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How To: Help Flood Victims from Iowa to China |
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| Save me, O God! For the waters have come up to my neck. I sink in deep mire, where there is no standing: I have come into deep waters, where the floods overflow me. --Psalms 69:1-2 | ||
by Tamar Fox, June 17, 2008 |
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Jews are used to a flood story with a happy ending: The animals march onto the ark two by two, and after forty days and forty nights of rain, things begin to ease up. The dove brings back an olive branch. There is a rainbow, and a pledge never to destroy humanity by flood again. Sweet on the page, but gruesome if you think about it for too long. The world slowly drowned. God erased history.
Flooding in Iowa City: water water everywhere
The flooding in Iowa is not quite cataclysmic, but it is horrifying and dangerous and sad. Aside from the four Eagle Scouts who were killed in a storm last week, thousands have been evacuated from their homes. Businesses and agriculture have been submerged in water that is noxious and full of sewage, farm chemicals, and fuel. As an alumna of the University of Iowa, I was personally horrified to hear that sixteen university buildings have taken in water, including the main library, the brand new journalism building, and a small non-denominational church.
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