Freezing Nights, Desert and Falling Snow:
Lighting up Hope in Afghanistan
Period of Assistance: 1998.2-2002.8
Relief Work: Medical Equipment and Supplies, Food and Clothing
"Is
the wheat important to you?" The cameraman had followed
the old man to his home after he had received his 50 kg bag
of wheat. The home was made only of tree branches and grass.
It looked like a huge bird's nest. This nest was home to the
old man, his wife and two daughters. The cameraman asked the
question, and the old man let out a sigh. He said that a week
ago he had three daughters. The cameraman was led to a small
grave beside the house where he wept. The third daughter had
starved to death.
Although far removed from the rest of humanity,
the mountainous country of Afghanistan has not been isolated
from turmoil. To date, Afghanistan has produced one of the
largest numbers of displaced people in the world. The country
was torn by an invasion from the Soviet Union in 1979 and
then a series of civil wars throughout the 1980's. Because
of more than twenty years of unremitting conflict, half the
population of Afghanistan are widows and children under the
age of fifteen, and over six million people - one fifth of
the country's population - have been forced to take refuge
in the neighboring countries of Iran and Pakistan. The conflicts
resulted in destroyed infrastructure and lack of basic medical
care, educational and economic institutions, forcing the people
of Afghanistan to fight for survival day by day and with the
future far from their minds. Living in despair with critical
conditions for survival, those who could not leave the country
continue to wait near the border, patiently abiding an immense
hardship for a light of hope to shine through the destitution.
Human Crisis
Already suffering the constant threat of war and drought,
even prior to September 11, 2001, more than four million people
in Afghanistan were starving and more than 10 million mines
were laid among the lands. Sadly, the 9-11 attacks on the
United States resulted in an additional 1.5 million Afghans
fleeing their homes in anticipation of the US strikes.
For too long now, the magnitude and depth
of human suffering in Afghanistan has largely outstripped
the capacity, resources and personnel of the aid community.
The deteriorating security situation post 9-11 forced all
staff members of the United Nations, Red Cross, and other
non-governmental relief agencies who were there under the
UN "Deepening Crisis" assistance plan to withdraw
from the country. A few missionaries and relief personnel
from organizations such as the Red Crescent Society (the Islamic
counterpart to the Red Cross) and Médecins du Monde
have risked staying behind to support the refugees. According
to a report on Afghanistan by the United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR), each day one child dies from acute respiratory
infection, diarrheal disorder or malnutrition. And every winter
an average of 300,000 children pass away.
Millions of more Afghans have become homeless
since the US strikes. Few Afghan refugees made use of the
pre-packaged meals dropped by US planes for fear the Taliban
had contaminated the food packets. Entire families, some who
were on the run for more than a year, walked more than two
weeks to find shelter. Many live on the outskirts of refugee
camps without shelter, blankets or winter clothing. At one
camp, some families were fortunate enough to secure one of
700 tents among more than 10,000 other refugees. The small
tents protect them from the wind and rain, but not from extreme
desert temperatures or the reality of having to depend on
outside aid to survive.
Together Again
Within one month of 9-11 Tzu Chi and Knightsbridge International
joined hands again to deliver food, medicine, clothing and
other critical necessities to Afghanistan. The contract was
signed on October 11, 2001. Tzu Chi would provide the relief
supplies and Knightsbridge would deliver them. Afghanistan
Relief Organization (ARO) will also assist with the project.
This would be Tzu Chi and Knightsbridge's third humanitarian
aid partnership to Afghanistan since 1998 and though not one
of the most dangerous, it would by far be one of the most
challenging missions ever undertaken.
The small team from Knightsbridge departed
on October 14, 2001 and would arrive two days later in Tashkent,
Uzbekistan, near the northern border of Afghanistan. The team
members were Knightsbridge Chairman Sir Edward Artis, President
Dr. Sir James Laws, Sir Walter Ratterman and filmmaker Adrian
Belic. The first part of the mission would last through November.
On January 8, 2002, eight Tzu Chi medical and humanitarian
relief volunteers from Taiwan and the United States would
fly to Tashkent to meet up with Artis and Ratterman for the
second phase of assistance.
