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Newsline: Brethren grad student reflects on Gulf counseling


From COBNews@aol.com
Date Mon, 27 Mar 2006 18:17:30 EST

Title: Brethren grad student reflects on Gulf counseling Subject: Church of the Brethren Newsline Date: March 27, 2006 From: Church of the Brethren News Services Contact: Cheryl Brumbaugh-Cayford V: 847/742-5100 F: 847/742-6103 E-MAIL: _CoBNews@AOL.Com_ (mailto:CoBNews@AOL.Com)

BRETHREN GRADUATE STUDENT REFLECTS ON GULF COAST COUNSELING EXPERIENCE

March 27, 2006 (Elgin, IL) -- "Surreal is the only word I have for it," said Karen Croushorn, describing the Gulf Coast of Mississippi last fall. Driving south from Jackson was "eerie...like a nuclear bomb had gone off," she said "We were still looking at roads that were impassible, no clean drinking water, no sanitation."

Croushorn, a member of Manassas (Va.) Church of the Brethren and a former Brethren Volunteer Service (BVS) worker, was one of 14 graduate students and two professors from George Mason University who spent a week in Mississippi doing mental health counseling with survivors of Hurricane Katrina. Croushorn is a part-time graduate student in counseling, and also works for a credit union.

The students spent the week before Thanksgiving in Mississippi, offering counseling services to survivors almost three months after Katrina hit. The group were "not doing formal counseling," Croushorn said, but mainly just sitting down and talking with people who needed a listening ear.

The opportunity to do such work is unusual for students who are not authorized to work in disaster zones by the American Red Cross because they are not licensed, she said. But the professors who accompanied the group made connections with the director of Mississippi's Mental Health Counseling Association. Mississippi had such a great need for counselors that the association was willing to take the students.

The association director arranged for places to stay and sites at which to work. Croushorn's group worked with almost 600 people at sites from East Biloxi to Pearlington, and west almost to the Louisiana border. The work sites were central locations for survivors to receive services such as help with housing and food.

Many of the people the group met were aid workers themselves, or counselors who were personally affected by the disaster as they attempted to serve clients. Some of the counselors were from Louisiana, and were working in Mississippi because of so much need in the state. The students counseled both people who had evacuated, and people who had stayed through the storm. The professors worked with the professional counselors.

The group was in Mississippi when the "honeymoon period" after the disaster was waning, she said. People were frustrated with the lack of help and attention compared to that given to Louisiana, and a lot of racial tension was resurfacing, she said. "Instilling hope was what we were doing while we were there," she said. The "absolute resiliency" of the people surprised her, as well as the welcome the group received, and the thanks from the people they worked with. "And the fact that they're going to rebuild," even without the insurance or the money to rebuild, she said.

Another goal for the group was to help collect data in order to be effective advocates for Katrina survivors, because funding for such services is being cut off, Croushorn said. "In order to get funding, you have to have data." At the time, the George Mason group was told they were the last such group to be in Mississippi to help with the mental health counseling needs.

As she reflected on the experience a couple of months later, the needs she saw in Mississippi spoke to Croushorn's Brethren understandings of social justice. It was a perspective she had learned in BVS as well, she said. "It put a whole new spin on Thanksgiving, for all of us," she remembered. "First, how much being in something like that (Hurricane Katrina) puts things in perspective."

Since their return from Mississippi, the students have become advocates for the counseling needs of Katrina survivors, Croushorn said. The group is working toward doing lobbying on Capitol Hill. Some of the students planned to attend a March 14 march in Washington to protest the evictions of Katrina survivors without other viable housing options.

Croushorn has learned to talk through the "Katrina fatigue" that she has seen in other areas of the country, where some already are tired of dealing with the aftermath of the disaster. "There's a different kind of `Katrina fatigue' in Mississippi," she said. "It's not that they're tired of it--they can't get away from it, and they're tired."

The Church of the Brethren is a Christian denomination committed to continuing the work of Jesus peacefully and simply, and to living out its faith in community. The denomination is based in the Anabaptist and Pietist faith traditions and is one of the three Historic Peace Churches. It celebrates its 300th anniversary in 2008. It counts about 130,000 members across the United States and Puerto Rico, and has missions and sister churches in Brazil, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, and Nigeria.

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For more information contact:

Cheryl Brumbaugh-Cayford Director of News Services Church of the Brethren General Board 1451 Dundee Ave. Elgin, IL 60120 847-742-5100 ext. 260 _cbrumbaugh-cayford_gb@brethren.org_ (mailto:cbrumbaugh-cayford_gb@brethren.org)

***************************************************************** The Church of the Brethren Newsline is produced by Cheryl Brumbaugh-Cayford, director of news services for the Church of the Brethren General Board. Newsline stories may be reprinted provided that Newsline is cited as the source. To receive Newsline by e-mail, write _cobnews@aol.com_ (mailto:cobnews@aol.com) or call 800-323-8039 ext. 260.


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