PAB folks: This is an e-mail from Leslie of SHARE.
Please review it and respond to me by email <mailto:dbeach@csbsju.edu>
with ideas of what you think we should contribute. Note that one of the items of
possible use of funds has to do with providing funds for food to emergency
shelters in Cuscatlán, which is where Tenancingo is
located. I will call Amalia Flores to ascertain whether they are sheltering
people in the school in Tenancingo or any of the communities. You can
check the SHARE web site for more information and pictures. Dennis
From: Leslie Bilchick
[leslie@share-elsalvador.org]
Sent: Friday, October 07, 2005 5:27
PM
To: Beach, Dennis
Subject: SHARE Emergency Fund
Friday, October 7,
2005
Dear
Dennis and Partners Across Borders,The SHARE Foundation extends a greeting to your
community, this time in the shadow of calamity for our local partners in El
Salvador. As always, we deeply
appreciate your continued solidarity and support for Tenancingo. Your devotion to the Salvadoran people
is a source of strength in this trying time. SHARE invites you and your
committee to help in defraying the high cost of sheltering those who have been
displaced in recent days, as well as subsequent efforts to rebuild. We are
mounting a fundraising campaign to raise $40,000 to support our local partners
in their relief and reconstruction
efforts.
For those of us who are still haunted
by images of destruction in the aftermath of hurricanes Katrina and Rita, the
images here in El Salvador are frighteningly familiar. The entire country, and
especially the southern and western regions, have been hit by a dual disaster in
this first week of October. On Sunday, October 1, the government issued a red
emergency alert when the Llamatepec Volcano erupted, causing a shower of ash,
sulfur, and volcanic igneous rock along with mudslides. Many coffee crops have
been destroyed in the Ahuachapán region as a result, and 7,000 people were
evacuated from their homes.
This eruption came in the midst of two weeks of
heavy rains, culminating in Hurricane Stan, which has brought more downpours
over the past few days. This
precipitation, when paired with already saturated land and erosion caused by
deforestation, has caused countless mudslides, especially in marginalized
communities where over 40,000 people have been evacuated. These mudslides have
resulted in at least 65 deaths – 6 of them alone in our San Salvador sister
parish María Madre de los Pobres.
According to the UNDP, El Salvador is now the most deforested nation in
the world, making the poor and marginalized extremely vulnerable to these
tragedies.
In the face of these disasters, SHARE is
encouraged by the power of community organization.Although the national and local governments have come up short on funding
to evacuate and shelter all of those affected by these disasters, our local
partners and communities have banded together to form emergency response
commissions, monitoring high risk areas and evacuating when necessary, as well
as providing shelter, food, and basic items. In the days and weeks to come, a
secondary reconstruction phase will need to follow these first emergency
responses, including the rebuilding of sanitation systems, latrines, homes, and
schools, as well as the provision of mental health services. In addition, a
third phase of strengthening disaster response and prevention should
follow.
After the 2001 earthquakes, the Tecoluca Municipal
Development Committee brought international recognition to its devastated
municipality. It not only accepted
the challenge of reconstruction, but also decided to use the opportunity to implement a 25-year plan to
build a new and stronger Tecoluca, with more employment and income
opportunities, more stable homes and better services for its inhabitants, and
heightened citizen participation and municipal democracy. SHARE believes in the communities and
partners that it works with; we are committed to building an emergency fund to
support their efforts -- both for meals in the evacuation shelters today, as
well as for dreams of reconstruction and development for the future.
 |
Here are some examples of counterparts who could benefit
from emergency funds raised:
- Maria Madre de los Pobres Parish. Coordinating with the mayor of San
Salvador to provide shelter to 250 families in 7 shelters, helping communities
to respond with advocacy, and beginning to rebuild damaged
homes.
- CRIPDES Southern La Libertad (CODESMA). Providing
shelter and emergency provisions as well as relief packets for 300 families in
southern La Libertad.
- Institute for Women (IMU). Providing food to families in
shelters, including Chalchuapa.
- The Municipal Development Committee of
Tecoluca (CDM). Currently providing shelter to 320
families in various churches, markets, and schools in the Tecoluca
municipality
- Social Initiative for Democracy
(ISD). Working with municipal councils,
mayors, and non-profits to shelter families from La Paz and Cuscatlan in local
schools. Providing over 800
people with food, mattresses, clothing and hygiene
items.
|
Time is of the essence in raising this emergency fund.
Oxfam America has estimated that there is at least $43.6 million in damage
throughout the 70% of the country that has been affected. This situation has been the most
dangerous for the poor, whose vulnerability to these disasters is a tragedy in
and of itself. We ask that you act quickly in the spirit of solidarity and
consider how your committee can help to build this fund for SHARE's local
partners. Last night, one Milwaukee
parish responded immediately to SHARE's appeal by committing to raise
$2,000. This morning, a Michigan
sister parish pledged $500. Please discern what contribution your committee can make and reply as
soon as possible to this email. When we receive your commitment, SHARE
will provide funds immediately to groups that are taking emergency response
measures. This is the best and fastest way for your committee to provide relief
to our brothers and sisters in El
Salvador.
We sincerely appreciate your support in this campaign and all of your
work for social and economic justice in El Salvador's most marginalized
communities. To be a part of
SHARE's emergency response effort, or for any additional information, please
contact me at: leslie@share-elsalvador.org
In Solidarity,
Leslie Bilchick,
on behalf of the entire SHARE Foundation