+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Good News! Special edition 2012

Good News! Special edition 2012

Date post: 08-Apr-2016
Category:
Upload: the-salvation-army-saconnects
View: 216 times
Download: 3 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
 
8
GOOD NEWS! Volume 29 Number 8 SPECIAL EDITION 2012 Hurricane Sandy Relief Photos by Robert Mitchell
Transcript
Page 1: Good News! Special edition 2012

GOOD NEWS!Volume 29 Number 8 SPECIAL EDITION 2012

Hurricane Sandy Relief

Pho

tos

by R

ober

t Mitc

hell

Page 2: Good News! Special edition 2012

2 Special Edition 2012

We issue this special edition of Good News! to provide you with a quick view of what The Salvation Army is doing in the wake

of Hurricane Sandy. These eight pages belie the depth and the breath of the Army’s efforts to respond to human need following the most extraordinary storm on record. I hope you’ll be inspired by these stories that describe how, in the midst of such disaster, people affected are be-ing helped practically, emotionally, and spiritually by offi cers, employees, and volunteers of The Salvation Army.

One example occurred in Coney Island, N.Y., when an offi cer hap-pened to look up at the 20th fl oor of a darkened building and saw what

appeared to be a woman standing at her window. She waved her arms vigorously, attempting to get anyone’s attention. What is this woman trying to say? the offi cer wondered. She disappeared from view momentarily, but returned with a baby in her arms.

Salvation Army volunteers then climbed 20 fl ights of stairs and discovered that she had two more small children and needed food for all of them.

Although the media’s attention has moved to other challenges facing our nation, recovery from Hurricane Sandy will remain on the Salvation Army’s agenda for months to come. If you’d like to donate to this cause, please contact us via the information provided on page eight of this bulletin.

May God bless you!

“m”

WARReN l. MAYe

FROM THE EDITOR >>

In Sandy’s wake

‘We had to swim to our house. It was like walking into the ocean’ — Teresa Schaffer, Midland Beach, Staten Island, N.Y.

‘It’s wonderful that The Salvation Army is here to help us! We lost everything. It’s nice to have a hot meal’ — Amy Lachky of Union Beach, N.J.

‘No doubt, the people are seeing The Salvation Army!’—Captain Antonio Rosamilia on Staten Island

Commissioner Israel L. Gaither, territorial commander, joins the Emergency Disaster Services team at Territorial Headquarters for a territory–wide conference call on Hurricane Sandy with volunteers in the fi eld.

Pho

to b

y M

ajor

Jor

ge D

iaz

GOOD NEWS!

USA EASTERN TERRITORYCommissioners Israel L. and

Eva D. GaitherTerritorial Leaders

Colonel William CarlsonChief Secretary

Linda D. JohnsonLiterary Secretary

Warren L. Maye EditorRobert Mitchell Associate EditorKeri Johnson Art DirectorReginald Raines Associate Art DirectorSaoul Vanderpool Senior DesignerKarena Lin Graphic DesignerNanette Morales Production SpecialistJoe Marino Production Assistant

Divisional News CorrespondentsSFOT — Major A. Kenneth Wilson ARCC — Major Debra TaylorPENDEL — Randall Thomas, Major Kathryn A. AveryEmpire State — Jaye C. JonesGNY — Jennifer GroffMass. — Major Kathleen KlenkNJ — Tricia PellegriniNEOSA — Major Lurlene JohnsonNNE — Cheryl PoulopoulosPR & VI — Linette LunaSNE — James GordonSWONEKY — A/Captain Jean ThorntonWEPASA — Captain Paul R. Pelletier

All articles are copyrighted by The Salvation Army, except where indicated, and can be reprinted only with written permission.

Also available in Korean and Spanish.

Statement of PurposeGood News! is the offi cial publication of The Salvation Army of the USA Eastern Territory. The purpose of Good News! is to inform, inspire, and equip Salvationists to grow in holiness, to serve together in supportive, healing communities, and to reach others for Jesus Christ.

For mailing list changes, write:Good News!, 440 West Nyack Road,West Nyack, NY 10994–1739.

GOOD NEWS!

Follow Good News! on Twitter @GOODNEWSSA.

Become a fan of Good News! on Facebook.

BUENASBUENASNOTICIAS!

Page 3: Good News! Special edition 2012

3www.sagoodnews.org

“Superstorm Sandy,” a Category 2 hurricane, devastated parts of the

Caribbean, and the Mid–Atlantic and East Coast, causing $20 billion in damage and leaving in its wake nearly 100 people dead. In the wake of the storm, The Sal-vation Army sprang into action.

