Tuesday 30 May 2023

POWER OF GOD

Global

In wake of devastating earthquakes, Bishop Waddell signs off on more Church humanitarian aid in Turkey

The Church donated over $13.5 million by early April, and is now donating housing, medical clinics and more

Bishop W. Christopher Waddell of the Presiding Bishopric with his wife, Carol, stand with the Disaster and Emergency Management Authority (AFAD) of Turkey team in Turkey, May, 2023.

Bishop W. Christopher Waddell of the Presiding Bishopric with his wife, Sister Carol Waddell, and with the Disaster and Emergency Management Authority (AFAD) of Turkey team. They were in Turkey May 10-11, 2023.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints


Bishop W. Christopher Waddell, first counselor in the Presiding Bishopric, recently spent two days in earthquake-devastated Turkey, where he signed off on donations, reviewed recent humanitarian aid and learned about additional needs in the area.

At least 50,000 people in Turkey and Syria were killed when magnitude 7.8 and 7.5 earthquakes struck the region on Feb. 6. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints responded quickly, contributing over $13.5 million in aid by early April through 20 relief projects.

“As we drove through the city of Antakya, I was amazed at the level of destruction. I’ve only seen something like that in pictures from cities bombed during World War II. It was sobering,” Bishop Waddell told ChurchofJesusChrist.org.

Collapsed buildings in Turkey following earthquakes in May, 2023.

Collapsed buildings in Turkey following earthquakes in May, 2023.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

Antakya is the capital of the Hatay Province in the southern part of the country near the Syrian border. The city has also lost its infrastructure, including water, power and sewer lines.

“For all intents and purposes, the city of 400,000 people no longer exists,” Bishop Waddell said. “Most of the houses and factories have collapsed. Those homes and buildings that are still standing will need to be demolished.”

Northwest Syria had already been affected by conflicts in the region, causing around 2.8 million people to be internally displaced and dependent on humanitarian aid. The earthquakes exposed more people to the elements and left them needing help obtaining food, medical care and clean water.

During his time in Turkey on May 10 and 11, Bishop Waddell reviewed results of Church-provided humanitarian assistance and met with Turkish officials about additional support.

He also spent time visiting some temporary housing, including a tent camp and a container camp, and a mobile medical clinic in Payas and mobile clinic factory.

Bishop Waddell signed a letter of donation providing 500 housing containers for displaced people. The containers are each equipped with a toilet and shower, and provide families with more privacy than tents. Those staying in tents must use community toilets and showers.

Rows of tents are show with several people walking among them in Turkey after the earthquakes.

Temporary housing for displaced families in Turkey, May, 2023.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

The Church is also providing mobile medical clinics to the region. Three clinics are operational, and a fourth will be delivered soon.

Bishop Waddell also learned of a fifth location where a mobile medical clinic is needed, and that was approved upon his return home. It will be in a town called Oguzeli where the population has swelled to 70,000 from 10,000 as survivors move there seeking refuge.

Additionally, the Church is helping fund repairs for a hospital in Gaziantep that was damaged in the quakes.

While in Turkey, Bishop Waddell also met with Dr. Selami Kilic, Director General for EU and Foreign Affairs at the Turkish Ministry of Health, and the Disaster and Emergency Management Authority of Turkey, headquartered in Ankara.

Kilic expressed great appreciation for the Church’s assistance and said the Church has been among the most efficient organizations in its earthquake response, doing what it says it will do.

Related Stories

LINK:  https://www.thechurchnews.com/global/2023/5/26/23738083/turkey-earthquakes-bishop-waddell-visit-church-humanitarian-aid

THE CHURCH NEWS

GOD IS GOOD!

On World Hunger Day, see how the Church works to end hunger worldwide

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints seeks to provide temporal relief by collaborating with organizations around the globe

Mothers and children wait in line for food at the Ifo Refugee Camp in Garissa County, Kenya, on Dec. 8, 2022.

Mothers and children wait in line for food at the Ifo Refugee Camp in Garissa County, Kenya, on Dec. 8, 2022.

Leslie Nilsson, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints


Founded by The Hunger Project in 2011, World Hunger Day is marked every May 28 to raise awareness about the more than 800 million people suffering from chronic hunger around the globe.

When someone lacks the physical or financial capability to meet their nutritional needs, it leads to malnutrition, wasting, stunted growth and death.

Fighting all forms of hunger is one of the key humanitarian initiatives of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

For example, the Church’s annual Caring for Those in Need report for 2022 lists:

Often, the Church’s most effective way to bring relief to people is to partner with local humanitarian and nonprofit organizations that have local resources and the expertise to address all different types of hunger and malnutrition.

