BGR, IMB join forces to reach those hit by storms in Africa

BGR, IMB join forces to reach those hit by storms in Africa

Severe rains have hammered Madagascar, Mozambique and Malawi in recent weeks, displacing more than 200,000 people and leaving hundreds more missing or dead. Baptist Global Response (BGR) and International Mission Board (IMB) personnel rushed aid to vital areas, delivering food and supplies to families with critical needs across southern Africa.

Rivers swelled beyond capacity, converted plains into lakes and completely erased villages. In Malawi, a reported 275 people are missing or assumed dead. Mozambique reported there were 11,000 homes destroyed and 88 fatalities.

Many villages in Malawi and Mozambique remain closed off by flooded roads. Despite the ongoing obstacles, IMB missionaries are launching relief efforts where possible.

Partnering with BGR, missionaries in Mozambique distributed food and supplies to more than 600 families.

Hitting home

Cyclone Chedza hit Madagascar on Jan. 16, causing havoc across the center of the island. IMB missionaries David and Kristin Washer were at home when the rain began to leak into their house.

“I went out to go check on the neighbors,” David Washer said and discovered their neighborhood was on the brink of being enveloped by water. Their house was the only one on high ground. Washer looked over to a small cluster of homes across the street and saw an elderly woman knocked over by the current. He ran, picked her up and carried her across the street to his house which still remained above the floodwaters.

Washer said, “We dodged one house going down our ‘street river’ while we were rescuing people trapped by the flash flood. God let us be involved in saving many lives.”

Washer and six other men from the neighborhood carried women and children to his home. People filed into the Washers’ backyard, balcony and spare rooms.

For the next two nights the Washers’ neighbors stayed with them in their home. On the third day supplies were delivered to a nearby school. Families left to gather aid supplies and returned to rebuild their homes. Of the 97 homes in the neighborhood, 23 were completely destroyed. Seven people died after being swept away by the strong current.

While Washer and other men were rescuing people in their neighborhood, a search and rescue operation was underway to bring stranded IMB journeymen Amber Gould and Kayla Mabery to safety. Downed cell phone towers and impassable roads made it impossible to reach the young women. Finally a helicopter found and rescued Gould and Mabery and took them to a place of refuge in Manakara.

The rains have stopped for now but repairing the damage will continue over the coming months. Progress may stall as roads remain flooded in many parts of Madagascar, Mozambique and Malawi.

(BP)