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Newsline: Disaster Child Care helps welcome evacuees from Lebanon


From "COBNews Newsline" <cobnews@brethren.org>
Date Thu, 03 Aug 2006 14:10:18 -0500

Title: Disaster Child Care helps welcome evacuees from Lebanon Aug. 3, 2006 Church of the Brethren News Service Cheryl Brumbaugh-Cayford, News Director 800-323-8039 ext. 260 -- cobnews@brethren.org

DISASTER CHILD CARE PROGRAM HELPS WELCOME CHILDREN EVACUATED FROM LEBANON

Aug. 3, 2006 (Elgin, IL) -- Disaster Child Care volunteers have helped care for children of American families evacuating from the war in Lebanon and Israel. The program is a ministry of the Church of the Brethren General Board.

From July 20-28, a Disaster Child Care center was set up at the

Baltimore-Washington Thurgood Marshall International Airport (BWI) to care for children of US citizens being evacuated from Lebanon, at the request of the Central Maryland Chapter of the American Red Cross.

"During the nine-day response, 23 child care volunteers provided a safe secure space for 231 scared, confused, and weary children to play and, in some cases sleep, while parents were guided through US Customs, and given the opportunity to apply for assistance, arrange connecting flights, or contact family members in the US," reported coordinator Helen Stonesifer.

BWI was chosen as the location for the child care center because the airport was designated as a Repatriation Center by Governor Robert L. Ehrlich, Jr., for Americans fleeing Lebanon, said Stonesifer. Nineteen flights from the Middle East were received on the International Pier, bringing a total of 4,492 passengers to Maryland.

Governor Ehrlich, along with several of his staff, visited the Disaster Child Care center and shared words of appreciation with the volunteers for their service.

"The children were relieved to be far away from the window-shattering bombs and fiery explosions" of the war, Stonesifer said.

A 10-year-old girl who had been visiting her grandparents in Lebanon shared her story with a child care volunteer: "The war was scary," she said. "We ran to our neighbor's house thinking it would be safer, and then back to my grandparent's house." Stonesifer said the girl's report indicated the family made this trip several times in search of safety. "One time we all huddled under the stair steps because we could feel the house shake from the bombs being dropped," the girl said.

The girl shared her story over and over with her care giver, Stonesifer added. "This was her way of working through the fear she had experienced."

"Hopefully, child care volunteers made a bright spot in a huge cloud of sorrow and pain for these children, whose lives have been turned upside down," Stonesifer said. "Please keep the children and families in your prayers as they embark upon a new life in the US."

The Church of the Brethren is a Christian denomination committed to continuing the work of Jesus peacefully and simply, and to living out its faith in community. The denomination is based in the Anabaptist and Pietist faith traditions and is one of the three Historic Peace Churches. It celebrates its 300th anniversary in 2008. It counts about 130,000 members across the United States and Puerto Rico, and has missions and sister churches in Brazil, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, and Nigeria.

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For more information contact:

Cheryl Brumbaugh-Cayford Director of News Services Church of the Brethren General Board 1451 Dundee Ave., Elgin, IL 60120 800-323-8039 ext. 260 cobnews@brethren.org

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