Dear Mother Jones Reader,
The impacts of climate change are no longer a question of if but when. Heat waves, hurricanes, and floods, painfully on display just this past week in the U.S. southeast, are becoming the norm. Yet they strike people living in extreme poverty — on less than $2.15 per day — hardest.
Six weeks ago, far from international headlines, flash floods ravaged eastern Bangladesh, affecting 5.8 million people in a region that hadn’t seen such flooding in 26 years. In a single night, chest-deep waters swept away homes and livelihoods. Vulnerable families lost everything.
BRAC — the world’s largest NGO from the Global South and proudly founded in Bangladesh 52 years ago — deployed 5,000 staff that very day.
Often working nonstop, these teams have since reached 127,000 families with emergency relief and dry food packages, set up 637 medical camps, and repaired 13,610 tube wells to restore clean water.
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