As of Nov. 6, the Army, in partnership with other organizations, helped provide more than 1.5 million meals and drinks to residents affected by storm.

The most heavily damaged areas in the USA Eastern Territory were in New York and New Jersey, where providing food, shelter, and emotional and spiritual care remains the focus of Salvation Army service.

That service was interrupted temporar-ily as a Nor’easter hit the area Nov. 7, bringing freezing temperatures, high winds, snow, and more fl ooding.

In New York City, The Salvation Army is the lead agency for the city’s Food Ac-cess Plan.

In New Jersey, The Salvation Army lost a can-teen to fl ood wa-ters, but has been undaunted in providing meals, water, blankets, baby for-mula, diapers and wipes, batteries and fl ashlights, toothbrushes and toothpaste, gloves and hand warmers, ear-muffs, toiletries, and shampoo and conditioners.

The Salvation Army is providing critical services in 12 counties in New Jersey, which includes 16 shelters and 11 mobile feeding canteens.

The Salvation Army is working with a broad coalition of partners to coordinate

the distribution of water and food sup-plies to 12 sites in Staten Island, Queens, Brooklyn, and in Manhattan.

Just before the Nor’easter hit, The Sal-vation Army had provided 932,051 meals, 688,937 beverages, 88,097 snacks and lodging for 1,073 displaced residents.

RobeRt Mitchell

HURRICANE RELIEF >>

After Hurricane Sandy: meeting human need

“I’m a cancer survivor and I need socks!” said Teresa Schaffer.

It was just a few days after Schaffer wandered into a Salvation Army tent in the Midland Beach section of Staten Island, N.Y., where volunteers quickly found warm socks and new boots for her chilly feet.

“Wow! My feet are warming up!” Schaffer said after a few minutes. “My feet are having a party in my shoes. These socks are the best gift ever.

“I haven’t been dry in days. I’m trying to pick up the pieces.”

Schaffer, a Stage 4 breast cancer survivor, says she had on the same clothes the day Sandy hit—most notably her

pink “survivor” T–shirt from a breast cancer fundraising walk.

“Last Thanksgiving, I was going through chemo and 20 hours of sur-gery,” she said. “This Thanksgiving, I’m homeless.”

Schaffer says her family got out of their home before Sandy hit, but returned the next day to fi nd it fl ooded and sur-rounded by a lake of water.

“We had to swim to our house,” she said. “It was like walking into the ocean.”

Schaffer, who still takes che-motherapy, found much more than socks and boots at the tent; Major James Foley, social services secretary for the Greater New York Division (GNY), directed her to a local pharmacy that was dispensing free medicine.

Schaffer, who also got some warm food during her visit to a Salvation Army canteen, was grateful.

“We’re cold and hungry,” she said. “This is amazing.”

When asked how she was hold-ing up, Schaffer said, “It’s like, I’m in mourning. And after the funeral, there’s no where to go.”

‘I need socks’ RobeRt Mitchell

Pho

to b

y R

ober

t Mitc

hell

Photo by Robert Mitchell

Page 4: Good News! Special edition 2012

4 Special Edition 2012

N.J.: a state of disaster RobeRt Mitchell

HURRICANE RELIEF >>

People saw the Army in ravaged parts of New Jersey.Jesse Rivera, the Army’s Emergency

Disaster Services (EDS) coordinator for Middlesex County, oversaw a canteen at Memorial School in Union Beach, N.J. Members of the National Guard helped unload donated food, which volunteers from the neighborhood and teachers served.

The volunteers served military grade “Meals Ready to Eat” (MREs), water, fruit, snacks, and other goods.

“Right now in New Jersey, the whole state is a disaster,” Rivera said. “This area has nothing. It’s totally decimated. What we’re doing here as an Army—it’s important.”

Rivera said that soon after the canteens arrived, the word went out for volunteers and they quickly filled the slots. “It was absolutely spontaneous,” Rivera said.

Grateful were weary residents who lined up to receive anything being of-fered on that blustery afternoon. Fran Blackburn of Keansburg, N.J., said she went five days eating cold food.

“But this is hot,” Blackburn said. “I feel normal now.”

Amy Lachky of Union Beach, N.J., agreed.

“It’s wonderful that The Salvation Army is here to help us,” she said. We lost every-thing. It’s nice to get a hot meal.”

Teresa Vona brought her family, includ-ing two small girls, to find food.

