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Dateline ACTSouth & south east Asia/Indonesia 04/05The morning that turned into mourningBy Orla Clinton, Church of Sweden/ACT InternationalAceh, Indonesia, January 25, 2005--It is a story that is repeated many times in the thousands of people who survived the tsunami. Thirty-two-year-old Adi Arisnadi was enjoying his Sunday morning at home. His four-year-old son was playing on the beach when the earthquake struck. His wife screamed to him to run and fetch the child, which he did. After that, he went to the nearby harbor where he worked to check if everything was all right. Once satisfied there was no damage, he returned home and ate breakfast. Melinda, his 31-year-old wife, was busy looking after their nine-month-old girl and asked him if he could go and buy some goods for her stall. Just as he headed over a bridge a couple of hundred meters from his home, he saw people staring toward the sea. The next thing he knew, they were running, and that was when he saw the huge, black waves racing toward the shore. He tried to turn back and get his wife but was trapped by the approach of the water. His only thought was to get away. Suddenly the water was upon him, and he saw a coconut tree, which he clung to and started to pray. “The water was whipping me ‘round and ‘round. Everything was falling down with the huge, black wall of water, and people were screaming and crying for help. I thought it was the end of the world,” said Arisnadi. He does not know how long it was before the water started to go down. “All the dead were floating around me. I prayed my family had been saved but realized there was little chance, as once I reached safe ground, people started saying how thousands had been washed away where I live,” he said. Arisnadi now sits in Blang Cut, one of the thousands of shelters set up for displaced people. In all, he has lost 10 relatives. Out of his dead wife’s family only one person has survived. He is receiving counseling from a Church World Service (CWS) therapist who embraces him gently. CWS, along with YAKKUM Emergency Unit and Yayasan Tanggul Bancana, all members of Action by Churches Together (ACT) International, a global alliance of churches and related agencies, is carrying out ACT’s response to the massive needs in Indonesia following the December 26 tsunami. Only a few people scavenge among the ruins here for belongings. The majority are dead. Piles of corpses wrapped in plastic lay on open ground awaiting collection, while body parts are scattered among the debris. Once whole families enjoyed their Sunday mornings here. Now, like so many Acehnese, they lie wrapped in plastic, with no family members still around, most likely, around to offer them a proper burial. “When I ran outside, I saw everything falling down around me and saw water coming from everywhere. I thought of my two girls, aged 10 and 13, who were in my mother’s house. So I ran there but saw from a distance that the house was covered in water, and I knew they were all dead,” she said, weeping quietly. Then the water washed her away, and she thought she was dead. “This disaster is a very bad dream. I cannot just accept it, and I don’t understand why it has happened. If I keep thinking of it I will go mad,” the grief-stricken mother said. She wants to do something, to be active to try and forget all of this. She needs a place to stay and some basic supplies. She is also benefiting from the counseling from CWS, which is trying to determine how she can best be assisted. These two stories are all too familiar. People have lost their entire immediate families, other relatives, as well as their livelihoods and hope for the future. But people are also gathering strength from each other, bolstered by a tremendous faith that keeps them going.
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