Month: October 2005

Relief volunteers transformed as God uses them in La.

LA PLACE, La.–When Hurricane Katrina slammed into the Gulf Coast destroying towns, homes and possessions, life changed in an instant for the victims.

But as evacuation sites were opened to bring aid and comfort to those from the devastated region, many volunteers got their first taste of disaster relief work and found that Hurricane Katrina not only changed the lives of the victims, but also the lives of relief workers.

A seminary student from Fort Worth, a homemaker from the affluent Dallas-Fort Worth suburb of Southlake, and a nurse and a couple of legal professionals from Lubbock were among many volunteers from Southern Baptists of Texas Convention churches who rushed to aid Katrina’s victims.

In helping to meet basic needs, these volunteers shared the love of Christ and found themselves blessed by the effort.

After moving to enroll at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, Phil Warlick was still seeking a job when he volunteered.

“I made the decision to go (as a volunteer) based on the need and the fact that I could go. I didn’t have any work commitments holding me back,” he said, adding that he accepted one of two offers while away volunteering.

“Missing a class and the time away from my family was a small price to pay compared to the suffering of the folks in Louisiana. God put that opportunity in my path, and I couldn’t just turn my back.”

Working with the SBTC’s Disaster Relief unit ministering in a Salvation Army kitchen in Kenner, La., Warlick learned nearly all parts of the operation.

“I helped with preparing and cleaning the food containers, cooking the food, working inventory and supplies and feeding people from the canteens. I was also given the opportunity to spend one night in New Orleans to help feed the citizens, law enforcement, and media there.”

Charmaine Fenstermacher made a similarly quick decision to volunteer, leaving the day after she completed training at the SBTC office in Grapevine, Texas.

She said she first learned of the opportunity as prayer requests were being shared in a Precept Bible study at Memorial Baptist Church of Grapevine. Each member of the mostly middle-aged group of women eventually was used somehow in the storm’s aftermath.

A Colleyville woman with years of experience photographing students for identification cards learned of the need to hasten the processing of Disaster Relief volunteers and helped obtain a machine that created the I.D. cards with far less labor on the SBTC’s behalf.

Others transported evacuees lodged at a nearby Hilton to apartment housing. Many of the women helped provide clothing, furniture and food through Southern Baptist churches that adopted evacuated families.

“When I went to the training I knew I was going to do something, even if it was just a mile from my home,” Fenstermacher told the TEXAN.

She heard SBTC missions team assistant Cindy Davenport describe the need for people to leave the next day and knew that her friends from Bible study had children at home or other responsibilities that prevented them from leaving so soon.

With her own daughter and son in college, Fenstermacher knew she had the freedom to go and began making the list of items to purchase.

“They mentioned buying a Therma-rest bedroll and I’d never even been camping in my life. I’d never even slept on an air mattress. Things like bug spray–just weird stuff like that,” she added.

After obtaining her provisions, she was packed and ready to drive out on Sunday afternoon, arriving at a cabin near Baton Rouge at 1:30 a.m. on Monday.

“It was just like camp–there were wall to wall women.” Inadvertently awakening several of the women, she heard one say they had to be up at 3:30 a.m.

“It was just really bizarre. It was dark and we didn’t know what we were going to be doing, but there wa a sense of excitement and we actually felt rested” despite little sleep, she said.

“I’ve never really experienced organized chaos,” she admitted.  “The concept was organized, but everything was ver chaotic.  Everyone had a purpose and ours was to serve in any way, shape or form to get food and beverages out.”

She recalled SBTC Disaster Relief Director Bill Davenport’s comparison to hiring people off the street.

“You don’t know anyone’s qualifications. There are different personalities and lots of Type A people used to being leaders.  Everyone just volunteered—some cleaned out bathrooms, others cooked.  You didn’t care what you were doing.  I didn’t know anyone as I was meeting strangers, but we all had the same purpose.  We bonded so quickly because we had the same goal.”

Tammy and Billy Wolfe, along with Dacia Newton answered the call to help after seeing Katrina’s destruction.   The Wolfes normally spend their days working in Lubbock, Texas, where he is an attorney and senior partner with Wolfe and Associates and his wife is a paralegal.  Newton is a student at Texas Tech University, majoring in Human Development and Family Studies.

