Transcript Slide 1
Ebola:
Voices from
West Africa
January 2015
What
WhatisisEbola?
Ebola?
Since the outbreak of the epidemic in 2014, over 22, 000 people
have been infected by Ebola and over 9 000 have died from the
disease.
Schools and youth groups have generously raised nearly
£20, 000 for our Ebola appeal, thank you.
Although overall the epidemic seems to have stabilised, the
number of new cases in Sierra Leone is a major concern.
What
WhatisisEbola?
Ebola?
Your money has helped us tackle Ebola:
We’ve trained 60 burial staff who have conducted 402 safe and
dignified burials so far.
We’ve rolled out an Ebola awareness training programme for
faith leaders and volunteers. Already they’ve reached nearly
170, 000 people.
4, 800 people kept in quarantine have receive vital food
packages.
We’ve distributed outbreak prevention kits, including cleaning
materials, to 995 places of worship to help them safely manage
Ebola outbreaks.
Where?
Where?
CAFOD is working
alongside people in
Sierra Leone, Liberia
and Guinea to support
them during this crisis.
(Ivory Coast)
Alex
Alex Musa Koroma (third from the right) is a science teacher,
but he has been unable to teach since May 2014, when the
Ebola virus gripped his community of Kambia, in Sierra Leone.
Today Alex leads a burial team supported by CAFOD and
its partner Caritas Makeni.
“I volunteered because
Ebola is not just for medical
staff. As a teacher I have to
play my part.”
Alex
The 60 strong burial team made up of men and women, on
average attend to between six and eight bodies a day.
The burial teams provide the deceased and their families with
a safe and dignified burial.
“Are you being
careful?”
Rachel
Rachel, 14, is Alex’s daughter. Here they are sitting outside
their school. Before the virus hit, Alex’s 14-year-old daughter
Rachel would ask him: “Dad, how was your day?” Now she
asks: “Are you being careful?”
Kadiatum
Kadiatum is part of a
burial team too.
It hasn’t be easy for
women to be
accepted onto the
burial teams; this
kind of work is
considered unsuitable
for women in Sierra
Leonean culture.
Kadiatum
“Some people accept
us, some don’t. But
overall we are
generally treated well
and people
appreciate women
being on the teams.
Some doubted we
would be strong
enough to pick up
and carry the bodies,
but we have proved
we can do it.”
Alex and Kadiatum
“We are part of
the hero group.
We are fighting
the battle. I hope
that after the final
eradication of
Ebola, Sierra
Leone and its
future generations
will prosper.”
Alex
Thanks to the work of people like Alex and Kadiatum, the
number of Ebola cases in Sierra Leone is starting to fall. Alex
is rightly proud of his role and hopeful for the future.
Catherine
“It’s been a
privilege to work
with our Sierra
Leone team and
Caritas partners.”
Catherine is CAFOD’s Emergency Response Coordinator for
West Africa. She has been working in Sierra Leone since
October 2014. She has been working alongside CAFOD staff
and partners to tackle Ebola.
Catherine
“I find it hard to reflect on my
time here, because I found,
like so many others, the only
way to deal with things was to
roll up my sleeves and get on
with the job.
There were moments when
despite that, the gravity and
terrible sadness of what we
were doing crept into some of
the essential practical tasks
that we needed to carry out.”
Catherine
“When I return home,
I will be able to touch
people again – it’s
something you miss
here: no handshakes,
no hugs make you feel
connected.
It has given me a
glimpse of the
isolation that Ebola
has imposed on
people here.”
Catherine
"We will be working
flat out until there are
no longer any new
cases."
“Ending Ebola goes beyond
eradicating this appalling
disease, it means tackling
extreme poverty that
allowed it to ravage this
beautiful country in the first
place.”
Thank you
for all your
prayers and
fundraising
so far.
Let us pray...
Lord God, we entrust to you those affected by
Ebola.
We pray especially for the health care workers,
that you may guide and protect them.
We pray that your Spirit may inspire those
researching the drugs, medicines and health care
systems that will stop people’s suffering.
“Do not be
afraid,
for I am
with you”
And in the midst of this, keep us strong in faith,
hope and love. We entrust ourselves and those
affected by Ebola to your infinite power and love.
Isaiah 41:10
Amen.
cafod.org.uk/secondary/emergencies
blog.cafod.org.uk
Picture credits: d-maps.com; Laura Purves, Poppy
Hardee/CAFOD; CAFOD.