Below are some of those examples of collaboration and response.

World Food Programme

A $32 million donation to the United Nations World Food Programme in September 2022 was the Church’s largest one-time donation to a humanitarian organization to date.

The organization was able to increase food rations at three refugee camps in Dadaab in eastern Kenya, helping families and children sustain their own cooking together.

Another way the donation helped was by providing more super cereal — a highly fortified porridge that provides calories, proteins and vitamins to pregnant and breastfeeding mothers in need. 

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A mother, father and baby share a joyful moment at the Ifo Refugee Camp in Dadaab, Kenya, on Monday, December 5, 2022.

Leslie Nilsson, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

The Hunger Project

In Ghana, Naomi Osabutey learned to make bread, and it’s now the primary source of her income. Patience Nugba-Yiyiava was taught how to grow and sell vegetables to help her family.

Funding from the Church helped The Hunger Project train these women and many others to become more self-reliant and have dignity and ability to care for themselves and their households.

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Naomi Osabutey makes bread for her family and to sell in her village, after training from The Hunger Project. Funding from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints helped with these efforts in Ghana, Africa.

The Hunger Project

LINK:  https://www.thechurchnews.com/global/2023/5/28/23739763/world-hunger-day-church-food-donations

THE CHURCH NEWS

ALLOWING GOD TO WORK IN YOUR LIFE

What is emotional resilience and how can I develop it? Learn about the Church’s new resource


As the world continues to battle the COVID-19 pandemic and its impacts, researchers are finding that simple interventions can help build emotional resilience — the ability to adapt to challenges and change — and increase positive emotions.

A recent study conducted across 87 countries by researchers from Harvard, Stanford and other universities found that using a simple method to help people think differently about their situations improved their emotional response. 

Developing healthy thinking patterns is one of many topics covered in “Finding Strength in the Lord: Emotional Resilience,” a manual and course offered by Self-Reliance Services of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to help members and their friends adapt to challenges with courage and faith centered in the Savior.

“There’s no shortage of emotional trials or struggles that we’re going to have,” said Derek Hagey, Family Services program manager who helped develop the Emotional Resilience manual. “The development of this program really is to help those who are looking at the future and saying, ‘I want to develop some skills to help me.’ …

“Let’s strengthen our emotional resilience now. Let’s build those skills that we need. Let’s develop that mindset of hope.”

Cover of the manual “Finding Strength in the Lord: Emotional Resilience.”

Cover of the manual “Finding Strength in the Lord: Emotional Resilience.”

Credit: Screenshot from ChurchofJesusChrist.org

In addition to developing healthy thinking patterns, the Emotional Resilience manual includes resources for managing stress and anxiety, understanding sadness and depression, overcoming anger, managing addictive behaviors and building healthy relationships.

The request to develop the manual came prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, Hagey said. 

Designed for anyone and everyone, the manual and course are not meant to be a replacement for therapy, he emphasized, but rather an introductory resource for developing skills, building hope and experiencing healthy relationships.

“The central part of all of this is the Savior and turning to our Savior throughout the whole course,” Hagey said. “Christ bore all the infirmities of this world — not just some or not just the sins — but all infirmities, so that He can know how to succor us and help us through our struggles. … With Him, there’s always hope.”

Some Latter-day Saint congregations have started organizing virtual and in-person group meetings, based on local conditions and directions, to go through the Emotional Resilience manual together with a facilitator. 

Elizabeth Valencia of the Dayton Ohio Stake is one of many who has participated in an Emotional Resilience group. She described the course as introspective and said she learned how to develop “a healthy response to life experiences rather than be derailed by them.” 

Valencia said the most impactful part of the manual for her was Chapter 2: Healthy Thinking Patterns. As a reminder of what she learned, she still has a picture on her computer screen of the Savior talking to a woman at the well (John 4).

“In the picture, she’s looking at Him, and He’s looking back at her,” Valencia said. “I put [Doctrine and Covenants 6:36] there because one of the things you’re talking about is recognizing inaccurate thinking patterns … and to try and look to the Savior in every thought.”

During the weekly meetings, Valencia said, “you talk about dealing with life and how to find strength through the teachings of Jesus Christ and support from other people.”

“You don’t have to share if you don’t want to,” she added, “but you learn a lot about a lot of things … from depression to exercise to taking care of your body to communication with other people. It covers a wide, wide variety of topics that can help us to be emotionally and spiritually stronger than we were when we started.”