Coming Through for the Refugees
Knightsbridge would follow through with Tzu Chi's principles
of relief work and deliver as much of the aid as possible
directly into the hands of the refugees and return with a
signature from each recipient. It would be a highly dangerous
mission as the US air strikes in Afghanistan had been ongoing
since October 7, 2001. Materials to be distributed in the
remote mountain areas would have to be flown in by helicopters.
The only belongings each team member had with them were two
changes of clothes; the rest their luggage was filled with
communications equipment that eventually broke, leaving them
isolated from all contact for eight days.
The mission will be accomplished under
the protection of the Northern Alliance and the United Front.
Open their arrival at the Tajik-Afghan border, they would
see that many humanitarian aid organizations along with 1,300
reporters, all who had been trying for some weeks to enter
the country, would be barred from entering Afghanistan due
to either customs or visa problems. Yet under the substantial
help of Ambassador Mohammed Hasham Saad, the Afghan Ambassador
to the Republic of Uzbekistan, the Knightsbridge team obtained
diplomatic visas and entered through the Tajikistan border
into Afghanistan ten days after their initial arrival.
Black winds of winter, the severe sandstorms particular to
Afghanistan, would be howling across the snow-covered yellow
lands within a few weeks. With another winter approaching
soon, the urgency of getting a message worldwide that help
was still being offered outweighed the personal risk of the
relief team. The refugees would die if no more relief supplies
reached them.
Into Afghanistan
Aid arrived by two routes. The goods included: surgical equipment,
antibiotics and other medicine, blankets, winter clothing,
shoes, wheat flour, beans, rice, sugar, cooking oil, tea,
kerosene oil, gas lamps, tents, first aid kits and other necessities.
The first route of delivery was via Tajikistan, north of Afghanistan.
From October to November 2001, Tzu Chi and the Knightsbridge
International distributed more than eight 40-foot containers
of relief goods to more than 13,000 Afghan people living in
Hoji Malla Camp and a hospital in Khoja-Baldeen, Cha Ab, and
Hazrati Sultan Camp in Aibak.
The second route went into western Afghanistan.
Knightsbridge returned to Afghanistan at the end of December.
In January 2002, after bringing aid to Afghan refugee camps
in eastern Iran, the Tzu Chi-Knightsbridge team departed from
these camps to distribute further aid to those just across
the Afghan border from Zabol, Iran. Knightsbridge International
delivered rice, wheat, tea, cooking oil, sugar, tents and
first aid kits to Mazar-e-Sharif and Bamiyan. Tzu Chi, with
the help of the Iranian Red Crescent Society, delivered clothes,
blankets, shoes and medical supplies to the Makaki and Mile
46 Afghan refugee camps and to the city of Herat in northwest
Afghanistan
A Tradition of World Peace
Back in 1998, on a snow-covered mountain in Afghanistan up
9,500 feet in the foggy sky, a plane delivering aid from Tzu
Chi and Knightsbridge had touched down on a runway that the
residents had cleared overnight with their bare hands, so
pressing was their need for relief care. Below are the accounts
from the latest mission--the Christian Knightsbridge International
organization partnering with the Buddhist Tzu Chi Foundation,
to bring relief aid to Afghanistan, a Muslim country-a genuine
symbol of world peace. Master Cheng Yen believes that only
Great Love can ease human suffering and by transcending national,
racial and religious boundaries, the power of Great Love is
truly revealed.
AID TO AFGHANISTAN:
October 2001
On October 19, 2001 after much difficulty in logistics, communication
and obtaining visas, the Knightsbridge team left from Uzbekistan
to Dushanbe the capital of Tajikistan. Waiting in Dushanbe
was a 40-foot container filled with medical supplies, clothes
for 500 families, 2,500 pairs of shoes and other necessities
that was shipped from Tzu Chi. Upon their arrival, the team
purchased 15 tons of wheat, sugar, cooking oil and other shipments
of items to meet them at the Afghan border. On October 25
after jostling along barren roads six hours, the team along
with forty vehicles piled high with the relief supplies crossed
into Afghanistan. The team endured sandstorms, driving rain,
scorching sun and took turns being sick.
Hoji Malla: The team made their first major food delivery
on October 30, 2001 to 1,000 refugees living in Hoji Malla,
a camp on the outskirts of Khoja-Baldeen. This food delivery
came at the heels of a major medicine delivery earlier during
the week. Fifteen tons of wheat separated into 300 fifty-kilo
(100 lbs.) bags was delivered to the 300 families residing
in the camp. This village had been in existence for a little
over five months and, with the exception for some minimal
amounts of wheat, no other aid organization had yet provided
any assistance to this camp. Many people ended up eating garbage
that soldiers left behind.
