World Refugee Day: Salesian Missions highlights programs that aid refugees
(ANS – New Rochelle – June 20, 2023) – Salesian Missions in New Rochelle joins humanitarian organizations and the international community in honoring World Refugee Day, held each year since 2001 on June 20. The day, coordinated by the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) and other international organizations, honors the plight of millions of refugees and internally displaced people (refugees within the borders of their own countries) who have been forced to flee their homes.
UNHCR estimates that global forced displacement
has reached 103 million people. This includes 53.2 million people who are displaced
within their own country and 32.5 million refugees. More than 72% come from just
5 countries: Syria, Ukraine, Afghanistan, Sudan, and South Sudan. UNHCR expects
the number to climb to 117.2 million people who will be forcibly displaced or stateless
in 2023.
“Salesian missionaries live among the communities
they work in and are on the front lines of the refugee crisis. They provide support
and services for refugees and internally displaced persons whose lives have been
affected by war, persecution, famine, and natural disasters such as floods, droughts,
and earthquakes,” said Fr. Timothy Ploch, interim director of Salesian Missions.
“Salesian programs provide much-needed education and technical skills training,
workforce development, health care, and nutrition.”
To mark World Refugee Day 2023, Salesian Missions
is proud to highlight programs around the globe that provide life-changing education
and support for refugees and internally displaced people in need.
Displaced people are able to receive care at the
Don Bosco Ngangi medical center in Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo.
While the province of North Kivu in the Democratic
Republic of the Congo faces ongoing clashes that have been displacing thousands
of people, Salesian missionaries continue with their work. The medical center at
Don Bosco Ngangi in Goma just delivered triplets for Dorcas Ndibungo, who had a
boy and two girls.
Ndibungo, age 36, has been at Don Bosco Ngangi
since she was displaced in November 2022. She fled Kibumba village in the Nyiragongo
territory north of Goma with her 8 children. She has been seeking shelter at the
center since then and was fortunate to have the medical center to aid in her pregnancy
and delivery.
Initially set up to provide care for youths living
at Don Bosco Ngangi, the medical center later began providing maternity, consultation,
laboratory, hospitalization, prevention, pharmacy, and nutrition services. This
has been particularly important with the addition of 28,000 people who have sought
shelter on the center’s fields.
The medical center has been transformed into an
emergency hospital for thousands who have been displaced. The medical team includes
a doctor, a laboratory technician, a physiotherapist, a clinical psychologist, two
hygienists, and five nurses. The team is providing both preventive and medical care
for those who have been injured and have emergencies.
In the first two months of assisting those displaced,
the medical center treated 1,702 people, and in the last week of February and the
first week of March, care was provided for 766 vulnerable people. A total of 16
women gave birth, 9 patients were referred to more specialized facilities, and 18
were hospitalized.
Sudanese refugees receive education and support
at Don Bosco Zeitoun in Cairo, Egypt.
Don Bosco Zeitoun, located in Cairo, Egypt, provides
education and support to Sudanese refugees in the country. Work with refugees began
in 2000 when several arrived at the Salesian organization hoping to celebrate Catholic
Mass.
The Salesian community welcomed the refugees with
open arms. Initially, the Comboni Fathers were responsible for working with the
refugees, but gradually that work transitioned over to the Salesian community.
Since space is very limited, Don Bosco Zeitoun
Oratory organizes activities for refugees three days a week. An average of 250 children
attend the oratory, and mothers have their own meetings. On the three days when
not working with Sudanese refugees, the Don Bosco Zeitoun Oratory organizes activities
for as many youths from the neighborhood as possible.
Salesians continue efforts to provide food, shelter,
and medical care for young refugees from Ukraine.
Salesian missionaries who remain in the Ukraine
and in surrounding countries like Poland and Slovakia are still hard
at work caring for those who have been impacted and displaced. More than 8.1 million
Ukrainian citizens, mostly women, the elderly, and children, are living as refugees
in other countries.
Salesian missionaries in Slovakia have been at
the side of people in need since the first hours of the conflict, taking in orphans
from Lviv and opening the doors to their centers to provide shelter for as many
people as possible. Despite all the difficulties that a sustained effort entails,
Salesians continue to care for them today.
Salesians have been providing basic needs like
food, shelter, and medical care. They are also ensuring education for youths and
language courses for adults, so that they can become as self-sufficient as possible
and find work to support themselves.
The psychological needs of refugees have not been
overlooked. For youths, Salesians have tried to offer times of joy and peace and
a sense of normalcy. For 47 orphans rescued from Lviv who were scattered among various
homes, Salesians gathered them all during Christmas break to take them on a ski
vacation and to enjoy time together.
Salesian missionaries with St. Vincent de Paul
Parish are operating the Don Bosco Gumbo camp (outside Juba, the capital) for internally
displaced persons in South Sudan. Don Bosco Gumbo camp for internally displaced
persons currently hosts 10,000 people, most of whom are women, children, and the
elderly.
The camp was established in January 2014 after
the outbreak of the civil war in December 2013. Salesians provide shelter, food,
education, medical care, and other basic needs.
In addition to the camp, Don Bosco Gumbo provides
education for more than 4,000 children and older youths in its schools. There are
two kindergartens, two primary-middle schools, an accelerated elementary school,
a secondary school, and vocational training center which offers courses in electricity,
mechanics, stonework-masonry, solar panel technician skills, welding, and computer
studies. More than 700 older youths gain skills for later employment through this
training.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, most of people living
in nearby villages had little or no access to face masks, hand sanitizers, and immunization.
They also had little information about the spread of COVID-19, leaving the population
at risk. Salesians worked to create awareness and provide information to create
healthy practices to fight the disease.
Source: Mission Newswire
No comments:
Post a Comment