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Charity
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When her mentor, Master Yin Shun, asked
Master Cheng Yen to leave the coastal town of Hualien to preside
over a temple in central Taiwan, she instead took a chance
at remaining in Hualien to carry out her charity work.. On
April 14, 1966, Master Cheng Yen founded the Tzu Chi Merits
Society with only four disciples, two followers and the help
of thirty housewives providing relief and assistance for the
poor.
The small group earned their living by
sewing one pair of baby shoes per day. They would sew extra
pairs to bring in additional money for the charity fund. The
thirty housewives would set aside fifty cents of their grocery
money into a bamboo "piggy bank" before they went
to the market each day. The first five years were extremely
trying for Master Cheng Yen and her small group of followers.
Yet throughout the hardships they never touched the charity
fund even when circumstances such as losing land or not having
enough to eat threatened to dissolve all their hard work.
They just worked extra hard to earn enough money to sustain
themselves and never gave up on their mission to help the
poor.
Within those first five years, the Tzu
Chi Merits Society helped fifteen families, serving a total
of thirty-one elderly and ailing impoverished people. Support
and participation for the program grew as word about compassion
and relief spread beyond Hualien. The program gathered strength
in numbers and drew support from other parts of Taiwan and
its nearby islands to eventually form the Compassion Relief
Tzu Chi Foundation over four million volunteers partake in
today.
Today, Tzu Chi's charity work has been
extended to international endeavors. These projects in international
relief uphold Tzu Chi principles of respect and administering
direct aide. Assessing the situational needs of victims is
a priority Tzu Chi undertakes before providing any relief
aide during its mission. Distribution of relief supplies is
placed directly in the hands of the victims with respect and
gratitude. As long as there are victims of disaster, Tzu Chi
people will be the first at the scene and the last to leave.
This is Master Cheng Yen's ideal for the mission of charity
and compassion relief.
Relief supplies include emergency funds,
long-term and regular living subsidies, rice, medical allowances,
home care products, school fee allowances, and funeral coverage.
Services provided include emergency medical assistance, home
repair and renovation and informational, referral, and case-related
services.