
Devastating
floods in Bihar, India 2008More than one million people was cut off by floods in northern India in the end of August.
AMURT & AMURTEL volunteers rushed to the affected area immediately and worked out of several relief camps covering the districts of Madhepura, Saharsa, Araria, Purnea, Katihar Bhagalpur and surrounding areas.
The teams for two months distributed food and non-food items to more than 10,000 people daily and provided medical care to the most vulnerable.
Flood
relief 2007
AMURT and AMURTEL teams have been meeting the emergency
needs of people affected by monsoon floods for the past
10 days in the Indian states of Bihar, West Bengal and
Orissa.
In Jamalabad, Bihar, our teams serve cooked food to
5,000 people daily, and deliver food supplies by small
boats to 6 inaccessible villages.
In addition we have been offering yoga and sports activities to people to lift their spirits.AMURT and AMURTEL volunteers give priority to children, making sure they are well fed, and engaging them in enjoyable activities.
Tsunami
2005
In phase one of the relief work our team located and buried or cremated all the dead bodies in and around Keerakolaichal in Nagapattinam district.
We were able to locate the bodies with the help of military helicopters, and the villagers and townspeople themselves. Grief-stricken tsunami survivors would approach us asking us to carry their dead relatives away.
The teams disposed of 322 bodies from December 28 to
January 2.
In phase two our volunteers split up into smaller groups
and helped the local people clean and repair their
damaged houses. Some volunteers provide counseling,
games and sports for the traumatized children.
Gujarat
Earthquake 2001
In Gandhidham, 1200 students and 50 teachers from the
Ananda Marga schools had gathered for the Republic Day
celebrations on January 26th. Immediately after the
earthquake hit they joined the AMURT volunteers and set
up a relief camp in their school compound.
The camp was operational within an hour and started providing shelter, cooked food, blankets, clothing and medical care to stunned survivors from the surrounding apartment blocks.
The team accommodated 220 families in the first few days under tarpaulin and plastic sheets.
Orissa
Cyclone Relief 1999
AMURT was amongst the first NGOs (non-government
organizations) to arrive at the scene of the devastation
caused by the merciless cyclone that hit Orissa in
eastern India on October 29 1999. 65 team members and
300 volunteers responded to the needs of the cyclone
survivors throughout the affected areas.