Communities Responding to Overcome Poverty
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Greater Greensboro CROP Hunger Walk
Who We Help

CROP Hunger Walks help to support the overall ministry of Church World Service, especially the grassroots,hunger-fighting development efforts of partner agencies in some 80 countries. CROP Hunger Walks help to provide tools of hope that empower people to meet their own needs. From seeds and tools, to wells and water systems, to technical training and micro-enterprise loans, the key is people working together to identify their own development priorities, their strengths and their needs -- something CWS has learned through some 61 years of working in partnership around the world.

For more information on the services provided by Church World Service, please visit them online at www.churchworldservice.org.

In addition, each local CROP Hunger Walk can choose to return up to 25 percent of the funds it raises to local hunger-fighting programs. The Greater Greensboro CROP Hunger Walk uses this money to help fund Potter's House Community Kitchen.

 
Children of the World
Glimpses of children around the world, with a song by Tim Janis, in support of CROP Hunger Walks.
The song is sung by school children in Kenya.
Potter's House Community Kitchen

Potter's House serves a free, well-balanced, nutritious meal each day to an average of 350 guests. The meal is served between 10:30 am and 12:30 pm. For many in our community, this may be the only nutritious meal they receive that day.

Hawa gets water in Geles, a village in the Darfur region of Sudan where the Action by Churches Together-Caritas coalition has provided wells and other services. While the CWS-supported coalition effort focuses primarily on the needs of people internally displaced by the widespread violence in Darfur, it is also assisting nearby villages, many of which are hosting uprooted families.

In the arid northwest of Kenya, 350 Turkana families in two villages are gaining clean water and sanitation facilities, with the help of the CWS Water for Life/Water for All program and a local partner. The people are providing the labor and some of the materials. The new wells will free up the women and girls from walking long distances to get water. Latrines and bathing cabins will help to prevent illness.

As a CROP Hunger Walker or sponsor, you help us reach out to children and families in Darfur, Kenya, and elsewhere with the gift of clean, fresh water and other empowering tools of hope.

Darfur

Bosnia

Before the war in Bosnia, Mehmed Hadjic built a pretty white house with a red tile roof in the village of Sevarlije. When the war came, the Hadjics, along with many others, were driven from their homes. When the conflict ended, the Hadjics were among the returnee families. But, the sight of nearly total destruction was too much for Mehmed; his heart literally could not bear it.

His widow, Alma, and their children now live in a rebuilt house in their old village, and continue to survive these hard times. Most of the returning families have no dependable source of income and lack access to seeds and tools necessary to work the land.

Church World Service and our local partner have distributed seeds, tools, and machinery that years of war have made scarce. This helps the families have enough food to eat and a surplus in order to retain seed stock for the next growing season. The surplus produce is also sold in the market, generating income for the families and revitalizing the local economy.

Now Alma and her family are growing and harvesting vegetables from their garden and fruit from their orchard again. Through the “give back” process, they are giving a portion of their harvest to be used by soup kitchens in nearby towns.

Since an attack by militia, Maliru Muheha has not stayed overnight in her house. As evening falls, she climbs to the nearby hills, to be there before dark.

“I have three teenage daughters, and I don’t want to take any risks,” says Muheha. “We put the blankets on the ground and try to sleep. It’s not easy and we’re very tired during the day. It's worst when it rains. We try to protect ourselves with the banana leaves, but we still get wet and cold.”

Long-running military conflicts between rival militias in the Democratic Republic of Congo continue to threaten civilians in some areas of the country, while in other areas families are beginning to restart their lives.

In the northeastern part of the country, many displaced people have returned to their villages. Church World Service is supporting partner efforts to help these families restart their life.

Efforts include assisting 1,200 people with seeds, tools, small breeding livestock, agricultural technical assistance, and reconstruction of a vital farm-to-market road.

Democratic Republic of Congo
Pakistan

Mohamad Siraj is a welder today, with his own shop in Dhodial, Pakistan, thanks to Church World Service-supported vocational training.

A farmer before, Siraj lost his home and his livelihood in the October 2005 earthquake in northern Pakistan. The quake left him, his wife, and their three children in a camp for the displaced. Siraj says he spent months doing nothing, just sitting around in front of their tent. Then came an opportunity to join the CWS training program. At his graduation, CWS provided him with a complete set of welding equipment.

“There’s no end to the work to be done, and I work every day, making shutters, doors, gates, and grills,” says Siraj. “I’m making money, taking care of my family, and looking at where we can build a house.”

More than 1,700 quake survivors are taking CWS-supported
construction trade courses. CWS continues to assist quake-affected communities with shelter kits, food packages, water and sanitation, basic health services, psychosocial care, and more than 100,000 native trees for reforesting denuded hillsides.

Donate Online "If I can stop one heart from breaking, I shall not live in vain. If I can ease one life the aching, or cool one pain, I shall not live in vain." -EMILY DICKINSON

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