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H. George Anderson Visits Lutherans in Flooded Areas


From ELCANEWS@ELCASCO.ELCA.ORG
Date 06 Jun 1997 15:37:36

ELCA NEWS SERVICE

June 6, 1997

H. GEORGE ANDERSON VISITS LUTHERANS  IN FLOODED AREAS
FE-97-03-ET*

        CHICAGO (ELCA) -- Riding in Grand Forks, N.D., past street after
street with debris piled three to four feet high along the curbs, the Rev.
H. George Anderson, presiding bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America, could only shake his head.  Front-end loaders
prowled the streets in a losing effort to haul away ruined furniture,
washing machines, paneling and insulation.  A portable toliet stood on
every corner.
        At what remained of Jim and Sherryl Weisenberger's home, the
bishop heard how the Red River submerged the house, twisting it off its
foundation.  He took a step inside a totally ruined kitchen, with muck still
on the floors, walls and ceiling.  Somehow, Sherryl told him, they
managed to retrieve the one "memory" piece she wanted -- a cross from
her grandfather.  Government funds will buy them out, and they will
move elsewhere -- as will  owners of about 200 other homes in the
Lincoln Park area.
        Anderson donned boots, goggles and a hard hat to slosh around
the lower two levels of United Lutheran Church, still an imposing
structure even though the lower levels had been completely under
water.  Remnants of children's paintings were still on the masonry walls,
but virtually every inch of drywall, paneling and tile were gone.
        The presiding bishop was in Grand Forks -- and Fargo, Devil's
Lake and Mayville, N.D., as well as Ada, Breckenridge and East Grand
Forks, Minn. -- on a three-day swing May 20-22 to see firsthand the
damage from April's floods and to visit with the people.  At six gatherings
of pastors and church workers he listened to their stories, asked about
their well-being, prayed with them and made a promise.  "We will be with
you.  Whether it takes a year or longer, your church will stay with you,"
Anderson said.
        The people told him their stories.  "We've been vacuuming water
for the last six weeks," said the Rev. Rolf Wangberg, North Buffalo
Lutheran Church, Kragnes, Minn.  "Now that's stopped.  Lots of members
have moved back into their homes.  Farmers are working some land that
was under water.  We're back in our church after missing three straight
weeks."
        The Rev. Michael Gustafson, Breckenridge Lutheran Church, said
there is "lots of anger because people aren't getting as much money for
rebuilding from the Federal Emergency Management Administration or the
insurance companies as they expected. They are angry that they have
to wait on the cities to do things."
        The Rev. Jim Holthus, Nora Lutheran Church, Perley, Minn., said
his stress level is higher than before the flood.  "Farmers are back in the
fields, the schools are in session and everyone is calling me.  I'm like a
duck trying to put out a fire with my feet.  I played golf the other day and
had 10 phone calls when I got back."
        Anderson emphasized at each stop that caregivers must take
care of themselves.  "God created the world in six days and then took a
day off," he reminded them.  "That is a good example for you too."
        "We've been disconnected from friends and loved ones," a
member of Sharon Lutheran Church in Grand Forks told Anderson.
"They are scattered from here in 49 of the 50 states.  People were
moved from nursing homes to 67 different places in three states."
        The Rev. Tim Megorden, campus pastor at the University of North
Dakota, said there was so much to do earlier, but now "we're waiting for
things to dry out.  When you're watching two-by-fours dry out, you kind
of long for the chain of sandbagging."
        The Rev. Phil Bogen, pastor of Walle Lutheran Church, Thompson,
N.D., proudly told Anderson that his son, Adam Joseph, was born to him
and his wife, Sharon, that morning. "I'm incredibly thankful for some life to
go back to," he said poignantly.  He added that he was extremely angry
until he finally got a new water heater installed the day before.
        The Rev. Pam Marolla, Adams, N.D., told about farmers who had
"hundreds of dead cattle stacked up like the debris on Grand Forks'
streets."  A May 22 article in The [Fargo] Forum says a U.S. Department
of Agriculture survey shows 1.1 million acres won't be planted this year,
123,000 cattle have died, buildings have sustained $27.2 million in
damage and more than 400,000 bushels of stored wheat and barley
have been lost.
        Marolla also told about a congregation that took an offering to help
flood victims and then borrowed $500 from its cemetery fund to meets its
current expenses.
        In East Grand Forks, Minn., Anderson met Eleanor Hendrick and
her son Shawn, from Ascension Lutheran Church, Shelby, N.C. who
came to help her brother, Dale Hilde, clean out his home.  Across the
street was Family of God Lutheran Church, where 18 inches of water in
the worship space meant that "we have water rings around the piano,
the organ, the lectern, the pulpit and the font," said the pastor.
Northwestern Minnesota Synod Bishop Arlen Hermodson conducted an
outdoor service two weeks after the flood using a green electric box in
the lawn as the altar.
        At Oak Grove Lutheran High School, Fargo, N.D. -- flooded when
a dike broke near the school -- Anderson walked through administrative
offices that are cleaned up, including two with new carpet.  He saw
library books that were placed in a refrigerated truck to reduce mildew,
then aired near a dehumidifier and now ready to go back on shelves.
Trees around the school's football field, which was under water for
about six weeks, have foliage on the tops but none below.  About
$100,000 of the school's $750,000 loss is covered by insurance.
        The ELCA has raised $267,400 for the flood emergency.  The
Rev. Gilbert B. Furst, associate director for the ELCA's domestic disaster
response, said, $987,400 has been spent in the area for emergency
equipment, cleanup supplies and discretionary funds for pastors and
bishops.  Full-time coordinators have been hired for Grand Forks and
Fargo, a team of three people will assess church property damages, and
salary guarantees will be made to pastors whose congregations can't
pay them.  Area congregations are being matched with sister
congregations across the United States who have written Lutheran
Disaster Response or ELCA synods to set up such a relationship.
        Lutheran Brotherhood, a fraternal benefits organization in
Minneapolis, collected $1 million for flood relief and matched contributions
up to $500,000.  Aid Association for Lutherans, based in Appleton, Wis.,
has collected nearly $1,000,000 and provided an additional $1.4 million.
        Bonnie Turner, Lutheran Social Services of North Dakota, said,
"We need prayer first, then dollars, then volunteers.  Some 150 groups
want to come between now and August.  We need them now, not later.
We need skilled laborers -- plumbers, electricians, carpenters."
        Jan Perry in Breckenridge, praised the 114 volunteers from Luther
Seminary, St. Paul, Minn., who visited people in their homes.  "Some told
them, 'you're the first people who have come to see us,' " she said.
        "Long after FEMA, the Red Cross and the Salvation Army are
gone," Furst said wherever he went, "your church will still be here.  The
body of Christ is rolling up its sleeves for the long haul."

[*The Rev. Edgar R. Trexler is editor of The Lutheran magazine.]

For information contact:
Ann Hafften, Director (773) 380-2958 or NEWS@ELCA.ORG
http://www.elca.org/co/news/current.html


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