Members of the team personally placed every one of the 300
bags of wheat into the hands or on the backs of the aid recipients.
Each bag of wheat was enough to feed a family for one month.
Within the camp, there were families with no shelter, and
some with only makeshift shelter. More than 1,200 people lived
in shabby tents made of earth, paper, tree branches or plastic
sheets. Women and children were living on the ground with
nothing between them and the elements. The team was only able
to find nine tents to purchase, which they assembled immediately.
It became an urgent undertaking to find more tents, as each
passing night brought closer the chill of winter. The team
requested Tzu Chi's help in acquiring tents to help the refugees
front the winter. The team had visited the camp a total of
four times with food that could last each family up to two
months.
The food distribution was covered by many of the major media
organizations from around the world, as the team was the only
NGO in the entire area. Yet as many media organizations as
there were in the area, few had provided aid to the refugees.
They were mainly there to cover the fighting between the United
Front and the Taliban. One of the reporters followed several
of the bags of wheat to their destination. There, a woman
shared that, although it was only a bag of wheat, it meant
that her remaining two children might not die. She took the
reporter to a graveyard near the camp. One of her children
who had died just days ago was laid to rest along with five
other children who had died within the past week due to hunger
or exposure.
The team held firm that all aid should be representative of
what the people needed, and that it should be delivered directly
into their hands. They met with leaders of the village to
determine the primary needs of the residents. After these
meetings, another 45 tons of supplies consisting of more wheat,
cooking oil, sugar, beans, and 1,000 blankets were purchased
to arrive at the end of the week. Determined to deliver aid
to whatever extent they had the resources for, the team would
not leave until this refugee camp was provided with sufficient
food and supplies to make it through the winter.
Unfortunately, on October 31, 2002 Dr. James Laws and Adrian
Belic had to depart from Afghanistan, cutting the manpower
of the Knightsbridge team in half. Laws had donated most of
the medicine for this mission and had suffered a sudden foot
injury. Belic had prior filming engagements to attend. That
morning, the now two-man Knightsbridge team Edward Artis and
Walt Ratterman, along with Abul Khalili from Afghanistan Relief
were awaiting clear weather for transportation by helicopter
into the Panjshir Valley. The United Front had requested they
travel into the Panjshir Valley where tens of thousands of
refugees were fleeing the fighting and bombing in Kabul. From
what they had been told these refugees were in a far worse
situation. The team had planned a delivery of 60 tons of food
to 60,000 refugees living in Jebul Seraj, approximately 65
kilometers north of Kabul, yet the mountain passes were snowed
in and the weather kept the helicopters on the ground.
Artis and Ratterman were within 14 kilometers of the front
lines and could hear the US air strikes on Taliban positions.
Freezing snows were now less than four weeks away, and the
lives of tens of thousands of refugees were at risk. The two-person
Knightsbridge team continued on. Their new destination was
deeper into Khoja-Baldeen.
November 2001
Khoja Baldeen: In the city of Khoja Baldeen about 150,000
refugees were living in dire conditions. There, the team purchased
various food items from the local market and distributed them
along with 15 tons of wheat purchased earlier. An additional
45 tons of food had been delayed at the border due to military
traffic in the area. The mission proceeded, in hopes these
food items would soon be delivered.
An extreme need for medical equipment was pervasive throughout
the entire country. At a hospital in Khoja Baldeen the superintendent,
a cardiologist and the other doctors were still able to perform
sophisticated operations despite minimum equipment, little
power, makeshift recovery rooms in tents, and a very sporadic
supply of medicines. This hospital had not charged patients
any fees over the last five years.
On November 7, 2001, the team donated a new electrocardiogram
unit to the hospital that was immediately used to save lives.
Delivering the unit was made possible by the collaboration
of Partners International Foundation, Knightsbridge International,
Afghanistan Relief International, and Tzu Chi Foundation.
A week earlier, Knightsbridge International, Afghanistan Relief
International, and Tzu Chi Foundation had delivered over US$8,000
worth in medicines and supplies to this hospital.
