June 5, 2006 By Michelle R. Scott
BIREUEN, Indonesia – Zulkifi believes the houses built by the United Methodist
Committee on Relief are the best. Sitting in the living
room of his new UMCOR-built house, he likes to compare it to the other homes being
built in the area. He then apologizes that his house is empty. It is, save for
a straw mat on the floor and the fishing net he is working on to earn some income
for his family. "The house is empty because I have no
job," he says. UMCOR is not only helping Zulkifi and
people in four other villages in the Bireuen district with housing, it is also
helping them restore their livelihoods, as the region continues to recover from
the Dec. 26, 2004, tsunami. Zulkifi is one of 292 people
who participated in recent training sessions. The livelihoods program includes
a 16-hour course in small-business startup and management, followed by an application
process through which Zulkifi and his neighbors can request the supplies and equipment
they need to start a new business or restart the one they lost in the tsunami.
Providing support A local
government official, Amir Adli, lists jobs as one of the top needs for people
in his community. He explains that people want to work, but they lack the support.
"Now they have a good house," he says. "But they lost everything." At
a community gathering near Pineung Siribee Village, dozens of people living in
temporary barracks-style housing talk about their future. This village is one
of the five where UMCOR is assisting tsunami survivors. Many
of the people gathered here have already attended the weeklong livelihood training
session and have either submitted or are planning to submit an application to
receive assistance in starting up a small business. Common
interests are fishing, setting up fishponds, operating small stores, chicken farming,
supplying well parts, sewing and making cakes. Most are picking up where they
left off before the tsunami. Some, mostly fishermen, are choosing to change their
occupation. Giving and receiving Syarifa
is one of the more than 500 people who submitted an application and a business
plan for a cake-making business to UMCOR. In the plan, she says she needs an oven,
a way to purchase ingredients, and something to transport the cakes she makes
to nearby shops where people buy snacks. This is what
she did before the tsunami took her home, her husband and her only means of income.
"Everything was gone except me," she says. In her application,
Syarifa explains how she will give back to the community. Those who receive livelihood
assistance will be obliged to return to the community 25 percent of the value
of what they received from UMCOR. The return payment
is not expected to be in cash. Instead, beneficiaries can provide free or reduced
cost services to their community, hire additional employees or use other creative
ways to give back some of what they received. UMCOR plans
to provide at least half of the applicants with material assistance in the form
of equipment and other support that will allow them to start new or restart businesses
lost in the tsunami. More information on the work in
Indonesia and other parts of the world can be found at http://new.gbgm-umc.org/umcor/,
the UMCOR Web site. United Methodist News Service Michalle
R. Scott, an UMCOR staff member in New York, visited Indonesia this spring. |