This is a must see site. Sree Sreenivasan's list (made via Furl.net) is a treasure trove, at least for this geek.
Tsunami Relief Fund
The recent devastation in South and South East Asia has taken an emotional and financial toll on many of our brothers and sisters. While it may be impossible for all of us to go there to help people first-hand, it is possible for us to bring some relief to the troubled areas by making a small, but effective, financial contribution. Please donate liberally!
Every cent we receive through this campaign will be turned over to one the many NGO's on the ground. While the goal is $10,000, it is our deep desire that we can collect a lot more. Help us in this first campaign to directly impact people in their time of greatest need.
Tsunami: How To Help
MSNBC.com has compiled a list of organizations you can approach to offer your financial contribution. Every dollar counts. Please give liberally.
Tsunami Matters
Via Sree Sreenivasan
With so much carnage spread across several countries, after the 9.0 earthquake and the resulting tsunami, my head is set on spin mode and is about to explode. Thankfully, Saheli has it all together on her blog. It's a great resource for information about how to help.
The earthquake and the tsunamis have caused the death of at least 20,000 people and devastated some of the most beautiful spots on this planet. Please make a donation, however small. We can work together to bring some semblance of sanity to our fractured lives.
“Land Became A Sea”
Via Shahidul Alam
As we watch in horror at the scale of the event, several things come to mind. How events a thousand miles away can affect our lives in so many ways. How connected we are in our joys and our sorrow. I realise that Bangladesh was not as badly affected as our neighbours, and that we should take pride in our achievements, but Bangladeshi newspapers today gloated over the victory of the Bangladeshi cricket team over India in their headlines! While I fret over the fact that the media plays on the negative, to downplay a disaster of such proportions in favour of a cricket match said a lot about our sense of proportions. In 1991, when nearly a million people had gathered to demand the trial of a war criminal, the government had chosen to ignore the news and mentioned instead the man of the match in a cricket game in Shunamganj. I had hoped a free media would play a more responsible role.
As I watch BBC and CNN interview British and German tourists, and the director of Oxfam from her office in Oxford, I remember my experiences in the 1991 cyclone where one hundred and twenty thousand people died in Bangladesh. As I stumbled through the debris, trying to get a sense of what had happened on the night of the 29th April 2001, I kept asking “What happened that night?” The aid workers told me of the number of bags of wheat they had distributed. The government officials quoted the figure in dollars that would be needed for reconstruction, the engineers spoke of the force of the wind.
A young woman in Sandweep looked at me and said “The land became a sea, and the sea became a wave”.
I try to imagine the tsunamis hitting the coasts of India, and Sri Lanka and Indonesia, and remember her words. The thousands whose lives have been wrecked by the earthquake do not constitute the ‘experts' that the media consider worth asking.
Shahidul Alam
27th December 2004
Dhaka
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