August 25, 2006 By Kathy L. Gilbert
Lisa, Destin and Darrien Swanson are wearing big smiles and new school uniforms
for their first day of school in Pearlington, Miss., thanks to two United Methodist
churches in upstate New York. A chance meeting of three
women in a New York pizza place led to the Swanson family in Mississippi being
adopted by the Red Hook and Rowe United Methodist churches in Red Hook and Milan,
N.Y. Cable News Network will carry a feature on the family
of Denise Swanson, a single mother of four who lost everything in the Hurricane
Katrina, and two United Methodist congregations. The program will be cablecast
on Aug. 29, the one-year anniversary of Katrina making landfall in Louisiana and
Mississippi. Meeting through a waitress Angela
Cole, a nurse from Tivoli, N.Y., and sisters Deborah Lamb and Jude Polotaye happened
to be in a neighborhood pizza place at the same time. The waitress knew the sisters
were planning to go on a mission trip to Biloxi, Miss., and she knew Cole had
been to Mississippi several times. She introduced Cole to the sisters. Cole
has made helping the people of Pearlington her personal mission. Her efforts have
grown into a national, grass-roots campaign, and she is hoping to get more families
adopted. "One year after the community of 1,700 was leveled,
the approximately 800 persons who have returned live their lives in limbo not
knowing when – or if – their tiny community will fully recover," Cole says. The
people refer to themselves as "forgotten," she says. On
the day they met in the pizza place, Lamb and Polotaye were days away from going
on the mission trip to Biloxi. "She told us the story
of Pearlington, Miss., in the southwest corner of Mississippi that directly got
hit by the hurricane," Polotaye says of Cole. "Pearlington is in the backwoods
and is really struggling. The more she talked, the more excited we got." The
mission team made the trip to Biloxi and still had a little more than $800 that
was not spent on the trip. A short time later, Lamb heard
Hancock County, where Pearlington is located, was requiring all children to have
uniforms for the school year. While the team had not visited the forgotten Mississippi
town, she remembered Cole's stories and thought the money would be put to good
use by the Swanson family. "We didn't want to just buy
clothes for the children; we wanted them to be able to pick out what they wanted,"
Lamb explains. "What makes the way the church did this
so special is they sent the money so Denise could buy the uniforms with the kids,"
Cole says. "Darrien is 12, and that's a tough age. He
wants to wear a certain type of khaki pants, and by sending money Denise could
preserve his sense of self and dignity and buy him what he wanted." "It
means so much because I can't get my kids all the things I could before, and that
hurts," Denise says. Churches plan baby shower
Red Hook and Rowe United Methodist churches have decided
to adopt the family and send more support. Already the churches are planning a
baby shower for Denise's oldest daughter, who is pregnant. "We
plan to have the shower in our lounge and take pictures and send the gifts. After
that, we are planning to do Christmas for them," Polotaye says. The churches also
want to send a mission team down to Pearlington. "I am
just so proud of what these two lay people have done," says the Rev. Dave Jolly,
pastor of both New York congregations. "We are too small to be doing this, but
we are doing it. Any time they have encountered roadblocks, they have built bridges
over the roadblocks." Cole has formed the Pearlington
Project Katrina Foundation Inc., a nonprofit organization, to fund the building
of permanent houses for families and individuals whose homes were destroyed by
Hurricane Katrina. She is painfully aware of the looming
deadline of February when the Federal Emergency Management Agency has said it
will reclaim the trailers it has provided to those left homeless by Hurricane
Katrina. For more information on how to donate to the foundation, go to http://www.pearlingtonproject.org/.
Jolly says it is amazing what churches full of spirit-filled
people can do. "One leap of faith has just led to another."
United Methodist News Service Kathy L. Gilbert is
a United Methodist News Service news writer based in Nashville, Tenn. |