Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

AUCKLAND * HAMILTON * PALMERSTON NORTH * WELLINGTON * CHRISTCHURCH * DUNEDIN February 2015.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "AUCKLAND * HAMILTON * PALMERSTON NORTH * WELLINGTON * CHRISTCHURCH * DUNEDIN February 2015."— Presentation transcript:

1 AUCKLAND * HAMILTON * PALMERSTON NORTH * WELLINGTON * CHRISTCHURCH * DUNEDIN February 2015

2 Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter. Martin Luther King Jr

3

4 Get ready to collect… Don ’ t touch anyone !

5 Peso values Money bag = 100,000 Yellow = 100 White = 10

6 PoorMiddle-ClassWealthy  Basic wooden house (limited electricity)  Bike  Cell phone  Low paid or no job  Basic wooden fishing boat to collect food  Some medical services/ no health insurance  Primary education/some secondary education  Shared toilets within the community  Shared water wells Note: you have no insurance, no remittances, no social security or government funded benefits.  Strong house  Second hand car  Reasonably paid job  TV  Computer  Can afford most medical expenses  Have some insurance  Remittances (money) received from family overseas  Access to primary, secondary and tertiary education  Access to clean water, private toilets and food Strong concrete house  Modern/new car  Well-paid job / business owner  TV, computer, radio, ipad  Cell phone  Nice clothes  Overseas holidays  Maid  Nanny  Can meet all medical expenses  Extensive home, contents and health insurance  Private education including primary, secondary and tertiary.  Access to clean water, private toilets and food

7 Typhoon Haiyan, 8 th of November 2013

8

9

10

11 A few stories from the ground…

12 How are the wealthy affected?

13 … and the middle-class?

14 What about the extremely poor?

15

16 PoorMiddle ClassWealthy  House destroyed P1000  Cost of tarpaulin for temporary shelter P50  Boat destroyed P200  Community sanitation system damaged. Need to purchase anti-septic liquid and buckets. P80  Community water supply damaged. Need to purchase safe drinking water for a week. P200  Medical fees from family members physically injured from debris during the typhoon (no health insurance) P800  Funeral costs P850  Damage to the exterior of the house P2500 (You pay excess of P500)  Damage to garden P300 (You pay excess of P100)  Loss of wages P500  Childcare costs: P1000  Cost of contacting relatives: P20  Contaminated water supply means you need to purchase bottled water for several days: P200  You have some food supplies in your cupboards. You buy some food. P100  Minor damage to the exterior of the house P1000 (covered by insurance)  Damage to garden P200 (covered by insurance)  Phone calls to overseas relatives who are concerned P20  Increased childcare P1000  Need to replace contaminated water supply with bottled water for several days. P200  Power is down but you can run your own generator for 2 weeks. P250  You have food supplies for two weeks in your cupboards.

17 Responding to an emergency

18

19 The first step is Relief

20 Distributing emergency food supplies…

21 …cleaning things (soap, toothpaste, etc.)

22 …materials for building temporary shelters

23 …transporting supplies to remote places

24 The second phase is called Recovery

25 The goal is to ‘build back better’

26 …employing local people and materials

27 Coconut palms felled by the storm become the building materials for new houses

28 Veges are planted to feed families and sell

29 Livelihoods (like fishing) are re-established

30 These women make chilli powder

31 Safe water supply is re-established…

32 …so life can start returning to normal again

33 These houses are built on a hillside, so they will not get flooded out again

34

35

36 1 DAY OF DIFFERENCE FOR A LIFETIME OF CHANGE

37 HOW YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE Caritas projects for the Philippines: Water Disaster Preparedness Growing Organic Food Private Toilets

38

39

40

41

42 MOVE IT GO THE DISTANCE MOVE IT GO THE DISTANCE LIVE IT LIVE IN A TEMPORARY SHELTER LIVE IT LIVE IN A TEMPORARY SHELTER SWEAT IT WORK UNDER DEMANDING CONDITIONS SWEAT IT WORK UNDER DEMANDING CONDITIONS STOP IT GIVE SOMETHING UP STOP IT GIVE SOMETHING UP

43 GUIDED BY CATHOLIC SOCIAL TEACHING ≪ SOLIDARITY ≪ HUMAN DIGNITY ≪ STEWARDSHIP ≪ PREFERENTIAL OPTION FOR THE POOR AND VULNERABLE

44 MOVE IT GO THE DISTANCE Preferential option for the poor and vulnerable

45

46

47 SWEAT IT WORK UNDER DEMANDING CONDITIONS Solidarity

48

49

50 LIVE IT LIVE IN A TEMPORARY SHELTER Human dignity

51

52

53 STOP IT GIVE SOMETHING UP Stewardship

54

55

56 ≪ Register your team ≪ Organise your team/school and choose your captain ≪ Set a date and choose a challenge ≪ Promote and fundraise ≪ Engage your community

57

58 Lunch break Grab some lunch and a drink Sign up at the desk to stay in touch with what Caritas is up to Show off your talents in UVball & UFOball

59 2014 Winners Maisy & Tobias Hide & Seek Jessica Rogers Waiting

60 Ka ora te whenua, ka ora te tangata; ka mate te whenua, ka mate te tangata. When the land lives on, so does man; when the land dies, so does man.


Download ppt "AUCKLAND * HAMILTON * PALMERSTON NORTH * WELLINGTON * CHRISTCHURCH * DUNEDIN February 2015."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google