-wide commitment to addressing the root causes of poverty, not just the symptoms, LWR will also include longer-term efforts in its Niger response. These plans include the distribution of 10 tons of seed stock for future plantings, repair of five existing grain banks, and construction of 30 new ones. Grain banks will be used to store seeds between harvests, and after the harvest each household that received seeds will repay 1/3 of the amount received, provided the harvest is sufficient.

Niger, the world's second poorest nation, is suffering a food shortage caused by poor rains and locust attacks that decimated last year's crops. Approximately 3.5 million people are affected, 800,000 of them children. Livestock intended for food are themselves starving, for lack of feed. Rising food prices have made it impossible for the most impoverished to purchase what food is available, and a belated international response has allowed the situation to reach crisis proportions.

Generous Support from Churches

The ACT-LWR response in Niger will be partially funded by generous gifts from the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) and The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod (LCMS), the two church bodies that support LWR's work.

“This is a large disaster that's gone unnoticed,” said the Rev. Dr. Rafael Malpica-Padilla, executive director of the ELCA Division for Global Mission, which is providing $100,000 toward ACT-LWR's work in Niger. “Because of the lack of a prompt response from the international community, now we have a situation that's more difficult to address. We must be attentive to these ‘silent disasters' that affect millions of people. We have a long history of companionship with LWR, and we know LWR's good track record – it's an important partner and companion for us.”

LCMS World Relief and Human Care pledged $20,000 to the ACT-LWR appeal. “LCMS World Relief, St. Louis treasures our partnership with LWR Baltimore,” said the Rev. Matthew Harrison, that agency's executive director. “Through LWR our donors combine their gifts with many other individuals and organizations to bring immediate aid to critical situations. We are confident thousands will be assisted immediately. And the people of the LCMS are honored to participate as good world citizens in this humanitarian work.”

A Long History

LWR began working in Niger in the early 1970s, after a series of severe droughts had impacted food production, much like the current crisis. In many areas, abundant water was available just 10 yards below the ground, but the hand-dug wells most villages used were prone to collapsing in the unstable, sandy soil. LWR developed inexpensive concrete-walled wells, and taught community leaders how to install them. Those leaders in turn taught more people, and over a 10-year period, more than 3,000 of these wells were installed. The communities that got them benefited tremendously from having a readily available water supply, and the wells opened the gates for other development projects such as crop diversification, irrigation systems, and even road improvements.

Water management and sustainable agriculture have always been central components of LWR's work in Niger and neighboring countries. Grain banks, wells and community training are aspects of LWR's ongoing projects with local partners in Niger that will continue after the immediate crisis has passed. It is ongoing work like this that helps strengthen communities and make them less vulnerable to the conditions that led to the current crisis.
Lutheran World Relief Expands Response To Niger Food Crisis | Log-in or register a new user account | 0 Comments
Comments are statements made by the person that posted them.
They do not necessarily represent the opinions of the site editor.
PostNuke :: PostNuke Support :: Developers 
New Creation Lutheran Church -- 7275 Santa Teresa Blvd. San Jose, CA 95139 -- 408-972-9200
All logos and trademarks in this site are property of their respective owner.
The comments are property of their posters, all the rest (c) 2005-2007 by Outstanding Imagery
You can syndicate our news using the file backend.php