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UMNS# 05040-United Methodists forge ties with Indonesian church for
From
"NewsDesk" <NewsDesk@UMCOM.ORG>
Date
Tue, 18 Jan 2005 17:22:10 -0600
United Methodists forge ties with Indonesian church for recovery work
Jan. 16, 2005 News media contact: Linda Bloom * (646) 3693759* New
York {05040}
NOTE: Photographs and related stories can be found at
http://umns.umc.org.
By Linda Bloom*
MEDAN, Indonesia (UMNS) - A United Methodist team's visit to the island
of Sumatra following the Dec. 26 tsunami has laid the foundation for a
future partnership with the Gereja Methodist Indonesia (Methodist Church
of Indonesia).
United Methodist Bishop Joel Martinez of San Antonio said he found
Indonesian church leaders "genuinely pleased and appreciative" about the
Jan. 12-16 visit. Martinez, who is president of the denomination's Board
of Global Ministries, co-led the delegation with the Rev. R. Randy Day,
the board's chief executive.
"We tried to listen to the church and get their perspective, and then we
also were able to witness and observe for ourselves," Martinez
explained.
Part of that observation included a tour of the devastated city of Banda
Aceh and impromptu visits to camps for internally displaced persons.
Even three weeks after the tsunami struck, the bishop believes "the full
dimensions of the tragedy are not fully known" and expects the price tag
of the disaster to exceed initial estimates just as the death toll did.
Although the tsunami swept over other Indian Ocean nations - including
Sri Lanka, Thailand and India - the delegation chose Indonesia as the
place to make a pastoral call, to let Indonesian Methodists know that
the greater Methodist family was grieving with them, according to Day.
Sumatra suffered 115,000 of the more than 162,000 deaths caused by the
tsunami and the earthquake that triggered the giant waves.
"While we mourn the people who died in the tsunami, we're also taking
immediate action to care for the survivors, so the death toll doesn't go
higher," Martinez said. That action included delivery of medicines that
the Indonesian church can use in its relief efforts in 11 camps for
displaced people.
The Rev. David Wu, a board staff executive and native of Indonesia, said
he was impressed that the small church had immediately set up an
emergency relief committee on its own, without asking for help.
"Perhaps bringing our church and their church together would create a
greater energy, a greater hope," he noted.
Kyung Za Yim, president of the Women's Division, Board of Global
Ministries, said she found the survey of tsunami damage to be a
"shocking and painful experience."
After meeting with several church women in the region, she said she
hoped to help them coordinate efforts to participate in tsunami relief
efforts, perhaps through the assistance of the Women's Division's
regional coordinator based in the Philippines.
"Once they set up a system, they can empower local women to join them,"
she said.
Day said he is thankful for the initial generous response of United
Methodists to tsunami relief efforts through the United Methodist
Committee on Relief and Board of Global Ministries. Besides Indonesia,
funds have been directed to Sri Lanka and India, and future work is
expected in Thailand.
Coordinating with Asian leadership, he would like to see new gifts
directed to the care of internally displaced people now living in camps,
especially children. That care could include housing, medical and
education needs. "We want to do our part in rebuilding those
communities," he said.
As in other countries, the rebuilding of communities by UMCOR covers
people of all faiths, according to the Rev. Paul Dirdak, the relief
agency's chief executive. In communities divided by religion or
ethnicity, "our projects are often opportunities for modeling
coexistence," he said.
One such possibility, he added, would be in the town of Meulaboh, which
was severely damaged by the tsunami. An equal number of homes could be
constructed for Methodists and Muslims there.
Day noted that Indonesia has a long history of religious tolerance, even
though it is overwhelmingly Muslim. That foundation of tolerance "gives
a basis for cooperation as we do humanitarian work together."
"We would see it as an honor to work with Muslims in the largest Muslim
country in the world," he added.
Delegation members acknowledged the need for psychological as well as
physical care in Indonesia. Dirdak pointed out that Methodists there -
in addition to being "shocked and exhausted" from the first three weeks
following the disaster - carry the everyday strain of being part of a
small minority and sometimes suffering from discrimination.
Right now, Indonesian church members and pastors are in a "survival
mode," Wu said. "But deeper than that, it's a question of theological
understanding: Where is God in this disaster?"
If pastors don't have the chance to process or cope with this question,
there will be a disconnect between what they preach and what they feel.
Since many churches are not equipped to take this step, Wu said he hopes
to organize a retreat for Indonesian pastors to help unravel theological
issues raised by the crisis.
Another concern is possible discrimination against some tsunami victims
by the Indonesian government. The Rev. Henry Leono, an Indonesian native
and pastor of St. Paul United Methodist Church in Willingboro, N.J.,
said a number of ethnic Chinese that he met during the trip expressed
fear that the aid would not reach them.
For Leono himself, the destruction of the area where he spent his
childhood was painful to see. "I feel so overwhelmed by the magnitude of
the need," he said.
He hopes the church can at least keep small relief projects going "to
keep their hope alive."
The Rev. Larry Hollon, chief executive of United Methodist
Communications, said his agency would help present the reality of the
tsunami disaster, in Indonesia and elsewhere, to the denomination as a
whole. "My hope is that we can help interpret the need, which is
obviously for the long term," he said.
He believes the immediate worldwide response after the tsunami
demonstrates a rejection of hostility and conflict in the face of human
need. "A spirit of compassion lives around the world, and people want to
bridge these divisions," Hollon declared.
Donations to UMCOR's "South Asia Emergency" relief efforts can be placed
in local church offering plates or sent directly to UMCOR, 475 Riverside
Drive, Room 330, New York, NY 10115. Designate checks for UMCOR Advance
#274305 and "South Asia Emergency." Online donations can be made at
www.methodistrelief.org. Those making credit-card donations can call
(800) 554-8583. One hundred percent of the money donated to "South Asia
Emergency" goes to the relief effort.
# # #
*Bloom is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in New York.
She is traveling with the United Methodist delegation to Indonesia.
News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, (646) 369-3759 or
newsdesk@umcom.org.
********************
United Methodist News Service
Photos and stories also available at:
http://umns.umc.org
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