Send Relief, the compassion ministry arm of Southern Baptists, has been mobilizing through partners in India to serve people in need amid the major surge in COVID cases in the nation, distributing emergency food packs, face masks and portable oxygenators.
They are also conducting awareness campaigns to teach preventative measures in response to the crisis.
“The disease has been a slow onset that has rapidly accelerated over the past week,” said Tim Patterson, Send Relief’s South Asia area director, “but thankfully now the large media outlets are covering it, and the government is doing its best to respond. It’s snowballed, and we’ve reached the crescendo this week. Send Relief is proactively reaching out to try to help.”
Send Relief President, Bryant Wright, noted the need for Christians to pray for and encourage their fellow believers in India.
“The news of just how rapidly this disease continues to spread is heartbreaking,” Wright said. “We’re hearing stories of hope in the midst of the tragedy, but the needs are overwhelming. I am praying for our partners on the ground as they provide resources and minister to people in need, and I ask my fellow believers here in America to do so as well.”
On average, 350,000 people are infected in India every day, and more than 3,000 die each day as a result of COVID infections. Those who were already struggling with poverty and undernourishment are suffering the most from this outbreak.
This crisis has exacerbated the circumstances of impoverished families, leaving many without food. About 40% of India’s children already suffer chronic malnutrition, but the food crisis is steadily escalating that number and could threaten the wellbeing of an entire generation.
Making it personal
An elderly grandmother named Prisha lives in a village that has no access to the gospel and no church near her community. Last year, she lost her only son and daughter-in-law to the coronavirus, leaving her to care for three children on her own.
Her 13-year-old granddaughter is the only one able to make an income for the family, working as a day-laborer on a farm for little pay. Though the hours are long, and work is increasingly hard to find, the family has no other way to keep food on the table.
Prisha met Send Relief distributors with tears in her eyes.
“I am a widow and don’t have much,” she said. “I was in great need of this food. Thank you from the bottom of my heart to those who gave to me!”
Prisha currently hosts a Bible study in her home and continues to look for ways to relieve her granddaughter’s workload.
A local pastor with whom Send Relief is partnering also commented on the distributions.
“We are ready to go out into the communities to help people physically while also helping them spiritually by sharing the gospel,” he said. “Most of the people have no jobs because everything is locked down, which means they have no way to buy food for their families. If we can help in any way, they will be able to see the love of God.”
To learn more about how to help those in India during the crisis, visit sendrelief.org.
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