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[LCMSNews] Tsunami teams give reports


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Date Sat, 26 Feb 2005 08:52:34 -0600

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February 26, 2005 .................... LCMSNews -- No. 12

Focus on cleanup, rebuilding, say tsunami teams

By Kim Plummer Krull

Posting personnel in Sri Lanka and Indonesia as quickly as
possible and focusing on projects that assist with the "incredible"
challenges of massive cleanup and long-term rebuilding are among key
recommendations from two LCMS assessment teams for "next step" relief
efforts in those tsunami-ravaged countries.

"Cleanup is going to be incredible, and it's going to continue
for some time," said Rev. Ted Engelbrecht, LCMS World Mission
facilitator for Southeast Asia, who helped assess needs following the
Dec. 26 tsunami.

"We need to deploy people there so we're not attempting to do
projects by long distance," he continued.

Engelbrecht and fellow team members shared insights and
recommendations with LCMS World Relief/Human Care and LCMS World Mission
in comprehensive reports Jan. 27 in St. Louis.

Those two ministries worked in partnership to deploy the
assessment teams less than two weeks after the tsunami.

The team members-all LCMS World Mission alumni or current
personnel with broad international expertise in health care, community
development, and missions outreach-spent seven to 10 days evaluating
needs in Sri Lanka and Indonesia, the two countries with the most
tsunami casualties.

Reports

"We looked at the devastation and could just stand and stare,"
said Dennis Denow, an LCMS World Mission education specialist based in
Papua Province, Indonesia. "It takes so long and is so hard to try and
understand. Where do you begin [with relief efforts] when you are
talking about thousands upon thousands of dead and missing, about whole
families and whole villages gone?"

To date, the tsunami has claimed at least 190,000 lives;
thousands more remain missing and some 5 million are homeless.

Team members described "devastation as far as the eye can see"
and "dazed people" searching refugee camps for missing loved ones. They
told of grief-stricken survivors holding photos of "lost" loved ones.

According to their reports, about 40 percent of the tsunami
victims in Sri Lanka were children; recovery of bodies in some areas is
expected to continue for as long as six months.

"The horrible smell of death was everywhere," said Julie Lutz,
an LCMS World Mission medical missionary in Papua New Guinea, who helped
assess needs in Indonesia.

Acknowledging there was no clear "best way" to provide help
after such an enormous tragedy, assessment team members offered what
they called "broad stroke" recommendations to address physical and
spiritual needs in two countries with complex challenges.

In general, the teams stressed the need to focus on areas where
other relief agencies are not already working to avoid duplicating
services and coordinating, when possible, through local Lutheran
congregations.

Michelle Hoeppner, an LCMS World Mission community development
worker in Southeast Asia, emphasized the importance of laying the
groundwork "to better equip and build capacity of our partner churches."

The team that surveyed needs in Sri Lanka said that country's
government welcomes outside assistance. The Synod has a partner church,
the Lanka Lutheran Church, through which to work.

The other team focused on Indonesia, which, Denow said, is the
nation with the world's largest Muslim population. There they focused on
two distinct areas: Nias, a small, rural island with a large Christian
population, and Banda Aceh, a region that had been closed to Western
influence before suffering some of the greatest tsunami-related
devastation.

Recommendations

In addition to posting staff on-site in both Sri Lanka and
Indonesia, the assessment teams recommended addressing a top concern of
tsunami survivors: to help their children resume their education.

After the disaster, many schools and public buildings were
transformed into refugee camps, said Dr. Herbert Hoefer, LCMS World
Mission area director for India and Sri Lanka.

"There's a big need to get the refugees out of the schools so
the kids can get back in school," he said. "They need alternative
shelter for refugees plus school supplies, shoes, and other things that
the children need when they go back to school."

Team members recommended either building or providing support
for a Christian school in Nias, perhaps to serve refugee children.

In Indonesia, the assessment team also recommended working
through local congregations to sponsor self-help projects that will
yield long-term benefits. One proposal was to participate in a "mercy
corps," hiring refugees to do cleanup work.

The Sri Lanka assessment team specifically cited the needs of
two Lutheran pastors in Batticaloa. One pastor lost a daughter, his
chapel, and parsonage to the tsunami; another pastor took 15 orphans
into his own home when floodwaters damaged a Lutheran orphanage.

Just as the assessment teams departed within 48 hours after they
were recruited, they urged a quick, continued response to ongoing needs.
"If we're not there now, we're not building relationships and we won't
be a part of rebuilding later," said Dr. Keith Harvey, an LCMS World
Mission medical missionary serving in Kyrgyzstan. "We must act now."

And while their reports were filled with stories of grief and
devastation, they also included glimmers of hope. Photos showed LCMS
team members listening to survivors' personal stories and sharing hugs
of compassion. Often, team members said, survivors asked why they had
come to South Asia and why they cared about strangers.

Hoefer said he had the opportunity to reply, "I am a Christian.
Caring is something I cannot not do."

The LCMS members marveled at the tsunami survivors' resiliency.
"These are still a cheerful, optimistic people," said Debra Wesche, a
former LCMS medical missionary, now a hospice nurse in Ann Arbor, Mich.
"They seem to be dealing with this tragedy, at least on the surface,
better than we can probably understand."

Rev. Matthew Harrison, executive director of LCMS World
Relief/Human Care, thanked the assessment teams for their "invaluable
work."

"This is an extremely important moment for the LCMS," he said.
"We have the opportunity to share acts of mercy. We don't do this to do
some bait and switch evangelism. We love people body and soul, in the
name of Jesus."

To learn more about ongoing tsunami relief efforts or giving
opportunities, visit worldrelief.lcms.org <http://worldrelief.lcms.org>

(Kim Plummer Krull is a freelance writer in St. Louis who writes
for LCMS World Relief/Human Care.)

****************************************

If you have questions or comments about this LCMSNews release,
contact Joe Isenhower Jr. at joe.isenhower@lcms.org or (314) 996-1231,
or Paula Schlueter Ross at paula.ross@lcms.org or (314) 996-1230.

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