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August 26 - September 1, 2007 Issue |
Posted 8/21/07 at 1:50 PM
LIMA, Peru — On the feast of the Assumption, Albina Tobar
Seminario, the 59-year-old wife of a vine farmer, went to Mass at the Shrine of
the Lord of Luren.
One of the most venerated places in Southern Peru, the
shrine is home to the 16th-century image of a crucified Christ who is also
known as the Lord of the earthquakes — it has survived several quakes.
But Albina never made it back home. She was one of the seven
people who died at the shrine Aug. 15, when a 7.9 magnitude, two-minute-long
earthquake killed 700 people, injured more than 3,000 and left more than 20,000
homeless along the coast of Peru.
The Lord of Luren survived this earthquake as well, though
two towers and one of the three domes of the church were destroyed.
Devastation was greater 60 miles north in the port city of
Pisco, where 60 of the 120 killed by the earthquake in that area died at the
town’s Church of San Clemente.
“When Father Emilio [Torres] pronounced ‘You may go in
peace’ after the 40-minute-long Mass, the earth started to shake violently, the
lights went off and people started screaming,” said Sister Elvira, a Dominican
nun who arrived at the 6 p.m. Mass with three others.
“Father Emilio remained on his knees at the altar praying.
Sister Blanca and I helped people leave the church by the side door. Right
after we left, I turned around and saw the church fall completely, disappearing
before me in a cloud of dust,” said Sister Elvira.
Her congregation lost two sisters at San Clemente, she said
tearfully.
Father Alfonso Berrade, San Clemente’s pastor, ran out of
the rectory and tried to find his assistant, Father Torres.
“When I saw the church completely destroyed and heard that
Father Emilio remained inside, I started shaking and began to cry,” said Father
Berrade, a Spanish missionary who has spent more than 30 years in Peru.
During the night after San Clemente collapsed, people
started digging with their bare hands in the rubble until rescue teams arrived
the next morning.
“The recovery and identification of the bodies was
terrible,” said Sister Elvira. “A corpse would be found, then would be placed
in the main square next to a statue of St. Martin [de Porres] recovered from
the church, and rescue workers would shout the features, like ‘Woman, middle
age, thin, black skirt!’ and people would come forward to recognize if she was
a relative,” she explained.
With the local hospital partially destroyed by the
earthquake and no morgue available, the smell of bodies permeated the town over
the next two days. Desperation at the lack of food and water grew.
Early in the morning of the 17th, one of the rescuers heard
a faint voice in the middle of the rubble. “Over here!” he called the rest of
his team.
They found Father Emilio alive, protected under the altar.
When the priest was taken out, people started clapping and
shouting, “A miracle!”
Two other men were rescued that morning. Father Emilio
wanted to stay with his parish, but was sent to the hospital with a broken arm
and serious dehydration.
Cardinal Juan Luis Cipriani of Lima, said on national
television that people are asking him, “Why is God punishing us?”
“God is good, he is not punishing anyone,” the cardinal
said. “He is here with us, reminding us of our true destination. He is calling
us to greater faith and to a greater expression of our love in the way we
respond to those most in need.”
It was a U.S. Catholic organization, Catholic Relief
Services, that was the first to announce help for the victims of the earthquake
“Next to the international aid, it has been the help sent by
the Catholic Church from neighboring countries that was the quickest and most
significant,” said Jorge Lafosse, secretary general of the local Catholic
relief organization Caritas.
Special collections have been made in all Peruvian dioceses
for the earthquake victims.
“Our people have deep faith. They long for the spiritual
bread as much as they feel the need for the physical bread,” said Cardinal
Cipriani, explaining why he called for the creation a team of seven priests —
four from his archdiocese and three from the Peruvian-born apostolic society
“Sodalitium Christianae Vitae” — to provide spiritual assistance in the
affected area.
The priests have been hearing confessions, celebrating Mass,
conducting funerals, performing baptisms and administering last rites for 18
hours a day.
“I see myself as a rescuer, too,” said Father Gilmer Cacho,
one of the priests from Sodalitium, who provided spiritual assistance to
victims in the town of Chincha, 30 miles north of Pisco.
Said Father Cacho, “The people who have seen their loved
ones disappear, who have remained next to theirs corpses for days, and who have
lost everything, these are people you can’t appease just by providing them some
food or water.”
Along with the spiritual support provided by Catholic
priests, Lafosse said that “the logistical support provided by more than 500
volunteers from parishes and local movements has been critical to providing
effective logistics” in the hardest-hit areas.
The Peruvian-based Movimiento de Vida Cristiana (Christian
Life Movement) provided 150 volunteers, many of them experienced professionals,
to organize the distribution of relief supplies in Chincha and in Tambo de
Mora, another coastal town almost completely destroyed by the earthquake.
Said Lafosse, “At one point we had the help, but we needed
the human structure to make sure that all this help would reach everyone in
need.”
“Why these things
happen is always a mystery,” Cardinal Cipriani said Aug. 19.
“But just by watching the outpouring of Christian love and
solidarity, locally and internationally, we can say that God has been very
quick to bring great good out of this evil.”
Alejandro Bermúdez is based in Lima, Peru.
To donate:
http://www.crs.org 1-877-HELP-CRS or Catholic Relief Services, P.O. Box 7090,
Baltimore, MD 21203. Write “Peru Earthquake Fund” in memo section of check.
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