One month later, as we descended the hill, this is what we saw.
It had rained hard all night and the area was again flooded. We wondered if we would be able to get to the areas that needed relief supplies. We arrived at the Chikwawa District offices and met our two trucks.
Here are all but one of the volunteers that went to help us unload the trucks. Elder Reynolds was taking the picture.
We met with the District officials, received our directions and split our group up into two groups so we could send each delivery truck in a different direction. Each group had a someone from the district who would help with the organizing the distribution when we arrived at the camp. One truck went back a little to the north to find several small camps and a larger camp of 360 families in need. The other truck headed south to a camp of where 435 families were to receive supplies. We went south and this is what we found.
And then we got to Konzere and this group of women were anxious to see us.
Their only problem was they lived on the wrong side of the highway and were not those who had been displaced. The camp that we were sent to help were living in a temporary camp on the other side of the road. They had been registered by the District so they came and lined up to have their name called so they could receive our donation.
Which they received as they walked around the truck.
When we finished our distribution at Konzere we started back north to meet our other truck at Nchola. Close to there were two Tizora camps with 314 families needing donations. We met the other group and proceeded through the sugar plantation to the villages where the group was staying. This is what we found when we arrived.
The district official was starting to get them organized so they could have their name called and receive their donation.
When we finished at this site we dropped off two small donations and headed for the district warehouse. The other group had not been able to find one group of 350 families and the District was not prepared to have us place the 1250 blankets we had purchased so we had to leave them at their warehouse hoping we could come back in the next two days to make the final distributions. That has yet to occur so we have left it in The Lord's hands.
Now for the other side of Relief. Emotinal relief is always a good part of taking care of an emergency so while preparations are being made and distributions are being fulfilled there is need for dealing with children and supplying relief to their mothers. So Grandma Cindy and Elder Reynolds filled in when they could.
Finally, Papa Howie got some face time with the kids.
I LOVE the last picture with Dad and the kids! Also, my boys were impressed that those trucks could drive through all that water.
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