
| Survivors
Ask, 'Why Us?' - They Wish They Had Been Swept Away SEATTLE, Dec. 28 /PRNewswire/ -- World Vision, the Christian relief and development organization, has more than 5,000 staff in Asia -- 2,000 in India alone. Within hours of Sunday's tsunami, staff living in stricken communities were helping their neighbors with relief and rescue -- and dispatching food, shelter and comfort to survivors. Following are some of their stories.
SRI LANKA "One mother came into a relief center carrying her dead child. Doctors pleaded with her for some time before she would let go of the child." "We are an island and our beautiful beaches have become a graveyard. We will find bodies buried under the sand for years." Some community leaders also have been immobilized by shock. One World Vision worker said she wished she had been washed away instead of her family. Children are wandering into relief camps alone. Some are merely separated from parents who might be in another camp. But too many have watched their parents die. World Vision's own staff have not been spared. One was in his car, trying to drive his family out of harm's way. A wave struck the car, tipped it on its side and carried away his mother, mother-in-law and baby daughter.
INDIA "Houses are broken, and there are bodies under the houses. The stench is terrible because not all of the bodies have been removed." "Survivors are not going back to their communities because they fear another wave. The fear has really affected the people." One major problem encountered by relief workers is the large number of children separated from their parents. They arrive at relief camps alone. So while they are dealing with pressing health and survival needs, relief workers and government officials also are faced with the task of reuniting children with their parents -- if the parents survived. "Groups of children were playing cricket on the shore when they saw the waves approaching. They ran, but many were simply too small and too slow to outrun the waves."
THAILAND For more information on World Vision's response, or on ways the public can help, please visit World Vision, or phone 888-56-CHILD. World Vision is a Christian relief and development organization dedicated to helping children and their communities worldwide reach their full potential by tackling the causes of poverty. | |