A family smiles for a portrait in Ghana. The new emotional resilience materials are designed for anyone and everyone to learn how to better adapt to challenges and change.

A family smiles for a portrait in Ghana. The new emotional resilience materials are designed for anyone and everyone to learn how to better adapt to challenges and change.

Credit: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

Valencia said she would participate in the manualized-study course again. “There is so much content there, and I think at different times in your life, there are different things that you would learn from the different modules.”

Valencia’s husband, Dayton Ohio Stake President Ricardo Valencia, commented on the importance of emotional resilience for members in his area and the enduring impact of Elder Jeffrey R. Holland’s general conference talk “Like a Broken Vessel.”

“We’re so grateful that an Apostle would address [mental and emotional health], and the fact that the Church has continued to see that as a need and come out with a course like this to help address those needs — I think it just makes a great point that the Lord is mindful of us and that He’s putting forth the resources to bless His people,” President Valencia said. 

The emotional resilience materials are currently available in English, Spanish, Portuguese, French, Russian and other languages, with 10 additional languages forthcoming. Other self-reliance manuals offered by the Church are titled “Personal Finances,” “Starting and Growing My Business,” “Find a Better Job” and “Education for Better Work.

Learn more at ChurchofJesusChrist.org/self-reliance/manuals-and-videos

LINK:  https://www.thechurchnews.com/2021/9/27/23216820/new-emotional-resilience-course-manual-self-reliance?fbclid=IwAR2G8D_RWgNt3yqhHQXyY3CjYI1nNvonFLHW46BPz8tBKw_O2vBgmGOqCAc

THE CHURCH NEWS

God reigning in this Southeast Asian nation

Latter-day Saints help celebrate 100 years of Christianity in Cambodia

Church members and missionaries were among the thousands who attended event marking a century of Christianity in Southeast Asian country

Sister missionaries sit in rows of red chairs.

Sister missionaries of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints attend the 100-year celebration of Christianity in Cambodia on Jan. 27, 2023.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints


Members and missionaries of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints were among thousands who helped mark 100 years of Christianity in Cambodia earlier this year.

“We have been blessed by a government that allows us to practice our religion freely,” Cambodia Phnom Penh Mission President Veasna Neang said in an interview with local news organizations, reported the Church’s Cambodia Newsroom. “We have missionaries who leave their homes and serve all over the world. We have many American and Khmer missionaries who serve here.” 

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Cambodia Phnom Penh Mission President Veasna Neang participates in an interview during the 100-year celebration of Christianity in Cambodia on Jan. 27-28, 2023.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

They share a message of the gospel and of living prophets today, President Neang said. 

More than 95% of Cambodia’s 16.8 million people are Buddhist, which is the state religion, according to the World Factbook. About 2% are Muslim and 0.3% are Christian. 

There are more than 16,000 members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Cambodia in 28 congregations. 

The first Christian missions to Cambodia date back to 1555-56 by a friar of the Dominican Order, but the effort wasn’t considered a success, according to news reports. It was in 1923 when missionaries with the Christian and Missionary Alliance arrived and were able to establish a mission and continue efforts to translate the Bible. 

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints received legal recognition on March 4, 1994. Many Cambodian refugees living in the United States began joining the Church in the 1970s, according to ChurchofJesusChrist.org. A temple is being built in Phnom Penh and ground was broken in September 2021.

Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Sen spoke at the celebration on the Koh Pich Theater grounds with nearly 10,000 people. “This gathering is a demonstration of the progress of Christianity in Cambodia under the shade of peace,” Sen said at the Jan. 27 event.

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Prime Minister Hun Sen greets the audience of nearly 10,000 Christians at the 100-year celebration of Christianity in Cambodia on Jan. 27, 2023.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

Four Church leaders were invited to sit on the stand, including Phnom Penh North Stake President Bunhouch Eng; Sophornn C. Touch, counselor in the Phnom Penh South Stake presidency; Phnom Penh Cambodia East District President Sokha P. Tay; and Samnang Sea, president of the Cambodia Association of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Elder Malachi Horn, a full-time missionary serving in Cambodia, was also interviewed. When asked about the benefits of Christianity to Cambodia, he said: “Christianity can help develop a loving culture, and that looking forward, Christ can continue to bless this country. He can bless us with knowledge and education and bring hope and joy into our lives.”

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Missionaries from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints gather for the 100-year celebration of Christianity in Cambodia on Jan. 27-28, 2023.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

LINK:  https://www.thechurchnews.com/global/2023/5/29/23736095/cambodia-latter-day-saints-help-celebrate-100-years-of-christianity

THE CHURCH NEWS