June 15, 2006 By Michelle R. Scott
BANDA ACEH, Indonesia – "Before the tsunami . . . I was a fisherman . . . I had
a house . . . I had a son who spoke English . . . I had five grandchildren." "Before
the tsunami" is a phrase often on the lips of survivors. Areas full of life before
the Dec. 26, 2004 tsunami are now only empty spaces-open fields speckled with
house foundations wiped clean. Two Indonesia staff members
for the United Methodist Committee on Relief drive me to see the damage in Banda
Aceh this spring. Time has done little to heal the gaping wounds the sea cut across
this city and throughout the province. As we near the
sea, Ambiya, UMCOR's procurement officer in Banda Aceh, points to the left side
of the road where I see an open field. "That was my mother's village," he says.
We drive further and he points to the right, where the
land is filled with stagnant water and rubble. The shell of one large concrete
house stands. "That was my father's village." Then he points to a driveway leading
to an empty lot. "That was my house." Everyone who lives
here has a story to tell-a story of survival and loss, of bravery and brokenness.
They are sacred tales that represent the rending of many lives in two: life before
the tsunami, and life after. A Better Future UMCOR
is working with survivors to make their lives after the tsunami better. In Banda
Aceh, the agency is reaching out to survivors still living in barracks-style temporary
shelters because they have no where else to go. UMCOR
workers are assisting with 100 families living in two of these temporary living
centers, helping them make plans for a future. Most people already know what they
need to do – they need income and a place to live. Some have specific ideas of
how they want to go about this. They just need a hand up to make their plans a
reality. The agency also is helping people like Rima
who mistook the sound of the tsunami approaching her village for thunder and its
dark appearance rising above the trees for a storm cloud. When she and her husband
realized what they were seeing was nothing as ordinary as a quick-moving storm,
they grabbed their two small children and ran. They didn't
get far before the tsunami caught up with them. The family was separated in the
roiling waves. Four days later, Rima's relatives found her and brought her to
their home where she met up with her husband and oldest child. Their youngest
child was never found. Rima and her family now reside
in a temporary living center just outside of Banda Aceh. Their house was completely
destroyed and the little work Rima's husband can find barely covers their living
expenses. They want to move out of the barracks and UMCOR
is providing livelihood training and assistance that will lead to more income
for the family. UMCOR is also working to find permanent housing solutions for
these displaced families. The staff at the Banda Aceh
office, like UMCOR's offices throughout Indonesia, is made up mostly of fellow
Indonesians. Many of them experienced personal loss when the tsunami roared ashore.
They have a personal commitment to helping survivors to not only have what they
need for today, but to build a new future. More information
on the work in Indonesia and other parts of the world can be found at http://new.gbgm-umc.org/umcor/,
the UMCOR Web site. United Methodist News Service
Michelle R. Scott, an UMCOR staff member in New York, visited Indonesia this spring. |