From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


Organization saved lives in Caracas slum


From NewsDesk <NewsDesk@UMCOM.UMC.ORG>
Date 21 Jan 2000 12:08:00

Jan. 21, 2000        News media contact: Linda Bloom·(212)870-3803·New York
10-21-32-71B{023}

By Paul Jeffrey*

CARACAS, Venezuela (UMNS) -- If there's a sign of hope in mud-covered
Venezuela, it can be found in the steep ravine where the Catuche River flows
into the center of Caracas.  

When days of rain provoked flooding the night of Dec. 15, the Catuche --
like similar rivers along the northern coast of Venezuela - rose rapidly to
levels unseen in decades, wiping out hundreds of homes with an unstoppable
torrent of water, mud, rocks and tree trunks.

Yet unlike other Caracas neighborhoods assaulted by the floodwaters,
Catuche's unique history gave its residents a fighting chance to survive the
worst disaster to hit this country in more than a century.

"The organization of the neighborhood and the solidarity of the people saved
hundreds of lives in Catuche," said Manuel Larreal, director of Ecumenical
Action/ACT, one of five Venezuelan church-related groups that have joined
together in ACT/Venezuela. The group's new office, which opened in
mid-January, is just two blocks from the Catuche River in a building used by
Ecumenical Action/ACT to dispense emergency assistance and psychological
care.

The United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR) has engaged in relief work
in Venezuela with Church World Service, the relief agency of the U.S.
National Council of Churches, and ACT, or Action By Churches Together, an
ecumenical coalition organized by the World Council of Churches.

No one knows for sure, but perhaps as few as 15 people died in Catuche, a
very small figure compared to other similar neighborhoods where hundreds
lost their lives. Estimates of the death toll nationwide range from 15,000
to 50,000. 
	
The history of what made Catuche different begins in 1992, when Jesuit
seminarians living in the neighborhood started organizing local residents in
an effort to clean up the Catuche River. Unplanned development had allowed
hundreds of families arriving from the countryside to build houses right up
to the edge of the river -- and in some cases directly on top of the river,
leaving just a small tunnel underneath for the passage of the water.

With many houses dumping raw sewage directly into the river, the ravine
became an unsightly and unhealthy place, and engineers warned that serious
floods would violently rip through houses in the ravine.

What the seminarians started soon blossomed into a neighborhood-wide
organization that brought together church groups, city government, local
builders and international funders in a partnership designed to improve the
quality of life along the Catuche River. Sewage pipes were installed,
and families slowly began relocating out of the ravine.

As the neighborhood organization began to make change along the river,
residents utilized the same structures to resolve other neighborhood crises.

Two years ago, 36 families moved out of shacks above the river and into
church-sponsored four-story apartment complexes overlooking the ravine. They
were the first of hundreds of families that community leaders hoped to
relocate in the coming years. Then came the December flood,
and within minutes many of those families lost their homes.

"We had a 15-year plan to heal and recover the river," Larreal said. "Now
we've got to do all that work in the next 18 months."

Although they face staggering challenges in the months ahead, community
leaders in Catuche are markedly more hopeful than their counterparts in
other affected areas of Venezuela. "We lost our homes and personal
possessions, but the organization remains," said Liliana Padilla, a
researcher at a Jesuit center in the neighborhood. "That gives us hope at a
time when hope is in short supply."

Donations for Venezuela relief work can be made to UMCOR Advance No.
9826450-8, earmarked for Venezuela floods, and dropped in church collection
plates or mailed to 475 Riverside Dr., Room 330, New York, NY 10115.
Credit-card donations can be made by calling (800) 554-8583.

# # #

*Jeffrey is a missionary with the United Methodist Board of Global
Ministries.

*************************************
United Methodist News Service
Photos and stories also available at:
http://www.umc.org/umns


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