"Could you please allow us to pick up the pitiful children who have lost their parents in the cyclone," he pleaded. "They have no families and are completely alone."
Yohannan said permission had been granted and that the children will be cared for.
GFA workers have been actively involved in the relief effort since a few hours after Cyclone Nargis hit Burma in the early hours of May 3. The work was started in the GFA Bible college in Rangoon, where people sought shelter in the badly damaged, but still usable, buildings. A few days later, GFA workers spread their efforts to other parts of the storm-ravaged country.
The Bible college is still being utilized as a shelter. A portable generator there has made it possible to draw clean, fresh water out of the campus well. The water is being bottled and distributed to those who so desperately need it. At night, the missionaries are using portable projectors to show an Indian-made film about Jesus.
Missionaries are focusing their attention on the two major needs of the people.
"The people are asking for water to drink and rice to eat. Starvation is the major problem right now," Yohannan said.
GFA and Believers Church has additional medical and food shipments on the way to the country, and more than 300 students from GFA's Bible colleges, along with missionaries and volunteers, are mobilised to get food and clothing to the storm survivors.
News reports from inside Burma put the death toll at 38,491. The United Nations estimates that more than 60,000 people perished because of the storm. The International Red Cross says the dead could number as high as 127,900.
"No matter what the official number is, we must remember that each of these people was a soul precious to God. In the same manner, we must continue to help the millions of survivors. They need to hear that they are beautiful in God's eyes," Yohannan said.
Weather-related troubles may not be over for the people of Burma. Heavy rains have been falling on the country for several days and the annual monsoon season is just a few weeks away.
The foul weather may complicate the distribution of some emergency supplies, but it will not be cause for the relief efforts to stop. GFA's 500 native missionaries in Myanmar will continue to serve their fellow countrymen, long after the crisis disappears from the headlines.
"Rebuilding Burma could take years. And since our missionaries, churches and Bible college students are indigenous, they are there for the long haul," Yohannan said.











