6th
July, 2007
MICHAEL
IRELAND
Assist
News Service
With inflation exceeding 4,500 per cent - some reports
put the figure nearer 8,000 per cent - currency no longer
buys food and medical care in the African nation of Zimbabwe.
There is little food due to drought and poor harvests, and
the collapse of civil infrastructure has meant basic services
are no longer available to the majority of Zimbabweans.
Christian
churches in Zimbabwe are fighting poverty, hunger
and HIV among Zimbabwe’s decimated communities
and helping to meet the basic day to day needs, says
UK Christian relief agency Tearfund.
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Christian
churches in the country, however, are fighting poverty, hunger
and HIV among Zimbabwe’s decimated communities and helping
to meet the basic day to day needs, says UK Christian relief
agency Tearfund.
Peter Grant, Tearfund’s international director, says
the situation is desperate with children now suffering from
very high levels of chronic malnutrition.
“People are dying. It’s the very young, the very
old, and those with Aids who are the most vulnerable,”
says Grant. “We heard recently of a church leader who
had to bury a grandmother and a baby from the same family
over the same weekend. As the year goes on with the continuing
food shortages, we can expect the situation to get worse,
and more people to die.”
Tearfund says that even if people could afford to go to hospital,
there are no longer medical supplies to treat them. The wages
of hospital staff do not even cover the bus fare to work.
The crisis has engulfed the cities, where food distributions
were rarely seen previously. Middle income school teachers
told Tearfund that they can’t even afford to buy sugar.
Pastor Promise Manceda leads a church in Bulawayo and sees
the stark reality. “If the middle classes consider themselves
poor, then the most marginalized people in society are hit
so much harder,” says Manceda. “We have to help
them - and it is only with God’s strength that we are
still able to.”
HIV and Aids related illnesses have compounded the suffering
- leaving many unable to work in fear and isolation. Unemployment
is over 80 per cent and those that can find casual work often
do so for small amounts of food. Others search around for
vegetables to supplement meager amounts of maize, getting
by on one inadequate meal a day. Because of the lack of food
over the last five years many of Zimbabwe’s children
suffer from chronic malnutrition and an increasing number
are too sick to go to school.
Esinah is a grandmother aged in her 80s, caring for eight
AIDS orphans. Queuing for maize, beans and oil at a food distribution
funded by Tearfund she spoke of the people dying in her community.
“There
have been many deaths and people are starving,” says
Esinah. “Without this food we could be dead by now.
Only God knows what will happen.”
Supporting churches in wider relief response is at the heart
of Tearfund’s vision. The UK agency is funding, assisting
and standing with them as they tirelessly work to fight poverty
and social injustice. Tearfund’s Peter Grant talks of
the churches having a Biblical mandate to speak out against
poverty - as they continue to engage the public square while
they can, remaining non-political within civil society.
“To
speak out requires real courage and they need our support
in prayer,” adds Grant. “They need practical support
and continued international pressure for change.”
Tearfund is currently funding feeding programs for some 9,500
orphans and vulnerable children. Working through churches
and church based agencies this is relieving some of the immediate
suffering - providing essential, but very limited, assistance.
Many more need help.
~ www.tearfund.org
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