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Drought Pushes Turkana Herders to Farming
Listen to a recent VOA interview with Darren Harder, World Relief’s South Sudan Country Director. (Interview begins at 7:04)
Seeking Refuge Receives Award of Merit in Christianity Today’s 2017 Book Awards
Seeking Refuge: On the Shores of the Global Refugee Crisis, written by Stephan Bauman, Matthew Soerens and, Dr. Issam Smeir, received an Award of Merit in Christianity Today’s 2017 Book Awards. Read Story
The Christian Post Publishes Op-Ed Written by World Relief CEO Tim Breene
In an op-ed entitled “Mosul’s Liberation Has Begun. Is the World Ready?” World Relief CEO, Tim Breene, proposes four guiding principles that should be a part of the response to the conflict in Mosul. Read Op-Ed
World Relief’s Refugee Resettlement Work Featured on ABC News’ Nightline
ABC News’ David Muir explores the journey Syrian refugees take to arrive and resettle in the United States in the Nightline segment, “Flashpoint: Refugees in America.” Watch story
The New York Times Profiles the Welcome of Refugees by Johnson Ferry Baptist Church
In the article, “Evangelicals Ignore G.O.P. by Embracing Syrian Refugees,” The New York Times profiles the refugee resettlement efforts of World Relief’s partner church Johnson Ferry Baptist Church. Read Story
Time Magazine Op-Ed by World Relief President Scott Arbeiter
Time.com featured “Syria’s Children Are the World’s Responsibility,” an op-ed written by World Relief President Scott Arbeiter. Read Op-Ed
Drought Pushes Turkana Herders to Farming
Farmers receive high value seeds and technical expertise to boost harvest. Download the story
Why Waging Peace is Necessary in the DR Congo
By Jenny Yang
Kasolene is a beautiful, loving mother of four children in eastern DR Congo. She’s been a survivor of sexual violence – twice. She said, “When my husband and I were raising our third child, I was raped. After the rape, he has directly forsaken me telling me that he cannot live with a raped woman for fear of being despised and rejected by the community.”
Kasolene became pregnant with her fourth child as a result of the rape, and her husband abandoned her. Left with the responsibility to provide for her children, Kasolene was forced to work in the fields, where a soldier then raped her for the second time.
Kasolene’s story should be unique – but it’s not. Some experts consider the DR Congo to be among the world’s worst places for women to live.Engaged in a cycle of conflict and violence which has cost more than 5 million lives, rape is regularly used as a weapon of war. At one time, 48 women were raped in the DR Congo every hour.
War has become more profitable than peace in the DR Congo, and the efforts of the international community to combat such violence have made little progress. They’ve often focused on addressing the consequences of the conflict, not the causes of the conflict. Top-down diplomacy is needed, but such efforts will not be successful without grassroots peace building activities where grievances between individuals are addressed to ensure they will not escalate into a greater conflict.
As is often the plight for women in DR Congo who survive sexual violence, Kasolene was abandoned. Fortunately, she met counselors who’d been trained by World Relief in trauma counseling. They voluntarily took her to the hospital to ensure that she received the medical care she needed.
Kasolene is now raising beans and is dreaming of starting a business in pig-breeding in order to build a small house and to get all of her children through school without difficulties. She said, “Today I feel better with meetings of the club formed by World Relief and with sharing of the word of God, and with the comfort and support they give us.”
Trained and empowered local counselors and peace makers are making a real difference to resolve conflict to reduce the stigma against those who have suffered gender-based violence and also to heal and build up entire communities. Join us in empowering peace makers in the DR Congo while raising your voice to Wage Peace and ask our elected officials support peace in the DR Congo.
You can join us by giving today to support women in DR Congo affected by gender-based violence. All donations will be matched by One Day’s Wages. Your gift will be used to provide medical care and trauma counseling for the victims of sexual violence and to raise community awareness about violence against women.
Give now at onedayswages.org/worldrelief.
Jenny Yang is vice president of advocacy and policy at World Relief and the co-author of Welcoming the Stranger.
Turning Outrage into Action in DR Congo
By Lynne Hybels
It started out as an ordinary day for Cecile, a married mother of five children. With her family relying on farming for their livelihood, Cecile decided to get a head start by walking to the fields early that morning. As she approached the field, however, she was stopped and threatened by eight armed men. Alone and helpless, Cecile began to cry, but this didn’t discourage her attackers. She was raped by five of the men before she lost consciousness and was left to die.
In the Eastern region of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DR Congo), eight out of ten women have been raped. Like Cecile, they are victims of a civil war that has become the deadliest war since WWII. Over five million people have been killed. Millions more have been displaced from their homes, their farms and their livelihoods. And brutal rape is used as a weapon of war by fighters who say it’s cheaper to rape a woman than to waste a bullet; if you rape enough women you can destroy the soul of a whole village, a region, even a country. Some experts call the DR Congo the worst place on earth to be a woman.
