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 Catholic relief agencies rush aid to Haiti Minimize
Catholic relief agencies rush aid to Haiti

Catholic relief agencies rush aid to Haiti

By Dennis Sadowski | Catholic News Service

WASHINGTON

Bishop Silva authorizes collection

Bishop Larry Silva authorized a second collection in parishes last weekend for Haiti. The money will be sent to Catholic Relief Services (CRS), the U.S. bishops international relief organization, which already has a permanent operation in the Caribbean island nation.

Money may still be sent to CRS through local parishes. Catholics are asked to write checks to their parish with a notation that the donation is for Haiti relief. Parishes will send the total collected to the diocesan business office payable to the Roman Catholic Church in the State of Hawaii. The diocese will in turn send what it receives to CRS.

The CRS representative in Hawaii is Ewie Tamashiro of the Office for Social Ministry. For more information, call her at 203-6702 or toll-free 877-263-8855, ext. 702. or e-mail her at itamashiro@rcchawaii.org.

Baltimore-based Catholic Relief Services has been asked by the Vatican to coordinate the churchs relief and recovery efforts in earthquake-ravaged Haiti.

The Pontifical Council Cor Unum, the Vatican office that promotes and coordinates Catholic charitable giving and distributes the money the pope designates for charity, made the request of the U.S. bishops aid agency because of its experience and expertise in Haiti, the most impoverished nation in the Western Hemisphere.

The council said in a statement released Jan. 14 that hundreds of CRS personnel have long been active in Haiti.

The past experience, expertise, and resources of CRS will enable prompt and effective coordination of the churchs efforts, which in the words of Pope Benedict, must be generous and concrete to meet the pressing needs of our Haitian brothers and sisters, it said.

Around the world, dozens of private Catholic agencies initiated fundraising efforts, and dioceses announced special collections at Sunday Masses to fund the relief efforts of CRS, Caritas Internationalis, Caritas Haiti and other Catholic agencies and religious orders already in the country.

The most severe damage was limited to the Haitian capital and areas to its south and west. The epicenter of the Jan. 12 magnitude 7 earthquake was 10 miles southwest of Port-au-Prince with severe damage extending outward. Relief agencies estimated that as many as 3 million of Haitis 9 million people were either injured or homeless because of the temblor.

The Haitian Red Cross estimated Jan. 14 that up to 50,000 people died in buildings that collapsed during the quake, which struck late in the afternoon while people were still in offices and classrooms or at home preparing dinner. Some agencies reported the death toll could top 100,000.

CRS has made an initial commitment of $5 million in aid, an amount that John Rivera, the agencys communications director, said would last barely a week.

Because conditions in the earthquake zone are treacherous and needs were still being assessed, CRS was sending a few additional staff as well as relief supplies through the neighboring Dominican Republic, said Pat Johns, the agencys director for staff safety and security.

Two staff members based in the Dominican Republic  an expert in natural disaster response and a civil engineer  were due in the Haitian capital the afternoon of Jan. 14, he said. A third, an expert in shelter, was expected to arrive from Kenya by Jan. 16.

Immediate relief was to start today, he told CNS Jan. 14. After the 2008 hurricanes, by the luck of God we decided to do some pre-positioning of supplies in Port-au-Prince. There are goods in warehouses, like water, bedding, mosquito nets.

Johns said CRS staffers were planning to make their way to the warehouses Jan. 14 to begin distributing supplies. He said it was not known if any of the warehouses were damaged by the quake or the dozens of aftershocks.

Catholic religious orders quickly mobilized people and resources as well.

The Camillian order was operating the only hospital in the Port-au-Prince area not destroyed in the earthquake, the Vatican missionary news service Fides reported Jan. 14.

Camillian Father Efisio Locci, director of health and development for the Order of St. Camillus, Order of Servants of the Sick, told Fides the hospital was full and in need of practically everything.

The rector of the Salesians of St. John Bosco, Father Pascuel Chavez, offered the orders resources in a letter sent to the superior of the Salesians in Haiti, Father Ducange Sylvain.

Now is the time to roll up our sleeves as Don Bosco did and help those in the greatest need, Father Chavez said.

The Rome-based Knights of Malta sent a medical team to assist with medical care in Haiti. Under the auspices of the orders emergency relief program, Malteser International, doctors and other medical experts from France and Germany were deployed.

The Jesuits in the Dominican Republic sent one person across the Haiti-Dominican Republic border to help with emergency relief, said Uta Sievers of the orders social justice office in Rome.

The Jesuits in the U.S. were organizing relief efforts through Jesuit Refugee Service and the Jesuits French-Canadian Province, of which Haiti is a part.

Father Jose Antonio Sandoval Tajonar, regional coordinator of Caritas for Latin America and the Caribbean, left Mexico City for Haiti Jan. 14. The eight-member Caritas team that accompanied him included five rescue workers from an area near the Belize border often hit by hurricanes.

Elsewhere, Catholic agencies had pledged hundreds of thousands of dollars in aid as of Jan. 14.

Development and Peace, the official development and aid organization of the Catholic Church in Canada, has launched an emergency appeal to support humanitarian aid to the devastated country. The agency has committed an initial pledge of $50,000 to Caritas Haiti, which operates 200 medical clinics in the country.

CAFOD, the overseas development and relief agency of the Catholic Church in England and Wales, made an immediate pledge of $162,000 for water, food, medicine and shelter for victims in the worst affected areas.

Contributing to this report were Carol Glatz and Father Matthew Gamber in Rome and David Agren in Mexico.


Posted on Friday, January 22, 2010 (Archive on Sunday, February 21, 2010)
Posted by pdownes  Contributed by pdownes
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CNS photo/Paul Haring
White flower pedals fall around U.S. Cardinal Bernard F. Law as he celebrates Mass at the Basilica of St. Mary Major to mark the feast of the church's dedication Aug. 5 in Rome. The dropping of flower pedals from the ceiling calls to mind the tradition t hat says Mary revealed where she wanted the church to be built through a snowfall in August 358.

    

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