First Person

Rebirth among the flood ruins

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Families in the Dadu district of Pakistan's Sindh province are still battling flood waters that keep their villages submerged. Photo by Caroline Gluck/Oxfam
Families in the Dadu district of Pakistan's Sindh province are still battling flood waters that keep their villages submerged. Photo by Caroline Gluck/Oxfam

Oxfam’s Caroline Gluck reports from Sindh.

The road heading towards Qaimjatoi, in Dadu district in Pakistan’s southern Sindh looked like it was disappearing into the river.  A week ago, it was impassable; now, it was still surrounded by flooded rice fields, but most of the road had, at last, re-emerged from the waters. 

All around us, rice fields and trees were submerged.

We were going to meet 18-year-old Sakina Ghaincha, living with hundreds of other displaced families on a narrow ridge of an elevated embankment.  The families are living here in makeshift wooden shelters, with straw mats hung over the top as a roof. Colourful hand-stitched patchwork quilts, called rili and made locally, were strung along the sides of some shacks, affording families a little privacy and also some warmth when night temperatures drop.

Many people could see their flooded villages from the elevated bank, but couldn’t get back to them yet because the flood waters were still several feet high.  For most, boat travel remained the only way in and out.


Sakina comes from Qaimjatoi, just a kilometer from where she’s sheltering. Heavily pregnant, she struggled through knee-high waters when the floods came in August.  Two days later, she gave birth to a baby boy, Ghous Bux, in the open air.

“He’s our ray of hope in these difficult times”, she told me, shyly. “I was so happy after my son’s birth. It’s a miracle for us.”

Her son was her first child.  There were no health facilities; but Sakina was lucky to find a traditional birth attendant who had also fled a flood-hit village and was sheltering on the same embankment.

Sakina also said she was very pleased to receive hygiene help and advice from Oxfam and its partner, SAFWCO, or the Sindh Agricultural and Forestry Workers Coordinating Organization, who have been working with the community to keep the area clean, distribute hygiene kits, provide water, and build toilets.

“They were the first organizations to work here,” Sakina said.  “We’ve sat down with the health workers to hear about the importance of handwashing – how it can prevent disease – and good hygiene.

“Now I can properly take care of my son and give him a wash with soap.  We have buckets to store water and I can take a bath.  We had nothing before.”

Sakina smiles as her son wakes and wants feeding.  She’s determined to provide him everything she never had – including an education, a chance to get qualifications, and a good job.

Despite her joy at being a mother, Sakina worries about the future. Her family house was completely destroyed in the floods.  Her husband, a tenant farmer, will be unlikely to begin farming his land for at least six months as it is still under water.  They lost their rice crop just before harvest-time.

She also feels anxious at the lack of privacy she has when she breast-feeds her son in her road-side shack.  Trucks, motorbikes, cars, and animal-drawn carts all drive past as we talk.

“We have no idea what the future will bring.  We just live here day to day,” said Sakina.  “If we go back home, there’s nothing for us; and nowhere to live.  We’re worried about finding work to earn money to feed our family”.

The daily difficulties and the approaching winter months are a worry not just for Sakina but for tens of thousands of other families in Sindh – the region that was the worst-affected by the floods, and where more than a million people still remain displaced because stagnant flood waters remain high.

“My only hope right now is my son”, Sakina said. “Because of my son I have hope.”

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