“Neither of us had ever volunteered before and really weren’t sure what to expect,” Tammy Wolfe said. “I will tell you that God would not have allowed us not to help.  He poked and prodded at our hearts all week until we absolutely knew he wanted us out there.”

The Wolfes and Newton helped register evacuees who arrived at the Red Cross shelter in Lubbock.

“These were people that had literally been rescued by helicopter earlier that same day,” Wolfe said. “Most had been stranded in their apartments without electricity, water, and food.”

“As the families sat down in front of me, they hadn’t even been able to take showers,” Newton said. “As they told me their stories, they had tears running down their faces as well as tears down my cheeks.  I heard everything from families who had been on their roofs for three days and nights with food and water and fathers having to lay on top of their children to keep the winds from carrying them off into the water.”

The evacuees shared horrid accounts of their days trapped in their New Orleans homes. “They told us stories of how dark it was at night,” Wolfe said.  “There was no moon during the five days they were stranded.  They were forced to leave their doors open” because of the heat and humidity.  “All night they worried about the bugs, snakes, and other animals that might come in with them, and then they worried about the gangs and other individuals that would hurt them in the darkness.”

Arriving in Lubbock was the beginning of healing for many of the evacuees, she added. “From the minute these people walked off their buses that night they were hugged and loved on by everyone that saw them.  It was one of the most amazing things I’ve ever witnessed:  to see God open the hearts of his people in such a might way—right in front of my eyes.”

The open hearts of volunteers also led to opportunities to share the love of Christ with evacuees.

“They ask why we are doing so much for them,” Newton said. “That is my favorite question.  I get to answer because Jesus Christ’s love inside me flows over so I can share that same love.”

Wolfe believes many evacuees will not only start a new life in Lubbock, but will also find new life in Christ as a result of their ordeal.

As hurricane victims begin to rebuild their lives, volunteers now find their own lives altered in ways they could have never imagined.

“Every night when I left my heart was so heavy, but light at the same time,” Newton said. “Each one of them has touched my life in a way I will never forget, and I pray I am able to do the same by just showing Jesus Christ in love.”

“I will always want to volunteer after this experience,” Tammy Wolfe said. “I realized again how incredibly blessed I am and was reminded that God expects more form those he has given more.  That’s us.  God reminded us that we are all his children no matter what color we are, no matter our social status or place in society—we are all his.

“What my husband and I received from these people is more than we could have ever give to them. God truly does send the weak to lead the strong.”

Small church does big thing in Rita relief

CENTER, Texas?For more than a week after Hurricane Rita approached the Texas Gulf Coast, Hillcrest Baptist Church in the small East Texas town of Center had been home to nearly 200 evacuees, many of whom had special physical needs.

Inside the dimly-lit church auditorium, several children were sprawled out on the carpet near the altar, working on a jigsaw puzzle. Their grandmother, a diabetes sufferer, rested in a pew at the back of the auditorium. Another person slept on a mattress between the pews and worship center entrance.

Two days before Hurricane Rita hit, the Red Cross had designated the church, about 30 miles south of Marshall near the Louisiana border, as a special needs shelter for Shelby County, the church’s pastor, Gordon Vaughn, said. Soon, about 75-80 evacuees arrived in three buses from the Texas Gulf Coast.

Others?citizens who fled the storm and spotted the church along State Highway 59 as they drove north?found shelter also.

“We started with about 225 (evacuees) ? with absolutely no medical facilities or team or anything,” Vaughn told the TEXAN Sept. 29 as he stood in the parking lot of the church amid a whirlwind of activity.

A handful of officers from the United States Health Service (USHS) were there, interviewing evacuees to assess their medical needs.

The church averages about 130 on Sunday mornings, Vaughn said. A Southern Baptist Disaster Relief feeding unit from Ohio that was working at the First Baptist Church of Center provided one meal a day, Vaughn said.

More provision came from the community and church members, who helped provide food and identified local medical providers. Several of the evacuees with restaurant experience helped man the church kitchen.

“The Lord blessed us with several folks who are caterers,” Vaughn said. “If it hadn’t have been for them, we’d have been stuck.

“One of the major problems is getting medical attention and medication for people. We thank the Lord we didn’t lose any patients.”

The evacuees included nine babies, Vaughn said. Several evacuees had adult onset diabetes, three people were on breathing machines, two were heart bypass patients, two were on kidney dialysis and another was a cancer sufferer who had fled Hurricane Katrina in Louisiana and was evacuated again from the Texas gulf for Rita, Vaughn stated.