Several days had passed and the delivery of aid continued
to be delayed as a result of intensification of fighting nearby
at the front with the Taliban. When the aid finally arrived,
the team immediately started distributing it to the refugees.
Nearby, a team from National Geographic was filming at the
frontlines for a documentary depicting the war zone and the
humanitarian work of Knightsbridge International. While the
Knightsbridge team was delivering blankets, in a strange and
extremely unfortunate turn of events, two of the men from
National Geographic were injured by nearby artillery fire
from the Taliban. One man incurred shrapnel wounds to his
leg and buttocks, and the other suffered a concussion after
being thrown back against a tank. Both men were treated and
were recovering at the hospital. Dr. Artis, who assisted the
doctors in treating the wounds used the very medicines and
supplies that the team had delivered to the hospital just
ten days prior.
Later that same day, in the same location where to two men
from National Geographic were injured, three journalists,
two from France and one from Germany were tragically killed
in the intensifying battles.
Cha Ab: It was now nearing mid-November. The team had
been in Northern Afghanistan for a little over two weeks.
They were now heading four hours due east of Khoja Baldeen
to the town of Cha Ab, where no relief had been delivered
for four years. Cha Ab had recently seen a large influx of
refugees fleeing the oppression and war created by the Taliban.
Together with Afghanistan Relief International, the team delivered
over 40 tons of supplies over the weekend of November 10 and
11, 2001. The relief supplies included 30 tons of wheat, five
tons of sugar, five tons of cooking oil, and 1,000 blankets.
Each family was given one blanket and food to last for one
month. A third of the food and half of the blankets were retained
by the mayor of Cha Ab for use of payment in the town's "work-for-food"
programs. The food will assist in continuing public work projects
and infrastructure improvements.
Hoji Malla: That Sunday, November 11, 2001, the team
returned to Hoji Malla to deliver an additional 500 blankets
and food.
January 2002
Among the team members were Li Wei-huang, director of the
Tzu Chi Department of Religious Affairs Stephen Huang, relief
worker Chen Chin-fa, and Dr. Tseng Tun-hua.
Tzu Chi Taiwan and Knightsbridge International
started sending more relief supplies to Afghanistan in December
2001. Over 600 volunteers sorted and packed donated clothes.
They packed 6300 bags, each containing clothes for a family
of five or six. In addition to clothing, relief supplies also
included 900 pairs of shoes from the Field Relief Agency,
14,000 blankets provided by the Ministry of Defense, and medical
supplies from other organizations.
The volunteers packaged the clothes with care in the hope
that the recipients will feel the love from this far-away
land.
The supplies, which will go to 6300 families, included not
only what Tzu Chi collected, but also donations from private
and government organizations such as the Field Relief Agency
and the Taiwanese Ministry of National Defense.
Dire conditions
Hsieh Ching-kuei, Deputy Director of the Tzu Chi Department
of Religious Affairs, visited refugee camps in southwest Afghanistan
in November. He reported that 750,000 people lived in destitution
caused by civil war and drought.
Furthermore, after September 11 an additional 1,500,000 people
fled to neighboring countries to take refuge from war.
In refugee camps, families survive in tents with blankets
and daily rations of six loaves of flatbread provided by international
relief agencies. Those unable to enter refugee camps stay
near the camps, building makeshift shelters with tree branches
and living a life of starvation. An untold number of Afghan
refugees have lost family members and live without tents or
food.
Master Cheng Yen was extremely worried about the refugees
in the severe winter. She sought cooperation with other international
relief organizations to deliver relief supplies to Afghanistan
and asked Tzu Chi volunteers in Turkey and Jordan to help
with relief distribution in refugee camps.
In March 2002, 150 Tzu Chi volunteers gathered
in the Tzu Chi US headquarters in Los Angeles to pack new
shoes that were sent later to Afghan refugees. A company owner
was so touched in a Tzu Chi candlelight vigil that he donated
2,000 pairs of new shoes for men, women, children and even
babies, hoping that the refugees could have the shoes that
fit their feet.
Tzu Chi members in the US gathered more
relief goods in April 2002 such as: blankets, medical supplies,
two solar ovens donated by the Knightsbridge International
for the girls' school in Afghanistan, jeans, T-shirts, jackets,
school supplies, sleeping bags, and socks. These goods were
shipped in three containers and arrived in Afghanistan in
June 2002.