Prayers in Philippines as aid arrives

Typhoon victims prayed for their livelihoods, as
well as for the 4,500 the UN confirmed dead from the storm
Survivors of Typhoon Haiyan have flocked to
ruined churches, kneeling in prayer under torn roofs as the Philippines faces
an enormous rebuilding task from the storm that killed at least 3,681 people
and displaced 4 million.

This is a test of God. He wants to know
that we have faith in him in good times, as well as in bad.
Amadero Alvero, priest 
At Santo Nino Church, near the waterfront in the
flattened city of Tacloban, birds flitted between the rafters overhead as
women moved through the pews with collection plates on Sunday. At the end of
mass, the Roman Catholic congregation broke into applause.
Rosario Capidos, 55, sat crying in one row,
hugging her nine-year-old grandson, Cyrich.
Capidos had been sheltering at home with nine
other members of her family when Haiyan struck on November 8. As the waters
rose, she floated her three grandchildren on a slab of styrofoam through a
road flooded with debris and shipping containers to a nearby Chinese temple.
Her family survived.
“That’s why I’m crying,” she said.
“I thank God I was given a second chance to live.”
Violeta Simbulan, 63, said the priest’s sermon
promising that God would always be there offered her comfort while trying to
cope with losing two cousins and an aunt in the disaster.
“We are being tested by God, to see how
strong our faith is, to see if our faith is true,” priest, Amadero
Alvero, said at another mass. “This is a test of God. He wants to know
that we have faith in him in good times, as well as in bad.”
“Coming to Mass gives people hope that
things will eventually get better,” said Marino Caintic.
Aid arriving
A massive relief effort is finally kicking into
gear, nine days after one of the most powerful typhoons on record wreaked
havoc across the impoverished area in the central Philippines with monster
winds and a deadly storm surge of sea water.
Philippine authorities and international aid
agencies face a mounting humanitarian crisis, with the number of people
displaced by the catastrophe estimated at 4 million, up from 900,000 late
last week.
Nearly half a million houses were damaged by the
storm, half of them destroyed, according to the United Nations.
While aid packages have begun to reach more
remote areas, much of it carried by helicopters brought by the USS George
Washington aircraft carrier, the UN said people were still going hungry in
some mountainous provinces.
It said information about several provinces in
the west of the Visayas region remained “limited”, with 60 percent
of people in towns in the northeast part of Capiz province needing food
support.
President Benigno Aquino, caught off guard by the
scale of the disaster, is scheduled to visit affected areas on Sunday.
He has been criticised for the slow pace of aid
distribution and unclear estimates of casualties, especially in Tacloban,
capital of hardest-hit Leyte province.
There are 1,186 people missing, according to the
national count. The official death toll has only risen by 60 since Friday,
giving hope that initial local estimates of 10,000 dead were overstated.

 

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