I first heard about this conflict on an NPR news report in 2008. Shocked and heartbroken, I searched for an organization responding to this horrific suffering with compassion and wisdom; my search lead me to World Relief. Twice since then I’ve traveled to Eastern Congo with World Relief to meet with women like Cecile. On a single day two years ago I sat in a simple church sanctuary in the town of Rutshuru and listened to eleven women — ages 8 through 58 — tell their stories. All had been brutally raped. Many had watched their husbands murdered and their daughters raped. Some were hospitalized for months because of rape-inflicted wounds. Others had been impregnated by their rapists. Some had begged God to let them die.
Perhaps worst of all, in a distorted patriarchal culture that offers impunity to rapists and blames victims, some of the women we met had been rejected by their families. Physically scarred, emotionally wounded and finally abandoned, these women had lost all hope. But local church counselors, trained and mobilized by World Relief, embraced these women with tangible love in the form of medical, psychosocial and economic support. Through counseling and income-generating projects, offered in the context of ongoing relationships, the women we met had been reintegrated as vital members of their communities. Committed to changing the culture of impunity surrounding rape, World Relief also works closely with schools, government representatives, traditional leaders and military leaders to raise awareness and change cultural attitudes towards women.
What about Cecile? Sadly, when her husband discovered she’d been raped he rejected her and left her at her parents’ house. Fortunately, her parents contacted the counselors trained by World Relief, who helped Cecile get the medical and emotional care she needed. They also initiated contact with her husband, Jean. After repeated conversations with the counselors, Jean’s heart was completely changed. Not only did he humbly welcome Cecile back home, but he also offered financial assistance to other rape victims being cared for by the counselors.
I don’t have words to describe my outrage at the horror of rape as a weapon of war. But that outrage propelled me action: to learn, to pray, to speak up and to give. Would you join me in being outraged and in taking action? Together, World Relief and One Days Wages are turning stories of inconceivable suffering into stories of hope. On behalf of the women of Congo, I ask you to give generously today!
When you give now, you’re supporting women in DR Congo affected by gender-based violence. Your gift will be used to provide medical care and trauma counseling for the victims of sexual violence and to raise community awareness about violence against women. All donations will be matched by One Day’s Wages.
Lynne Hybels is the co-founder of Willow Creek Community Church in Illinois. In the Democratic Republic of Congo, where the deadliest conflict since WWII still rages, she has partnered with local churches that are caring for women who have been brutally raped, and are initiating grassroots peacemaking efforts in their villages.
The Church in Congo
By James Misner and Marcel Serubungo In the Democratic Republic of Congo, some say that you can find all of Africa’s problems: weak national leadership, eroding rule of law, HIV/AIDS and protracted tribal conflict. Warring militias use rape as a weapon of war and perpetrate other human rights violations. Children are stolen, forced to become soldiers and used as proxies between fighting groups.
Congolese civilians are caught in the vicious cycles of conflict and disease. Millions have died as a result. Refugees and internally displaced people number into the millions.
But even in the world’s most war-torn regions, the power of Jesus can overcome the horrors of conflict. After years of warfare, the Church in DR Congo is the only social structure standing. It is the only hope of true peace for survivors of violence.
This is the reality of the Church in DR Congo:
- The Church is traumatized. Many people in the Church have been displaced from their homes. They’ve fled as refugees, survived grave atrocities, lost entire crops and ran through the night in search of safety. Our Christian brothers and sisters in DR Congo face the same situations that their greater communities face — they’re not immune from struggle.
- The Church is resilient. Even in the midst of adversity and unspeakable hardship, the church in DR Congo stands strong! Despite ethnic divisions within the nation, the church builds unity and reconciliation. They’ve refused to give up the pursuit of peace. They continue meeting together, praying together and worshiping God together. In some of the worst poverty and injustice on the planet the church gathers to proclaim the greatness of God! We have much to learn from them as they restore their communities.
- The Church is redeeming suffering. None of us can explain precisely why God allows suffering. But we do know that God redeems it — through his hands and feet, the Church. When a woman survives sexual violence, the Church will take her in, provide food and shelter and help her to care for her children. When cultural norms say that husbands should abandon their wives after rape — the Church works to debunk this lie and to reconcile marriages. The Church stands in the gap and speaks out against this injustice — teaching boys and men that women are created in God’s image and are to be respected and treasured.
Wherever there is suffering in DR Congo – the Church is right there, too. And World Relief is there to empower the Church to fulfill its mission: to bring hope to the hopeless and restore justice to the oppressed. As the people of the Church endure suffering, they faithfully follow in the steps of Jesus – bringing healing to their communities as they themselves are healed.
Would you consider making a gift to empower local churches to prevent further gender-based violence and care for women survivors? All donations will be matched by One Day’s Wages. Your gift will be used to provide medical care and trauma counseling for the victims of sexual violence and to raise community awareness about violence against women. Give today at onedayswages.org/worldrelief.
James and Marcel are both members of the church team at World Relief. James serves as the Global Director of Church Partnership. Marcel serves as the Director of Church Mobilization and Peace Building in DR Congo.