“Everyone knows somebody that lost everything,” she said as she sipped hot coffee. “To just see the sadness, it’s just heart-breaking. I don’t see how some people are going to get through this. I know they will, but it’s heartbreaking.”

Many of the volunteers were teachers from Memorial School and saw their students coming for help.

“They’re happy to see a familiar face,” said Debbie Byren, a science teacher.

Math teacher Nicole Gilkison added, “We’re here for them, just like we are every day.”

Bart Sutton of Union Beach lost everything except what he had in his bedrooms. He feared his house would eventually collapse.

“But,” he said, “we’re all alive— a big plus!”

Pho

tos

by R

ober

t Mitc

hell

Page 5: Good News! Special edition 2012

5www.sagoodnews.org

For those people who could get out of the rav-

aged neighborhoods around Midland Beach to The Salva-tion Army’s tent on Midland Avenue, a wide range of free food, clothing, and other supplies were available. A can-teen served hot soup, coffee, and hot chocolate.

Lieutenants Travis and Zuheil Barton of the Army’s Stapleton Corps in Staten Island and other volunteers from GNY helped people in need.

Immediately after Sandy hit, Lieutenant Travis Barton said he loaded the corps van with about 80 spaghetti dinners but couldn’t reach people in many of the devastated neighborhoods. So, he fed first responders instead.

Over the next two days, the corps served 600 meals in the affected neighbor-hoods. Barton described the effort as a “fishes and loaves experience.”

“There were about 20 more plates every time we thought there were only 10 left,” he said. “They just kept coming and coming.”

Nearly every house in the surrounding area sustained heavy damage and people stacked their ruined posses-sions at the curb, making travel difficult.

“We went into the areas where people have no power or anything that would bring them hope or a little bit of God’s love to their hands,” Barton said.

“They’re just so glad for a cup of coffee, a cup of hot chocolate, a cup of hot soup. We just tell them that Jesus loves them. They’ve acknowledged that The Salvation Army has been here

for them.”Many observers said Staten

Island was probably the worst hit area in the country. Barton compared Sandy to another epic disaster.

“This is like 9/11 scale,” he said. “When I look at all the destruction and homes oblit-erated and the debris piles, it’s like, ‘Wow.’ I haven’t seen anything like this since 9/11. I’m a New Yorker and it’s quite a bit for me to watch.”

In a scene similar to 9/11, people pulled up to The Salva-tion Army’s tent and donated food, bottled water, and other goods—all day.

Included were Sylvia

Murphy and Nancy Ford who drove to Staten Island from the upper west side of Manhattan in a car full of donations. Then they spotted the large white tent.

Murphy said, “We were watching the news last night and just saw so much horror and we started crying and we’re like, ‘We need to do something.’ ”

Murphy and Ford solicited money from friends and went shopping.

“It just broke our hearts that Staten Island is 15 or 20 miles away and they have nothing,” Ford said. “It makes us feel good [to help

the people].”Meanwhile at a distribution

center near the beach, Cap-tain Antonio Rosamilia of the Manhattan Citadel Corps was working with several city and federal agencies.

Volunteers packed cars with containers of water, blankets, food, and other necessities before traveling into the hard-est hit neighborhoods.

Rosamilia later toured the communities himself, dis-tributing goods and offering encouraging words to suffer-ing people.

“No doubt, the people are seeing The Salvation Army” Rosamilia said.

Loaves and fishes on Staten Island RobeRt Mitchell

HURRICANE RELIEF >>

Photos by Robert Mitchell

Page 6: Good News! Special edition 2012

6 Special Edition 2012

From devastation to mobilization HURRICANE RELIEF >>

Pho

to b

y S

alva

tion

Arm

y of

Jer

sey

City

, N.J

.P

hoto

by

Sal

vatio

n A

rmy

of J

erse

y C

ity, N

.J.

Page 7: Good News! Special edition 2012

7www.sagoodnews.org

All

phot

o by

Rob

ert M

itche

ll ex

cept

whe

re in

dica

ted

Page 8: Good News! Special edition 2012

Non–Profi t Org.U.S. Postage

PAIDBeaver Dam, WI Permit No. 577

THE SALVATION ARMY440 WEST NYACK ROADWEST NYACK, NY 10994 –1739CHANGE SERVICE REQUESTED

GOOD NEWS!HOW CAN YOU HELP?Three easy ways to donate...

ONLINEwww.SalvationArmyUSA.org

CALL1.800.SAL.ARMY (1.800.725.2769)

TEXT Text the word “STORM” to 80888 to make a $10 donation through your cell phone

Pho

to b

y R

ober

t Mitc

hell


Recommended