Overseas
& Domestic Ministries
Margaret Yu ¡V Campus Crusade
Praise God for the 70 people who received Christ through the work of
summer missions teams this past summer. Please pray for
the 250,000 Asian Americans heading off to this college and next.
In 4 years only 1 in 5 will be connected to a church. Please
pray that staffing and funding levels will be adequate to meet this
area of need. Please pray for Margaret and Kevin as Margaret
seeks to balance her ministry and family needs. Also, please pray
for Kevin as he recently finished high school and is currently
looking for a part-time job. Please pray for Margaret to have
wisdom and discernment as she leads a National HR team.
His Work Elsewhere
Getting aid to
Georgia difficult Georgia (MNN) ―
President Bush has reiterated that Russia must honor its commitment
to withdraw its troops from Georgia. He's calling Georgia a
"courageous democracy" and again stressed the importance of respect
for its sovereignty. He said the Georgian people have cast their lot
with Western democracies and said the West will not "cast them
aside." Meanwhile, German Chancellor Angela Merkel stressed
support for Georgia's territorial integrity and called Russian
actions in Georgia disproportionate. She spoke after talks in
Russia's Black Sea resort of Sochi with Russian President Dmitri
Medvedev, who expressed doubt that residents of Georgia's breakaway
regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia will ever accept being part of
Georgia. As the political posturing continues, the human
crisis continues. World Vision is responding. World Vision
teams in both Georgia and the Russian Federation are responding to
the increasing humanitarian needs of children and families who have
fled the conflict zone. World Vision's Rachel Wolfe says,
"The estimates right now from the UNHCR is that at least 100,000
people have fled both to the south and the north. The good news is
that World Vision is on the ground in both directions." In
North Ossetia, World Vision is providing medical supplies such as
bandages, crutches, pain relievers, syringes and antibiotics to the
wounded through partners. Wolfe says there's more to this
crisis than homelessness and hunger. "Many, many families have been
separated. We're seeing that on the ground. There's a need that goes
beyond the basics. And especially for the children, World Vision
wants to make sure that they have safe places to go to talk about
what they've experienced, to start playing and having a normal
routine again. And that's why we're setting up these Child-Friendly
Spaces." Meanwhile, the Christian humanitarian agency
continues to assist civilians who fled south into Georgia proper.
"The humanitarian needs here are growing exponentially,
faster than the combined agencies can keep up," warned David Womble,
national director of World Vision in Georgia. "We continue to look
at the tip of the iceberg." World Vision's team in Georgia
has been asked by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees,
the World Food Program and the government of Georgia to increase its
response as quickly as possible to meet the immediate food, non-food
and health needs of internally displaced people. Even as more than
100 official collection centers have opened in Tbilisi and
surrounding areas, thousands of displaced people remain unregistered
and lack access to shelter or food. According to Russian
officials, more than 30,000 people have fled into North Ossetia, and
more than 150 public buildings are providing temporary shelter.
"World Vision is especially concerned about the longer-term
needs of children who have seen and experienced the horrors of war,"
Kimmerle said from North Ossetia. "In addition, school is starting
in two weeks, so we are considering how best to assist children as
they start the academic year in communities where they have been
given temporary shelter." One young mother named Shushanik
arrived from South Ossetia with her 3-year-old son: "I was scared
out of my mind. Bullets were flying around like hail," she told
World Vision staff in North Ossetia. "I hope my son is too young to
remember this war," she said.
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