Restoring War-Torn Ethiopia
Samaritan’s Purse is helping displaced people through our Hope for Tigray program.
Though unnoticed by the world… God has not forgotten them.
Just a few years ago, terrible violence overwhelmed a remote part of northern Ethiopia called Tigray. While the war is now over, the fight to survive continues.
Hundreds of thousands of displaced people still live cramped in tent shelters and civic buildings. Drought stalks the land, and children are hungry. Yet perhaps the deepest scars left by the war are unseen.
Trauma mars the memories of old and young alike. Women were abused and violated, then shunned by their communities. Kids, left vulnerable by the chaos of conflict, could no longer act like kids. Their childhood was ripped away the moment the war broke out, and they’ve been struggling ever since.
Though their suffering seems unnoticed by the world, God has not forgotten the men and women and boys and girls who live here. He is at work now to bring restoration.
Feeding the Hungry in Tigray
“This food means so much for these kids. Previously, they experienced a lot of things and they are now traumatized. Getting this food and other services at this program means so much.”
Samaritan's Purse began responding to the crisis in Tigray in 2021. Our mobile medical units have helped provide life-saving aid to close to 300,000 people, including malnourished children and pregnant and nursing mothers. We've also distributed over 51,000 tons of food to those in need and completed numerous water, sanitation, and hygiene projects.
Though some people have now returned home as fighting has ended, there are still many, many displaced people in and around Shire, Tigray's largest city. They live in 18 different camps, with up to 18,000 people in some locations.
Samaritan's Purse is there today providing hot meals and Biblically based trauma recovery programs through our Tesfa for Tigray project. “Tesfa” is the Tigrayan word for hope. We partner with local churches to help address physical hunger along with spiritual and emotional needs—especially restoring hope for children and women traumatized by terrible violence. We present the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ and trust God to change hearts.
“They have come through a lot of problems and unspeakable grief,” said Pastor Tamrat, a local Christian leader and Samaritan's Purse partner. “Only Jesus Christ can help them heal, if not here on earth, then in heaven.”
“We appreciate your opening this program as well as the staff who are caring for us. They take care of me very well every day. I eat the food until I am satisfied. I even take some to my home.”
Genet is just one of many people benefiting from this programming. When the war broke out more than three years ago, the young girl fled with her mother and older sister while her father fought in the war. While fleeing, her mother was killed. With no time to grieve—the two sisters fled to safety but, amid the chaos, they were separated. Now, years later, Genet still doesn’t know what happened to her sister or father.
Despite the war ending more than a year ago, Genet still faces a daily struggle to find enough food as conditions in Tigray remain dire. As a teenaged girl living alone in a tarp shelter, she's vulnerable to many dangers, and she has no family to help her meet basic needs. Genet tells others that sometimes “my neighbors give me leftover food.” But, it is hardly enough to fill her stomach.
Tens of thousands of children in Tigray, like Genet, are waking up each day uncertain about where their next meal may come from. That's why Samaritan's Purse supports local churches where children can come every weekday to receive a hot meal; enjoy crafts, games, and educational activities; and participate in one-on-one and group Biblical counseling. All this occurs in a setting overseen by local Christian women hired by Samaritan's Purse as caregivers.
Kebebush, one of the caregivers, shared, “This food means so much for these kids. Previously, they experienced a lot of things and they are now traumatized. Getting this food and other services at this program means so much.” The sense of stability and safety within these churches is something these kids haven't felt in years.