“It’s been a learning experience.”

One man, a 21-year-old with Down syndrome, eagerly donned an orange security vest as many in the group gathered outside between the church auditorium and the fellowship hall to talk with USHS officials.

Despite the urgency of relief work, “We haven’t missed a church service,” Vaughn noted. “We have a devotion time every morning. It’s optional, not everybody attends. But we’ve had at least five professions of faith that I know of ? people who have been saved because of the ministry.”

One of them, a woman from Beaumont who arrived in Center with her teenage daughter, told the TEXAN the Lord had been calling her for a long time but she had been running.

During her week at the church, she sensed the Lord asking her to provide what she termed a “children’s church” for the kids there. With construction paper and some craft supplies, the kids made pictures they proudly displayed.

SBTC crews, churches were crucial help as Rita knocked out power, water

KIRBYVILLE, Texas?Fifty miles north of Beaumont, Texas, members of First Baptist Church of Kirbyville were busy passing out water and ice to fellow townspeople who were all in the same predicament: No electricity and no water.

“We’re living ‘old school,'” said Robert Fuller, a member of FBC, two days after Hurricane Rita swept across the Texas Gulf Coast and a huge swath of deep East Texas, snapping towering Southern pines like toothpicks and altering life in dozens of communities for what looked like weeks to come.

More than a week later, much of the area was still without electricity?save for a few generators. Some residents had power restored, but others?customers of a rural electric cooperative that had its infrastructure and equipment destroyed?still lacked electricity.

Thankfully, said Fuller’s wife, Esther, running water?albeit cold?was restored late in the week after Rita struck.

“We got water two days ago. I felt like I’d died and gone to heaven,” Esther Fuller said. “I’d been living without water. To have water is just a blessing. Little things like that?you just don’t realize how important they are and how unimportant other things are.”

More important, no one from Kirbyville died in the storm, she added.

“That is just such a huge thing for me. Yeah, we’ve had some people’s homes severely damaged. Actually, we had more stories where trees are down all around it but the house is fine.”

On the coast, portions of Port Arthur were getting electricity restored by Oct. 4, said Bill Davenport, SBTC state director of Disaster Relief.

Meanwhile, FBC Kirbyville, like many churches in inland rural areas, continued to be central relief points for distributing food, water and ice to residents.

Late in the afternoon Sept. 30, a line of cars and trucks waited in an alley drive next to FBC Kirbyville as firefighters from California and community members unloaded supplies from FEMA, such as plastic tarps to cover damaged roofs, and distributed boxed dinners and bags of ice to citizens.

A line of approximately two dozen cars were lined up to buy gasoline at a Wal-Mart near Silsbee, Texas, about 40 miles north of Port Arthur.

Davenport said the relief effort for Rita could last for 90 days in some areas because of chainsaw work and mud-out recovery. The SBTC has mud-out recovery units that can restore water- and mud-damaged structures.

Through Oct. 4, SBTC Disaster Relief units had prepared an estimated 30,400 meals for Texans affected by Rita. But as electricity is restored, SBTC feeding units will go home, he said.

In the week after the storm, SBTC feeding units were operating in Port Arthur, Vidor and Splendora, Davenport said, and SBTC chainsaw units were working in Jasper County and in Port Arthur.

FROM THE GULF TO TYLER

Towns such as Jasper, Kirbyville, Silsbee and Woodville, in deep Southeast Texas, and Orange and Mauriceville closer to the Gulf, were hard hit by Hurricane Rita’s winds.

Damage was reported as far away as Tyler, Texas, nearly 220 miles north of the Gulf Coast and on the western edge of the storm.

Winds from Rita tore a large portion of a stucco façade from the four-year-old worship center at Friendly Baptist Church in Tyler, which had to cancel services the next day because church officials were concerned about the building’s safety, said Pastor Dale Perry.

“It tore the west gables off completely and exposed all of the roof and air conditioning duct work and steelwork,” Perry said. “We were really fortunate that we did not have water damage. When Rita passed by, it was strongest from north to south. On the west side of the building it just peeled off like a banana.”

Friendly Baptist previously had voted to postpone a planned building note campaign to financially assist Katrina victims.

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