| Medical Suppies for Afghanistan
(Feb 1998) |
 |
Project time: February 1998-May 1998
Aid provided: Medical supplies
Long-term war in Afghanistan impoverished
certain regions. Bamiyan Province, situated in the highlands,
is one such place. The five or six million people residing
in the area depend entirely on neighboring provinces such
as Takhar for medical care and daily necessities. On February
4, 1998, an earthquake measuring 6.1 on the Richter scale
shook Takhar, killing five thousand people and making thirty
thousand people homeless. Bamiyan was left with no outside
aid whatsoever
.
In February and May the same year, Tzu
Chi worked with Knightsbridge International to deliver antibiotics
and other medicines to Bamiyan, enough for at least thirteen
thousand people. A generator was donated to a local school,
and twenty-four stethoscopes were given to a local clinic
and the medical department of the University of Bamiyan.
The executive officer of this relief operation,
Hsieh Ching-kui, told of an incident which impressed him deeply.
In a small rural clinic established by a Belgian missionary,
all the foreign medical staff had left to avoid the perils
of war. Only a doctor and her husband had stayed behind. For
six months they had gone unpaid and unaided, hanging in there
to serve the locals. Said Hsieh. "Because of the existence
of such people, our bringing medicines from thousands of miles
away gains more significance: no longer is the act simply
the conveyance of goods, but it becomes the expression of
care, respect, moral support and
encouragement
for their courage and perseverance."
Edward A. Artis of Knightsbridge International
was in charge of delivering the medicines to Bamiyan. He remembered
that when the plane touched
down on a snow-covered mountain 9,500 feet high, it was in
extremely foggy weather and on a runway that had been cleared
overnight by residents with their bare hands. It was evident
how pressing the need was for outside aid. Artis remarked.
"The relief operation in Afghanistan was executed by an American
Christian organization, who distributed relief items provided
by a Buddhist organization from Taiwan, for the purpose of
helping victims in a Muslim country. It was indeed a manifestation
of Great Love that transcended borders and religions."