By Patrick Downes
Hawaii Catholic Herald
“Pray for Puna.”
That’s the message coming from the Big Island of Hawaii as a fierce and unpredictable volcanic eruption displaces hundreds of residents.
In addition to offering prayers, the Catholic Church is stepping into action.
Parishioners of Sacred Heart Parish in the town of Pahoa in the island’s Puna District, whose church is three and a half miles from the eruption, are opening their hearts, their homes and their parish hall to those forced to flee the lava flowing from cracks in the ground in their neighborhood.
Bishop Larry Silva has visited and offered his assistance.
Local Catholic service agencies are working with victims, coordinating aid efforts, and collecting and distributing funds.
About 1,700 people reside in Leilani Estates, a rural subdivision of acre-sized lots on a grid of about 22 miles of roads, where at least 18 fissures have opened up since May 3 spewing molten rock and poisonous sulfur dioxide gas. A Hawaii County evacuation order sent subdivision residents packing shortly after the eruption began.
According to Hawaii County Civil Defense, 37 structures, including 26 homes, already have been destroyed by lava from the 2.5-mile-long fissure system, the newest outflow from Kilauea Volcano which has been erupting since 1983. Lava so far has covered more than 115 acres.
During pauses in the volcanic activity, residents have been allowed to return to their homes to retrieve belongings.
Some are staying at two county evacuation centers. Sacred Heart parishioners are being taken in by fellow parish members, according to parish administrator Father Ernesto Juarez.
“Parishioners are opening up their homes,” he said.
Bishop Larry Silva was at the parish May 5-6, the weekend the eruption started, for a previously arranged episcopal visitation and to administer the sacrament of confirmation.
With hundreds of small earthquakes predicting volcanic activity, the bishop had offered to reschedule his visit, but Father Juarez, after consulting with some of his parishioners, decided to proceed as planned.
“I was happy to be there with them during that time,” the bishop said.
Area-wise, Sacred Heart is a big parish, rural, with many subdivisions, spread over a wide swath of the Puna District on the Big Island’s eastern corner. It has about 600 registered families.
“I was actually surprised how normal life seemed in Pahoa, despite the eruption that was taking place in the parish boundaries,” Bishop Silva said. “I did not detect any panic or great anxiety.”
He said he could see from the church the plume of smoke from the eruption site.
Hospitality of parishioners
Several people told him that evacuees who were parish members did not have to use the county-run emergency shelters “because they were offered hospitality by fellow parishioners.”
Bishop Silva said that the diocese’s three social service agencies — Office of Social Ministries, HOPE Services Hawaii and Catholic Charities Hawaii — “have all been involved in the situation.”
“I asked them to keep me informed to see if there was anything I could do or if there were any services of the diocese that needed to be mobilized,” he said.
The bishop was told that immediate needs for shelter, food and clothing were being addressed locally, but that “long-term needs may require help from outside the community.”
“I am very thankful to all the parishioners there who are opening their hearts and their homes to their brothers and sisters in need,” the bishop said. “We urge all the people of the diocese to pray that the volcanic activity will cease and that all will be safe.”
“We will continue to monitor the situation and will let people in the diocese know if there are any specific ways they can help,” he said.
Father Juarez volunteered the parish’s Father Avery Hall as a crisis information center, open from 9 a.m.-3 p.m., Monday through Friday.
At the center, evacuees from the Leilani Estates subdivision and the smaller Lanipuna Gardens subdivision connect with personnel from Hawaii County and social service agencies for information or to apply for assistance. Participating organizations include Child and Family Services, The Food Basket, Catholic Charities Hawaii and HOPE Services Hawaii.
HOPE Services Hawaii, an affiliate organization of the Diocese of Honolulu that deals primarily with homelessness on the Big Island, has deployed several staff members who, with others, are collecting data on evacuated households to determine their needs.
As of May 10, the agency had gathered information on nearly 300 households.
“Quite a bit of people need everything,” said Brandee Menino, HOPE Services Hawaii chief executive officer, who is coordinating the data collection. “They are checking all the boxes — food, shelter, permanent housing, transportation.”
Other families have temporarily settled in with family and friends, but will have needs down the road, she said. Some are hoping to eventually go back home.
“We’re still only days in and it looks like this is going to be a long one,” Menino said.
She said the various aid organizations planned a “triage” meeting May 11 to sort through all the needs and determine “the assignment of roles to various organizations.”
Menino said that some of the agencies involved cover financial assistance, food, shelter, counseling, case management, physical and mental health, clothing, legal assistance and animal care.
HOPE Services has already given out some rent assistance.
In a message to Big Island parishes, Catholic Charities Hawaii’s Hawaii Island Community Director Elizabeth Murph said that housing needs are a looming concern, in particular for those with mortgages to pay on houses they no longer have access to.
She said that besides stable housing, other immediate needs include counseling, clothing, and gift cards for groceries, household items and gas.
Monetary donations
Catholic Charities Hawaii is asking the public for monetary donations to be used for direct housing assistance for victims of both the historic April flooding on Kauai and the Kilauea eruption.
Donations will go toward temporary housing subsidies, emergency home repairs and other related needs.
“Funds will be immediately available” to victims, Murph said, compared to money from other organizations distributed through a lengthy grant process.
Father Juarez, who has been at the parish for less than a year, visited the main evacuation shelter in Pahoa May 7 where several hundred people are being temporarily housed.
He was joined by former pastor Jesuit Father Mike Scully, parish religious education director Maila Naiga and parishioners Liz Morgan and Roberta Vangoethem.
“We talked to them, shared stories, offering comfort, letting them know that there are people who have great concern about their plight,” Father Juarez said.
The parish is bringing back into action its Disaster Assistance Relief Team, which was mobilized when Tropical Storm Iselle ravaged the east side of the Big Island in 2014, and later that same year when a lava flow threatened Pahoa town.
At Masses over the May 13 weekend, the team planned to update its lists, by subdivision, of people who need help and of people who can provide help.
At an East Hawaii vicariate meeting May 8, Father Juarez said that some of his fellow Big Island priests offered their parishes for “refuge.”
At the meeting the priest gathered rosaries, Bibles and holy water to be distributed at the evacuation center. He said the parish youth ministry planned to visit the evacuation center that same evening to “mingle with the evacuees, especially the kids, to offer comfort and distribute rosaries, Bibles and holy water.”
Father Juarez said that his church is not in any immediate danger.
“We are safe in Pahoa as of now but we are always reminded to be vigilant,” he said.
“Please continue praying for the Puna District, especially those who are directly affected,” he said.
“We still need prayers,” Father Juarez said. “The eruption is unpredictable.”
To make a donation
HOPE Services Hawaii
Mail: HOPE Services Hawaii,
296 Kilauea Avenue, Hilo, HI 96720
Online: http://hopeserviceshawaii.org
Catholic Charities Hawaii
Mail: Catholic Charities Hawaii, 1822 Keeaumoku St., Honolulu, HI 96822
Online: www.CatholicCharitiesHawaii.org
Phone: (808) 527-4820
Designate: Puna eruption