Blogger Ariel Neidermeier |
After months of emergency response work, All Hands pledged to stay and help the people recover from Haiyan and its efforts shifted to helping survivors rebuild their homes and lives. As a result of this decision, while some NGOs moved on, All Hands made a home in Tacloban, listening to the needs of the community and making every effort to meet them.
The Journey begins ...
By Ariel Neidermeier
Reprinted from AsAm News
IT TOOK two plane rides, an extended stop over in Cebu City, and a 3-hour ferry ride, but I made it to Leyte island in the Philippines.
From Cebu City, you can catch a ferry to Ormoc, a port city on the west side of Leyte. In Ormoc, I caught a jeepney – an open-air public bus – to Kananga, where All Hands Volunteers has set up it’s volunteer base camp and hub of operations. From there, they deploy groups of volunteers to various projects around the island. These range from rebuilding schools and homes to taking down the walls of broken hospitals to begin the reconstruction process.
My immediate thoughts on the state of Leyte island post-Haiyan are grim. On the drive from Ormoc to Kananga, which is located inland, on the west side of the island, we passed countless buildings missing roofs and walls; downed powered lines that have been left tangled in destroyed building and shrubbery. In the worst cases, the houses were simply a pile of rubble on the ground.
Driving through the countryside, I also noticed that all the trees look odd. The coconut trees that dot the horizon of this tropical place look spindly and bare; with whole fronds missing. The trees are also bowed in unnatural positions, with leaves bent and twisted. You can clearly see the ravages of the wind and rains from the storm.
IT TOOK two plane rides, an extended stop over in Cebu City, and a 3-hour ferry ride, but I made it to Leyte island in the Philippines.
From Cebu City, you can catch a ferry to Ormoc, a port city on the west side of Leyte. In Ormoc, I caught a jeepney – an open-air public bus – to Kananga, where All Hands Volunteers has set up it’s volunteer base camp and hub of operations. From there, they deploy groups of volunteers to various projects around the island. These range from rebuilding schools and homes to taking down the walls of broken hospitals to begin the reconstruction process.
My immediate thoughts on the state of Leyte island post-Haiyan are grim. On the drive from Ormoc to Kananga, which is located inland, on the west side of the island, we passed countless buildings missing roofs and walls; downed powered lines that have been left tangled in destroyed building and shrubbery. In the worst cases, the houses were simply a pile of rubble on the ground.
Driving through the countryside, I also noticed that all the trees look odd. The coconut trees that dot the horizon of this tropical place look spindly and bare; with whole fronds missing. The trees are also bowed in unnatural positions, with leaves bent and twisted. You can clearly see the ravages of the wind and rains from the storm.
Ariel Neidermeier
Volunteers dig to prepare for the foundation of a new home.
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From the Kananga headquarters, All Hands is deploying groups of 5 to 15 volunteers to various rebuilding projects that need assistance throughout the island. I worked on a project digging foundations for a community of permanent homes called Rotary GK Village. The project is sponsored by Gawad Kalinga, a organization that sets up rebuilding projects in local communities in the Philippines.
RELATED: We Are The World for the PhilippinesCommunity members are chosen by lottery and able to pay for their houses through labor.
So, if a family works a certain amount of hours, their labor translates into the price of the house.
For roughly eight hours, we dug 80 meter trenches and 50 meter holes to prepare for the laying of the foundation blocks for a tract of three houses. We worked alongside the Filipinos who are working on their own homes. In this hot, humid climate, this is back-breaking work. It’s necessary to take a break every 30 minutes and drink excessive amounts of water. I have a new found respect for manual laborers, to say the least.
The children of the village watched and giggled at us as we worked. They were incredibly interested in knowing our names, ages and origins. All of them were lively and friendly. By the end of the day, they began yelling “Ate Ariel!” (Ate translates roughly into ‘Big Sister.’ It’s a term of endearment and respect) whenever I walked past. Honestly, the only thing that gave me the motivation to continue working under the hot sun for hours were their happy smiles.
VIDEO: Watch the volunteers and their workToday, I’m continuing on to Tacloban to join a new base of volunteers who will be working on projects outside and around the city. All Hands is slowly transitioning its main base to Tacloban and a group of seven of us are joining the small group of volunteers that are already there. While Kananga and Ormoc City felt the damages of the heavy rains and winds, Tacloban and its surrounding areas on the east coast of Leyte, were hit directly by the storm surge. I know the damages on that side of the island will be much worse than here.
Stay tuned for more information about Leyte post-Haiyan and what I find in Tacloban.
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