When Michael Santo returned to
his Hurricane Sandy-ravaged neighborhood in Tuckerton, he was horrified
by what he saw, and then thanked God he and his wife, Barbara, were
still alive.
"It really looked like it was bombed," Santo said as he looked at the storm wreckage scattered throughout the yards of
his seaside community in the Trenton Diocese.
"Some homes looked like
they weren't touched at all and others were just ripped apart."
When local officials advised residents to evacuate the area before
Hurricane Sandy made landfall Oct. 29, the Santos, who are parishioners
of St. Theresa Catholic Church in nearby Little Egg Harbor, heeded that
guidance and took refuge in a community shelter set up in a school
building further inland.
After assessing the extreme wind destruction and flooding, the retired
Santos both agreed they made the right call, but choked up with emotion
when looking at the severe damage to their home.
Hurricane Sandy swept over the U.S. East Coast, causing loss of life and
billions in property damage, with the worst of it occurring in New York
and New Jersey.
Though the storm caused death and destruction, it also affirmed the faith people like the Santos have in God, and mankind.
While the Santos began clearing water-damaged furniture and rugs out of
their house, several people from a Methodist church offered to help,
which they accepted with gratitude.
Similar offers of assistance are happening throughout the region, said Father Mick Lambeth, pastor of St. Theresa.
"It was almost a need for people to reach out and help," Father Lambeth
said of his parish of approximately 5,600 families. "We've had people
call from other states who have family in this area who want to reach
out in some way to help."
Donations have been filtering into Catholic Charities, the American Red
Cross, the Tuckerton Inter-Church Food Pantry, and potential volunteers
are coming to the church, he told CNS.
So many offers of help came to the church, Father Lambeth decided the
parish needed to organize the efforts, and parishioner Philip Cross of
Little Egg Harbor agreed to head Project Volunteer. That group will help
coordinate volunteers in assisting residents of nearby barrier islands
in cleaning and repairing storm-damaged homes.
Flood damage destroyed most of Michelle Veith's belongings in her mother's Ventnor City home.
So, when Catholic Charities set up a storm relief distribution center at
St. Gianna Beretta Molla Catholic Church in nearby Northfield, in the
neighboring Diocese of Camden, Veith went there for help, and to
volunteer to assist others impacted by Hurricane Sandy.
"I need help and they need help," she said, "and the only way you can
really make a difference is to help others. My grandmother and the
Catholic Church taught me to do onto others as you want done onto
yourself."
Veith's offer of help was welcome news to Mark Taylor, director of
veterans services for Catholic Charities of the Camden Diocese, who is
one of the coordinators for relief efforts in the region.
Camden's Catholic Charities agency also has welcomed other partners at
the distribution centers it has set up, such as the American Red Cross,
to serve hot meals, give out clothes, nonperishable food and bottled
water, Taylor told CNS as he helped give out staples to displaced
families Nov. 5.
"We have a lot of resources we can offer, but with the magnitude of
what's happened here, nobody can do it alone," he said. "We try to
partner with as many community organizations, religious organizations,
anybody who wants to give back. We appreciate all of the help people
have given us in this effort."
Sandra Vitelli of Orangeburg, N.Y., said the storm crushed her spirits
when she arrived at her Tuckerton vacation house to find terrible flood
and wind damage, but the generosity of her neighbors, friends and family
who have volunteered to help her clean up has bolstered her faith.
Tragic and devastating events often bring out the best in people and
frequently bring people who have left the church back into the pews,
Father Lambeth said.
"I saw so many people this past weekend, the weekend after the
hurricane, who I had never seen before, who came here just to find hope.
Just to find some kind of peace," he said. "Not one of them asked me
for anything, except prayer.
"Religion and their faith, which may have been far out of their mindset
before, brings them to a place where they have to go to, because there
is no more stuff to hold onto," Father Lambeth added. "They know there
is hope in their faith."