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May 16, 2008
United Methodists respond to China earthquake
A UMNS Report
By Linda Bloom
United Methodists are working with a longtime partner in China to provide
immediate relief to those affected by the massive earthquake in Sichuan
Province.
On May 15, China’s state-run media announced that the death toll from the May
12 earthquake, which registered 7.9 on the Richter scale, could reach as high as
50,000. The earthquake’s epicenter was in Wenchuan County, about 60 miles from
Chengdu, the capital of Sichuan Province.
Both the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries, including the United
Methodist Committee on Relief, and Church World Service are responding to the
earthquake through the Amity Foundation.
Diane Allen, who heads the board’s China Program, said Amity “has been very
swift” in both providing initial aid and giving ongoing reports to its overseas
partners. The Amity Foundation is an independent Chinese voluntary organization
created in 1985 by Chinese Christians to promote education, social services,
health and rural development.
Amity’s project officer for disaster programs, Yue Yaomeng, had arrived in
Chengdu less than five hours after the earthquake, which occurred around 2:30
p.m. local time May 12.
Allen said that Amity immediately released 1 million yuan, about $145,000, to
purchase 6,000 bottle cases of drinking water, 2,400 cases of dried instant
noodles and 1,700 plastic tarps for temporary shelter.
Three trucks were sent to Dujiangyan, where hundreds of students were trapped
when several schools collapsed during the earthquake.
Distribution of water, rice, tarps
“Amity’s relief efforts will concentrate in Sichuan Province, as well as
neighboring Gansu and Sha’anxi provinces that have also been affected by the
quake,” Allen said. Those efforts will include the immediate distribution of
drinking water, rice, quilts and plastic tarps.
Allen has visited Sichuan Province in the past, and she described it as a
mountainous region that is “spectacularly beautiful.” But the mountainous
terrain, she added, makes it hard to get vehicles there, particularly after the
rain. Three days after the earthquake, rescuers were still cut off from some of
the affected villages.
For long-term relief, Amity has drawn up plans for a post-crisis phase that
includes the reconstruction of houses, collapsed schools, township hospitals and
village medical clinics, as well as of drinking water and irrigation systems.
According to Amity’s official appeal, its relief work, administered through
its local partners, will concentrate on families whose homes are uninhabitable
because of structural damage and collapse, those who have lost more than
two-thirds of their possessions, and the extremely impoverished in the affected
regions.
Overseas relief is critical for the earthquake victims, Allen pointed out,
because despite its economy, China “has one of the largest gaps between the rich
and poor of any nation on earth.”
“China’s singular focus on the economy in the last 20 years has created a
litany of social ills,” she explained. “There is a great disparity between those
who live in the poor remote western provinces of China (where the earthquake
occurred) and the relatively rich urban east, which showcases Beijing, Shanghai,
Guangzhou, Nanjing, Hangzhou, all large and prosperous cities.”
Poverty-stricken region
According to World Bank estimates, about 45 percent of China’s population
lives on $2 a day, with much of that population in the earthquake region.
Migrant workers have flocked to the cities, sometimes leaving their children
with grandparents in rural villages.
“Consequently, there are villages where adults of working age are clearly in
the minority, as they have had to make the hard choice to go elsewhere for work,
in hopes of returning in a few years, a little better off,” Allen said. “When an
earthquake like this one hits a village where the majority of residents are the
very young and the very old, it is doubly tragic.”
Ken Guest, a United Methodist and an assistant professor in the Department of
Sociology and Anthropology at Baruch College in New York, agreed that the
earthquake has made a bad economic situation worse in what is a beautiful and
fertile but basically rural region. “Sichuan Province is one of the poorest
provinces in the country,” he said. “A lot of the young people from these areas
leave to find work.”
Guest, who has studied immigration patterns from China’s Fuzhou Province to
New York, noted that when Chinese from Fuzhou go to the New York area in search
of restaurant jobs, they rent their fields to internal migrants from Sichuan.
Sichuan also is a “hot spot” because it borders Tibet on the southwest end.
“It’s an area of concern for the government in general in terms of political
stability,” he said.
Donations to UMCOR’s relief efforts in China can be made to International
Disaster Response, China Earthquake, UMCOR Advance #982450. Checks can be
dropped in church offering plates or mailed directly to UMCOR, P.O. Box 9068,
New York, N.Y. 10087-9068. Write the Advance number and name on the memo line of
the check. Credit-card donations are accepted online at
www.givetomission.org or by phone at
800-554-8583.
Plate offerings received in Indiana Area United Methodist Churches need to be
sent to the respective conference treasurer with the information above noted on
the check.
Linda Bloom serves as a United Methodist News Service
news writer based in New York.
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