While there’s no dollar limit on the dollar-for-dollar program, the government matching funds will only be available for contributions made to approved charities between Aug. 2 and Sept. 12. Development and Peace, the international development arm of the Canadian bishops, is one of the approved charities.
Caritas Internationalis is asking for $5.5 million from its global network of Catholic aid agencies to help flood victims.
As a member of the Caritas network, Development and Peace responded with an initial $50,000 from its emergency relief fund Aug. 9, and immediately began appealing for donations.
Development and Peace has not called for a national parish collection in Canada. But a letter has been sent to Canada’s bishops asking that some mention of the crisis in Pakistan be made in parishes. Development and Peace is also preparing inserts to be downloaded from the organization’s web site (www.devp.org) and used in parish bulletins.
“We just want the general Canadian Catholic public more aware of this as people come back from summer break,” said Development and Peace executive director Michael Casey.
Initial response in early August was weak, said Casey. But it wasn’t just Development and Peace that was having trouble raising money after huge response to the earthquake in Haiti, he said.
Development and Peace raised $20 million for reconstruction efforts after Haiti’s massive earthquake in January.
In the development community, various theories have been advanced about why Canadians were slow to contribute to disaster relief in Pakistan, Casey said.
“The news literally dribbled in about the extent of the thing,” he said.
Because news of the scale of the floods was slow to develop, few people formed the clear picture of devastation they had following Haiti’s earthquake, said Casey.
Perceptions that Pakistan’s government is unstable and corrupt, and that Pakistanis are closely allied with insurgent groups fighting Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan, have not helped the fundraising effort, he said.
The increasing frequency and intensity of various crises is creating new challenges for Development and Peace, which has traditionally concentrated on the business of development, not emergency relief, said Casey.
Flood facts
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