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Quick response to two calamities (Church aids in earthquake relief in India and El Salvador).


PWRDF PWRDF Primate's World Relief and Development Fund  joins in world effort

Canadian Anglicans have responded quickly to help victims of two natural disasters which happened in the space of three weeks, in two different parts of the world.

In India, the Primate's World Relief and Development Fund (PWRDF) immediately made an initial grant of $15,000 to assist victims of the January 26 earthquake disaster in the state of Gujarat. As the estimated death toll rose from an estimated 10,000 to more than 100,000, PWRDF said it expects that more grants will follow.

The PWRDF grant was part of a larger grant of $100,000 from Action By Churches Together (ACT), a worldwide alliance of churches and related agencies with a coordinated emergency response system.

ACT sent emergency teams to the devastated dev·as·tate  
tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates
1. To lay waste; destroy.

2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark.
 area in India to create shelters and distribute food and other relief items such as blankets, clothes, and water. A mass exodus from the area from those fearing aftershocks was reported just days after the huge quake, which measured 7.9 on the Richter Scale Richter scale (rĭk`tər), measure of the magnitude of seismic waves from an earthquake, devised in 1935 by the American seismologist Charles F. Richter (1900–1985). . Meanwhile, former residents were flooding in to the area to try to find family members and salvage belongings.

The earthquake in India was the area's worst since 1956.

It pushed an earlier quake in El Salvador El Salvador (ĕl sälväthōr`), officially Republic of El Salvador, republic (2005 est. pop. 6,705,000), 8,260 sq mi (21,393 sq km), Central America.  off the front pages and effectively out of the news. That quake, which struck on January 13, killed an estimated 700 people, destroyed thousands of homes, injured a further 400 and left at least 1300 missing. Over 1,000 were reported missing in an area west of the capital where a mile-long landslide buried hundreds of homes.

PWRDF donated an initial $10,000 to aid in El Salvador, again part of a larger ACT effort of $50,000.

ACT members in El Salvador, the Lutheran World Federation “LWF” redirects here. For the aircraft, see Light Weight Fighter.

The Lutheran World Federation (LWF) is a global communion of national and regional Lutheran churches headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland.
 (LWF LWF Lutheran World Federation
LWF Love Worth Finding (radio & TV program in Memphis, TN)
LWF Lotus Workflow
LWF LuraWave Format (image compression format and file extension) 
) were distributing food, blankets, mattresses, shovels and other relief items in two camps in Santa Tecla Santa Tecla: see Nueva San Salvador, El Salvador. , for 300 people, and San Salvador San Salvador, city, El Salvador
San Salvador (sän sälväthōr`), city (1993 pop. 402,448), central El Salvador, capital and largest city of the country. It is the center of El Salvador's trade and communications.
, for 3000 people.

By late January ACT said it had helped 14,500 families in 39 communities. ACT said its support focused on those who were already vulnerable before the disaster and to those in the poorest communities.

A 4-year-old girl, a member of La Iglesia Anglicana in El Salvador was killed in the quake. Church property was heavily damaged. Dean Luis Serrano of the pro-cathedral at San Juan la Evangelista, was preparing for Sunday worship when the quake struck Saturday morning.

Huge cracks appeared in the walls of the church, forcing the congregation to meet on a nearby patio the next day. Dean Serrano said the community was devastated.

In the secular fundraising relief efforts in Canada, the Indian earthquake was culling culling

removal of inferior animals from a group of breeding stock. The removal is premature, i.e. before completion of its life span, disposal of an animal from a herd or other group.
 far more donations than the El Salvadoran quake.

Relief spokespersons for the Red Cross and other agencies attributed the swell of donations to front-page coverage in the media, and to the greater magnitude of the disaster. All expressed fears that the donations would drop off once the disasters are no longer front-page news.
COPYRIGHT 2001 General Synod of the Anglican Church of Canada
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Davidson, Jane
Publication:Anglican Journal
Date:Mar 1, 2001
Words:495
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