Within 24 hours of the deadly and destructive magnitude 7.8 earthquake
that rocked Nepal on April 25, Scientology’s Volunteer Ministers mobilized
emergency response teams in the nation’s capital of Kathmandu to assist in
combing the rubble for survivors and distributing needed supplies in the
ravaged Asian country.
Ten days after the temblor struck, the confirmed death toll has climbed
to more than 7,300 while the number of injured exceeds 14,000. Beyond the
initial shaker, there have been more than 70 aftershocks—destroying thousands
of buildings and leaving much of Nepal in ruins. The United Nations has
estimated that the earthquake has impacted 8.1 million people—more than a
quarter of Nepal’s population of 28 million.
The Volunteer Ministers encountered a desperate situation when they
arrived on the ground.
“There are areas of [Kathmandu] that are like an eerie ghost town.
Five-story buildings have been flattened to two, killing anyone inside—and the
stench of rotting bodies is hard to swallow, especially when you can’t access
them,” wrote one Volunteer Minister in an email from the disaster site. “There
are shattered exterior walls threatening to collapse any second on every
building.”
Scientology Volunteer Ministers of Nepal established a base camp in
central Kathmandu. They have been joined by VMs from the U.S., Mexico,
Australia, New Zealand, Taiwan, Italy and India. They reported that, despite
the grave circumstances, the Nepalese in the capital are resilient and there’s
a steady flow of food and water, and the focus is on recovery. Not so in the
mountain areas outside the city where many villagers have lost virtually
everything including their entire store of food.
There were Volunteer Ministers on each of three teams dispatched by the
UN headquarters late last week to search for survivors and bodies in villages
near the border of China, four hours from Kathmandu. One group was attached to
a Canadian canine unit whose dogs trained to locate bodies by their scent. In
addition to carrying out search and rescue they are delivering food and other
supplies to the villagers.
Volunteer Minister are also visiting nearby hospitals and camps, to
provide food and water and “assists,” Scientology techniques that help speed
healing, reduce pain, and allay stress in those suffering physical and
emotional trauma.
Whether serving in their communities or on the other side of the world,
the motto of the Scientology Volunteer Minister is “Something can be done about
it.” The program, created in the mid 1970s by L. Ron Hubbard and sponsored by
the Church of Scientology International as a religious social service,
constitutes one of the world’s largest and most visible international
independent relief forces.
The Volunteer Minister “helps his fellow man on a volunteer basis by
restoring purpose, truth and spiritual values to the lives of others.”
A global network of Volunteer Ministers mobilizes in times of manmade
and natural disasters, answering the call wherever needed. Collaborating with
some 1,000 organizations and agencies, they have utilized their skill and
experience in providing physical support and spiritual aid at hundreds of
disaster sites. For more information, visit volunteerministers.org.
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