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Faith-based camps like those hit by Texas floods are rite of passage for many. They’re now grieving

Texas’ catastrophic flooding hit faith-based summer camps especially hard, and the heartbreak is sweeping across the country where similar camps mark a rite of passage and a crucial faith experience for millions of children and teens.

Updated
5 min read
Faith-based camps like those hit by Texas floods are rite of passage for many. They're now grieving

A person carries a sign reading “Do Good. Do No Harm. Keep Falling In Love with Jesus” after it was salvaged from debris washed up near Camp Mystic along the Guadalupe River after a flash flood on Friday swept through the area, Sunday, July 6, 2025, in Hunt, Texas. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)


Texas’ catastrophic flooding hit faith-based summer camps especially hard, and the heartbreak is sweeping across the country where similar camps mark a rite of passage and a crucial faith experience for millions of children and teens.

“Camp is such a unique experience that you just instantly empathize,” said Rachael Botting of the tragedy that struck , the century-old all-girls where at least 27 people were killed. for in the area filled with youth camps as the overall death toll passed 100 on Tuesday.

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