Rainy Season is Here

August 20, 2014 • Cambodia
Rainy Season is Here
Water flooded buildings, even damaging houses high on stilts.

A Samaritan’s Purse team is working in Cambodia to provide flood victims with clean water and hygiene items

Whitney Conard lives in Cambodia with her husband, Andrew, who works with Samaritan’s Purse as a water, sanitation, and hygiene program manager.

Rainy season began in early August here in Cambodia. The air itself changes into a thick, wet blanket that coats everything. It sprinkles off and on throughout the morning, and by afternoon, it turns into torrential downpours. It’s rain like you’ve never seen in America.

Yesterday afternoon, I popped over to my neighbor’s house to have a cup of tea. She lives right next to me, but for two hours, I couldn’t go back to my house because the rain was so heavy. We sat on the veranda, sipped our milky tea that quickly cooled in the damp weather, and watched her two boys splashing around. Our Cambodian neighbors drove in and out of the driveway, on their way to errands, apparently more used to being sopping wet than I’ll ever be.

Rainy Season is Here

Torrential downpours create muddy, swampy roads, making it difficult for people to travel.

In rainy season, you quickly get used to the idea of being a bit wet and muddy if you go outdoors at all—and sometimes indoors, too. If a wind whips up a heavy rain at the right angle, the water floods right in under our front door. Luckily, our floors are tile, and it just turns into a good excuse to mop.

I love rainy season because of the intense relief it brings after the awful temperatures of hot season. The bulk of May saw highs around 110 degrees every day. But now, the weather is like balm on my parched soul. The evenings turn noisy as frogs and crickets croak and chirp. And it gets almost chilly, the kind of damp weather you might experience during a cool spring rain.

But the rain also brings devastation. Already in Cambodia this rainy season, six people have died, and more than 4,000 families have been displaced. Although it’s not nearly as bad as last year’s rains (when the yard around our house flooded in knee-deep water for a week), people are still seeing their homes and livelihoods ripped away, as river water spills over the banks and crop fields flood.

My husband recently left to drive to the opposite corner of Cambodia to Kratie, a province even more poor and destitute than the one we live in. Samaritan’s Purse activated their emergency relief teams to help people who have been displaced by the flooding. Andrew will lead the water, sanitation, and hygiene assessment and ensure people have clean water to drink and toilets to use.

LEARN MORE about the Samaritan’s Purse flood response in Cambodia

Rainy Season is Here

During assessments, Samaritan’s Purse team members passed out Aquatabs and Gospel tracts to stranded residents.

Disease can spread rapidly in floods. People are forced to drink from water sources contaminated with floodwater and to use the outdoors as their toilet, as bathrooms are flooded and unusable. They also cannot wash their hands or perform basic hygiene activities because they may not have access to any water at all except floodwater.

I really can’t imagine having a home wiped away by the water or losing my child to drowning. Snakebites and electrocutions also cause deaths when power lines become submerged in floodwater and poisonous snakes are driven from their homes. So if you think of Cambodia or Andrew, or maybe even see rain in your own town, please pray for him and his team as they work to help those who need it.

SUPPORT
Cambodia Projects Cambodia, one of the poorest nations in the world, has few resources available to care for its people, the majority of whom live in rural areas. We help meet desperate needs for food and livelihoods through animals and agriculture projects, as well as providing access to safe, clean drinking water. Children’s education projects ensure boys and girls remain in school, while increasing their quality of life. Our maternal and child health program reduces the mortality rates of women and their young children by improving obstetric care, teaching essential nutrition practices, and increasing access to quality healthcare. We also combat human trafficking through education and training. Only 2 percent of the country is Christian, and a crucial aspect of our work involves partnering with local churches to help spread the Gospel in their villages.

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