From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org
Albania Is Overwhelmed by Waves of Kosovar Refugees
From
PCUSA NEWS <pcusa.news@ecunet.org>
Date
06 Apr 1999 20:07:35
Reply-To: wfn-news list <wfn-news@wfn.org>
6-April-1999
99140
Albania Is Overwhelmed by
Waves of Kosovar Refugees
by Alexa Smith
LOUISVILLE, Ky. - It was late at night when military trucks dropped off
more than 600 Kosovar refugees in a little town in southern Albania, to be
housed in an abandoned barracks that has no windows or doors to keep out
the cold night air and no running water.
"They came in very bad condition," said John Lena, a 24-year-old
Orthodox monk who saw the trucks unload the refugees who were packed in, as
he put it, "like sheep." Once on the ground, one elderly woman - who said
she had walked for seven days to reach the Albanian border - began asking
townspeople for a pillow for sleep, promising to return it the next
morning. A mother was pleading for a cup of milk for her baby, who'd had
only water for sustenance for six days.
Donations of cheese and sausage and bread were gathered from neighbors
and shopkeepers, although most of the donors, according to the monk, had
little or no money to spare, because jobs are scarce. A few cattle are what
most families in this little town keep to sustain themselves since the
country collapsed economically a few years ago. Albania, as Albanians point
out, is among Europe's poorest places. Lena was stunned by the outpouring
of help from those who have little to those who have less.
"It is a great pain for me ... to see this suffering and not be able to
help them," said the young man, who, along with others in his order, is
slipping away from the monastery to talk with the refugees. "They are so
tired, so without hope ... How do you say [in English]?
"Hopeless."
Hope is what Albania's churches are trying to give - both evangelical
Protestants and the larger Orthodox Autocephalous Church of Albania. The
immediate task is emergency help. When the crisis has subsided they will
begin dealing with the longer-term challenge of caring for the refugees.
Diakonia Agapes - the outreach arm of the Orthodox church's development
office - just took in 1,000 tents, 25, 000 blankets and 10,000 mattresses
from Church World Service (CWS), the relief arm of the National Council of
Churches of Christ in the United States, an $800,000 shipment. An
additional $100,000 for blankets and bedding was channeled from CWS through
International Orthodox Christian Charities, the humanitarian agency of
Orthodox Christians.
The Lutheran World Federation, Norwegian Church Aid, DanChurchAid,
Dutch Interchurch Aid, CWS and other partners of the World Council of
Churches' relief agency Action By Churches Together (ACT) are working to
augment the church response in Albania - which is why two Presbyterian
Church (U.S.A.) staff - Duncan Hanson of the Worldwide Ministries'
Division's Europe Office and the Rev. Art Beals of University Presbyterian
Church in Seattle, who coordinates the PC(USA) partnership in Albania - are
in Tirana to help coordinate the response of the international religious
community.
As of Sunday morning, ACT had airlifted 31 metric tons of biscuits into
Albania, as well as more than nine metric tons of food for children and
infants. Relief staff on the ground are developing ways to distribute the
goods. The agency is developing contingency plans for countries bordering
the Balkans, such as Hungary and Greece, and is operating refugee relief
programs in Macedonia, Montenegro, Kosovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, as well
as the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.
The PC(USA) has so far given $200,000 to support ACT's work in Kosovo
and the Balkans. Presbyterian Disaster Assistance's Kosovo Relief account
number is 9-2000-137. Checks may be mailed to: Presbyterian Church
(U.S.A.), Central Receiving Service, Department 97590, 100 Witherspoon
Street, Louisville, KY 40297.
Credit-card donations may be made by dialing PresbyTel at
1-800-872-3283.
"We're here to ameliorate the crisis ... do what we can to get people
through the immediate problem," said Hanson, who spend a few days earlier
in the week in the northern border town of Klukes. "And then assist the
church here to build their capacity to minister to these people over the
long haul. Many have had family members killed. Many."
It is estimated that more than 1,000 Kosovars are arriving every hour
at an already overwhelmed and increasingly unsanitary camp in Klukes -
which has one bathroom for every 200 people, no shelter and not nearly
enough food. Many - including women and children, according to Hanson - are
sleeping outside in bitter cold, while others are jammed into school
buildings and even homes. "Klukes was described in `The Herald-Tribune' as
hell," Hanson said. "I think it was hell. There are tens of thousand of
refugees there, and thousands more are arriving every hour."
Two of the denomination's three mission personnel in Albania have been
relieved of their assignments to work directly in refugee relief: Cheryl
Lee Choy, a mission volunteer at the University of Albania in Tirana, and
Arthur Ware, who teaches at an evangelical bible college in Durres. The
college has suspended classes and is being used as a shelter for refugees.
Eloise Ware continues to teach English at The Resurrection of Christ
Orthodox Theological Academy in Durres.
"We're functioning here on Maslov's hierarchy of needs. Do they have
food? Do they have shelter? Do they have clothes? Are they physically safe?
Some of these people have walked hundreds of miles, and some of them are
elderly," said Hanson, adding that more than a few are collapsing as soon
as they cross the border into Albania.
"And nearly everybody has a story of an atrocity," Hanson told the
Presbyterian News Service (PNS). "... My companions from Norwegian Church
Aid and Diakonia Agapes and I heard about countless atrocities. At first I
tried to remember the details, but the stories eventually became so
numerous I couldn't take them in. I couldn't make a count of the number of
reports of crimes against humanity that I heard, but it was high. ... Art
Beals - who stayed in Tirana to work on that side of our planned response -
heard similar stories from refugees in `Tent City' [there]."
The Rev. Luke Beronis - academic dean of the seminary in Tirana and a
member of the pastoral staff of the Orthodox cathedral there - told the PNS
that Tirana has absorbed about 10,000 refugees, which he said is not so
overwhelming in a city of more than 600,000. But the problems of the
refugees are overwhelming. Fourteen refugees delivered new babies last week
in Tirana's maternity hospital - with no home to go to and no means to feed
or clothe their children.
Seminary students and church youth are volunteering in Tirana's "Tent
City." Kosovars with relatives in Tirana are jamming into private homes.
"A lot of people are very afraid," Beronis said, speaking of the more
than 239,000 refugees who had swarmed into Albania by April 5. "Albanians
are scared for the future, scared of what's going to happen. Of all the
countries in Europe to accept refugees, Albania is in the worst position
... But [people] are trying to help."
What worries Beronis is how such compassion will hold up after months
and months of relentless need. "It is going to get hard. ... We are going
to get tired," he said, noting that he believes Christians have no other
choice but to help anyone who is in need. "People here," he said, "are in
shock, in despair and, of course, they are also angry."
And then there's the shock of hearing about whole towns slaughtered,
and watching so many traumatized displaced people straggling toward the
Albanian border.
"It is a clear sign of evil in the world," Beronis said one week before
the Orthodox Easter. "In this century, we've seen some of the worst
killings in the world. Our technology has progressed, but the hearts of men
haven't progressed. It just shows that what the world needs is a change of
heart - a conversion only God can bring.
"Our technology just shows us that killing can be done on a greater
scale."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This note sent by PCUSA NEWS
to the wfn-news list <wfn-news@wfn.org>.
Send unsubscribe requests to wfn-news-request@wfn.org
Browse month . . .
Browse month (sort by Source) . . .
Advanced Search & Browse . . .
WFN Home