Finale. Prestissimo
A
woman in a drenched raincoat walks past the Quarry road informal settlement
outside Durban. (AFP or licensors)
AFRICA
South Africa’s floods: Neighbours have been helping neighbours.
South Africa’s Coadjutor Bishop of the Diocese of
Mariannhill, Neil Augustine Frank, O.M.I., has described the recent floods in
South Africa as “sad and depressing.”
Paul Samasumo – Vatican City.
South Africans are still coming to terms with last
week’s devastating floods. Amidst the bleak news from the flooding, the Bishop
has also spoken of heartening stories of neighbours reaching out to help
neighbours.
Over 4000 homes destroyed
It has stopped raining in South Africa’s KwaZulu
Natal. People in the province are beginning to process what happened to them
after a week of relentless rains that destroyed more than 4 000 homes leaving
thousands of families homeless. The death toll stands at 448.
A bleak Easter
For many residents of this coastal region, it was a
bleak Easter.
“Attendance was very poor because many people were
cut off. People couldn’t reach places of worship. In Mariannhill Diocese,
people couldn’t reach the Cathedral,” said Diocese of Mariannhill Diocese
Coadjutor Bishop Neil Augustine Frank.
He added, “Many people have lost their lives. Some
families are desperately mourning, having seen their loved ones washed away by
the floods. I have not seen bodies recovered, but some people are still
missing. It is a very sad, depressing situation. Homes have been swept away or
practically destroyed in the floods. There have been landslides,” Bishop Frank
said.
Waiting to bury loved ones
The People in the Mariannhil Diocese are waiting
for the waterlogged cemeteries to give them a chance to bury the dead, said
Bishop Frank.
“One of the greatest needs now is the burial of
loved ones,” said Bishop Frank. “The burials can’t happen right away because
the land is still soaked with water. We have to wait a while. Many people have
lost everything, and as a Diocese, we have to find funds to help people
supplement what they have and what they might receive from the government for
proper burials,” he said.
Affordable, stable housing
On Monday evening, South African President Cyril
Ramaphosa declared a national state of disaster. The floods, in a way, bring to
light continued widespread inequality in South Africa, especially in the
housing sector. Most deaths and destruction happened in informal settlements
where people live in shacks due to a lack of affordable, stable housing. Many
people just can’t afford stable housing.
Some people may not have lost homes, but their
houses have become uninhabitable, said Bishop Frank.
Neighbours helping neighbours
“Some homes may still be standing, but these
houses’ foundations have been compromised. The people have to leave them. They
may still have some possessions, but since they are displaced, there is a need
for mattresses, clothing, and in many places also for food. Fortunately,
neighbours are taking care of neighbours, and that is what we preach in Church.
To see this preaching happening in reality, to see it now, is encouraging. It
is a sign of a Church that is working well. Various families are also responding.
In some places, the municipal government structures are working. In some
municipalities, these structures are not working as well as they should,”
explained the Co-adjutor Bishop.
“Caritas South Africa has given us some funds for
us to respond as a Diocese. We are supplementing. We cannot do everything. We
have to see ourselves as working with others. Other NGOs and the government are
doing great work here,” said Bishop Frank.
South Africa needs a new resurrection
As communities now turn to bury the dead and the
arduous work of cleaning up and rebuilding, Bishop Frank hopes that some
lessons will have been learned from the tragic floods.
“We cannot go back to building houses on sand – I
say this literally and metaphorically. We thought that our resurrection was in
1994, but we have been disappointed. We must start again,” said the Mariannhill
Co-adjutor Bishop as he referenced the end of the apartheid government in 1994.
Many had hoped that the new democratic government of South Africa would usher in
a period of economic emancipation for the country’s poor.
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