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ELCA NEWS SERVICE

June 26, 2013  

ELCA works to provide relief to people internally displaced in Syria
13-45-CHB

     CHICAGO (ELCA) -- In response to the humanitarian crisis in Syria,
the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) is providing more than
$540,000 to the Syriac Orthodox Church to support its outreach to people
displaced from their homes but remain in Syria because of the violent
conflict. According to news reports, the conflict in Syria has claimed
100,000 lives since the fighting began in 2011.
     Funds from ELCA Lutheran Disaster Response will provide for six-
month's worth of rent for 500 families, health services and supplies for
children and infants, and support medical programs and surgeries.
     On a recent trip to Chicago, His Eminence Archbishop Jean Kawak,
patriarchal office director of the Syriac Orthodox Church in Damascus,
discussed the effects of the fighting on the entire population of Syria,
across all sectarian and ethnic divides.
     "It is not only the Christian(s) who are harmed or affected by this
situation. I'm scared about the entire Syria, but because we (Christians)
are a minority in Syria, the minorities are usually more affected by a
civil war or a problem like our Syrian problems," said Kawak.
     Although more than 1.5 million people have fled Syria and are
seeking refuge in neighboring countries, there are an estimated 4.25
million Syrians who are internally displaced. According to the Rev.
Robert O. Smith, the ELCA is one of the first churches in North America
to provide aid to Syrians internally displaced from their homes.
     "We started exploring what the Syriac church was doing to respond to
the situation in Syria and then how the ELCA might be able to accompany
them in that work," said Smith, the ELCA's area program director for the
Middle East and North Africa. "It became apparent that the aid was not
getting to the internally-displaced people," said Smith.
     Lutheran Disaster Responds funds will primarily support Christians
in Syria, who have no other source of relief.
     "Christians are the most vulnerable of all the vulnerable
populations (in Syria), because they often can't access the little aid
that is available. In order to help the Christian population, the ELCA
has to accompany churches in Syria, but the ELCA does not choose to work
with only Christians," said Smith.
     Kawak explained that all communities in Syria are suffering from the
violence that is spreading throughout the country, stressing that the
church will not turn away anyone who needs assistance.
     "I'm proud to say my nephew in Damascus asked me to help a Muslim
family. The family was in a suburb of Damascus where it was attacked and
destroyed," said Kawak. "I told him let them come to me and I gave them
money and medicine and many other things. And I'm really proud of him
because he asked me to help a Muslim."
     "You see this is our life. And they tried many times to come and see
me and say thank you. I told them you don't have to thank me. This is my
duty and I'm happy to do it. Please come always. We need each other; we
need to be together. And we hope that everybody, the extremists from all
sides, we need and we pray for them to understand that we have to respect
they are human beings because they are human beings."
     Kawak said, "This is our mission to help everybody. This is an
instrument of our Lord Jesus Christ.  He told us to help everybody,
regardless his color, his religion, his sect, his ethnic group. We need
to do it and we are helping to do it."
     The ELCA also provides aid to Syrian refugees living in other
countries and participates in humanitarian assistance in partnership with
the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan and the Holy Land, along with
other Lutheran companion churches and partner organizations. Earlier this
year, the ELCA provided $100,000 to support the needs of Syrian refugees
at the Za'atri refugee camp in Jordan. The funds were sent to The
Lutheran World Federation, which helps manage camp operations in
cooperation with the Jordanian authorities.
     The federation, which is managing the camp operations, is a global
communion of 143 member churches in 79 countries worldwide. The ELCA is
the communion's only member church from the United States.
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About the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America:
The ELCA is one of the largest Christian denominations in the United
States, with more than 4 million members in nearly 10,000 congregations
across the 50 states and in the Caribbean region. Known as the church
of "God's work. Our hands," the ELCA emphasizes the saving grace of God
through faith in Jesus Christ, unity among Christians and service in the
world. The ELCA's roots are in the writings of the German church
reformer, Martin Luther.

For information contact:
Candice Hill Buchbinder
773-380-2877 or [log in to unmask]
http://www.ELCA.org/news
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