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A prayer from the ebola front lines

MARY ZIGBUO
UM Missionary

After 27 hours of travel (and three breakdowns!!) from Liberia’s capital of Monrovia into its dense forest region, we finally arrived in the town of Zwedru. I am privileged to be part of the United Methodist Church of Liberia’s team leading an UMCOR-sponsored response to address Ebola awareness and food scarcity in three vulnerable communities in Liberia’s southeastern region. A targeted training-of-trainers will allow more than 25,000 people in three counties to receive Ebola awareness and sensitization training.

Marpu explained that the profit from her sudden sale of 50 vegetable-oil bottles enabled her pay the registration fees so her children can enroll in school. ~photo: courtesy of Mary Zigbuo

The southeast is Liberia’s most challenging region to access due to poor and/or non-existent road infrastructure. Eighty percent of its inhabitants survive off subsistence farming, earning less than $800 annually.

The region experiences the highest rate of poverty and the lowest rate of access to health facilities, employment opportunities, education and commerce.

It escaped the brunt of the Ebola disease largely because of its isolated situation; thus, its vulnerability lies in the potential for an outbreak.

Though the prevalence of Ebola is decreasing, it still lingers as a threat; especially for those communities that received limited or no awareness.

Restricted movement within the country has compromised subsistence farmers’ ability to plant their gardens; there is no harvest to reap!

Nine hundred beneficiaries, comprising vulnerable elderly, persons with disabilities, pregnant women and single mothers, will receive a one-month food package comprised of: eight pounds of beans, 55 pounds of rice, 25 pieces of dried fish, 1.5 liters of vegetable oil, salt and 60 bouillon cubes.

For the past six months, Ebola has precariously slowed down an already fragile, postwar economy.

Purchasing the food items locally boosts the local economy and brings smiles to the faces and hope to the hearts of dozens of market women such as Marpu, whose family income is totally dependent upon her sales. Marpu explained that the profit from her sudden sale of fifty 1.5 liter vegetable-oil bottles enabled her pay registration fees so her children can enroll in school.

A few weeks ago, the government announced the re-opening of schools in February after a six month closure due to the Ebola disease. Though happy and excited by the announcement, children and parents also worry about raising funds to pay school registration and tuition fees.

Marpu said, “a little profit can go a long way for us, our ma” (our ma is a local term of endearment).

I thank you, God, for blessing the work being done in the lives of your people in Liberia . Only your grace can turn victims into victors! Amen.

Last Updated on February 2, 2024

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The Michigan Conference