‘We’re out of everything’

2014 crises stretch MCC resources to the limit

December 18, 2014 | Web First
Emily Loewen | Mennonite Central Committee
Jasem Mohammed carries a food package distributed by MCC partner Zakho Small Villages Project at the Garmawa displaced persons camp in Iraqi Kurdistan. Like most people living in the camp, he fled the city of Mosul after its takeover by Islamic State. (MCC Photo by Ryan Rodrick Beiler)

It’s not just you. The news was been particularly bad last year. Islamic State is gaining ground, while videos of beheadings and other violence circulate online.

In the same region, more than 10 million people already needed assistance because of the Syrian conflict, while more than 108,000 people in Gaza don’t have permanent homes after more than two months of bombing. And more than 1.4 million people are displaced in South Sudan, with hundreds of thousands at risk of extreme hunger.

The situations are complicated. There isn’t one person to blame. There are no simple solutions. The amount of need can feel overwhelming.

In all these places, and many others, Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) is responding. But the unusually high number of emergencies puts a strain on resources, says Bruce Guenther, MCC’s director of disaster response.

“We’ve allocated over double our emergency resources to date than we had in the previous year [2013],” he says. “We are maxed out on our account at the Canadian Foodgrains Bank, and we are out of relief and hygiene kits. We’re out of everything.”

That also includes an MCC staple: handmade quilts, and in some cases a lack of funds has meant turning down relief projects.

“Sometimes [a lack of funds is] really a question of life and death. There’s no other way to put it,” says Amela Puljek-Shank, MCC’s area director for Europe and the Middle East, a region in particularly high turmoil this year. While air strikes fell on Gaza this summer, MCC, through its partners on the ground, was able to provide immediate relief, using money on hand to buy local supplies. “We were able to help with blankets. We were able to help with food, which people needed right at that moment.”

Donations to MCC’s emergency fund helps it both prevent crises from escalating and respond quickly when a disaster hits.

“We are really thankful for generous giving that we have had for Syria and also for responses in Gaza and Iraq,” says Guenther. “We would just encourage people to think about the many, many people that are affected by conflict and other crises that they are not always aware of, and to give generously, because we are there and we are responding.”

To donate, call MCC toll-free at 1-888-622-6337 or visit donate.mcccanada.ca/relief. 

--Posted Dec. 18, 2014

Jasem Mohammed carries a food package distributed by MCC partner Zakho Small Villages Project at the Garmawa displaced persons camp in Iraqi Kurdistan. Like most people living in the camp, he fled the city of Mosul after its takeover by Islamic State. (MCC Photo by Ryan Rodrick Beiler)

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