The purpose
is most of all to minimize the loss of human
life but also to utilize the economical
resources in a more appropriate way. It
is after all more efficient and economical
to prevent than to tidy up.
Joined hands
The training of the villagers
in the disaster prone areas is to a considerable
extent built on the villagers own knowledge
about the results of a disaster. Many of
them know how to prevent the catastrophe
but there is no tradition for sharing this
information with the neighbours and try
to get organised and join hands. A simple
initiative like planting banana trees next
to the house can in a emergency situation
mean a difference between life and death.
The stem can easily be transformed into
a primitive raft and keep you afloat if
flooding occurs. Some of the villagers know
that already but they don’t think
about passing the advice on to the neighbour.
The organisations try to keep the villagers
on standby and establish a sort of Civil
Defence Forces. A group of key-persons from
the village are selected to map the village
and to make a plan of evacuation. They are
to find out who are the most vulnerable
in the village, who will need extra help,
for example old, sick and handicapped people,
who has a boat which can be used to rescue
people, and who will listen to the radio.
The task of the organisations
is first and foremost to make the villagers
join hands and exchange ideas so that they
are as well prepared as possible when the
disaster comes. It is about gathering the
villagers, make them discuss the consequences
of a disaster and create a feeling of community
and solidarity – and of course encourage
them to take action.
India:
The small village of Dharijana is situated
in the north-western state of Orissa. Placed
only two kilometres from the Bay of Bengal
and between two rivers Dharijana is surrounded
by water. A walk through the narrow and
muddy streets of the village witness that
the 450 villagers know what it means to
be prisoners of Nature. Many of the palm-trees
do not sway in the wind any longer. They
lie broken and withered on the ground. Most
of the mud-built houses don’t have
a roof but are covered by blue plastic.
During the years Dharijana has witnessed
a vast number of n floodings, orcans and
typhones.
The members of the Mallick
family particularly recall the orcan of
1999, which killed 52 of their neighbours:
"Our house was in
an open field. The wind grew more and more
violent and the waterlevel rose rapidly.
We clung to each other inside the house
hoping not to loose sight of one another.
All of a sudden one of the walls of the
house was taken by the water and we realized
that if we decided to stay in the house
all of us would be taken by the water within
few minutes. We started to move towards
some trees not far from the house. My parents
did not have the strength to swim all the
way, they disappeared in the dark and muddy
water. My sister-in-law carried my youngest
son but she did not have the force to hold
him, clinging to the tree and fighting the
current at the same time. She tried to hand
him over to me but I lost my grip and he
disappeared just like my parents,"
Sidheswar Mallick cries silently but finds
the strength to continue his horrible story:
"That day my own son
died in front of my eyes. I thought that
it would be the very last day of my own
life. For three days we sat in the trees.
We did not eat and we did not drink. The
water below us was salt. We only survived
because it was raining and we were able
to suck the water out of our clothes. As
soon as the water level sank so much that
we could touch the ground we managed to
get to the only stone house in the village.
Here we found other survivors. After 12
days the relief reached us."
Mr and Mrs Mallick lost
two sons and three daughters during the
flooding in 1999. To prevent another disaster
they take part in a disaster prevention
project carried out by LWS-India (Lutheran
World Service India). LWS-India is supported
by DanChurchAid by means from ECHO, the
relief office of the European Union.
"I am still full of
fear when I think about that a new disaster
might hit us. But at least now thanks to
LWS-India we started discussing what we
can do to minimize the hazards and reduce
the effects. Some of the suggestions of
LWS we know already but we never sat down
in order to discuss what we can do ourselves
and how we work together most efficiently.
I believe that our chance to survive another
disaster is better now that we know how
to cooperate. During the flooding of 1999
a man in the village heard that a storm
was on its way, but he did not know the
meter-system. When they said on the radio
that the waterlevel would raise up till
ten meters he thought that they meant ten
feet. (3.3 meter). I am more confident know
that we learned how to prevent and how to
take action," says Sidheswar Mallick.
Bangladesh:
In northern Bangladesh on the vast Brahmaputra
River the Char people live according to
Nature’s laws. Flooding and erosion
force them to lead a nomadic life.
From May to September when
the melted water runs from the nearby Himalayas
into the arms of the Brahmaputra River,
the flood rises alarmingly. The river floods
the sandbars and forces the Char people
to leave their houses and their fields.
When the tide begins to go out, erosion
greedily consumes the sandbars. The houses
and fields of the Char dwellers are drawn
into the deep of the river.
The meeting with the violent water is hard
to forget for Mr. Abdul Hossein:
"I remember everything
as clearly as if it happened yesterday.
The terrible day in 1998, when the river
flooded. We ran like we had never run before
until we reached the boat. We were 22 persons
on board clinging to each other in the raging
storm. We were surrounded by huge waves.
Personal belongings and dead animals were
floating around the boat. All of a sudden
the boat started sinking. Fortunately another
boat passed by and saved us all by throwing
ropes in the water. I’m still haunted
by the sight of an old lady being drawn
down by the violent current. Her eyes were
full of fear."
Also Mr. Abdul Hosseins neighbour Mrs.
Golapi Khartoum recall the bad memories:
"Every year when the
time of flooding is approaching I get nervous
and tense. I constantly fear the river will
affect my family’s life and me in
a negative way. I often think of when I
was only eight years old. My two sisters
and I were playing in the peanut field when
the river started flooding. My parents took
us to my father’s raft heading towards
another Char. Suddenly my sister lost her
grip and fell into the black and whirling
water. We all panicked but fortunately my
father managed to catch her and get her
back on the raft."
Nepal:
Every year when the monsoon begins in the
village of Ilam in the south-eastern Nepal
is in danger. Heavy masses of mud slide
down the surrounding mountains and the river
running around Ilam starts to flood. Each
year the 2000 villagers face the same problems.
The water goes into their houses and pollutes
their drinking water. Diarea and other diseases
invade the village. LWF-Nepal (Lutheran
World Federation Nepal), DanChurchAid’s
partner started education and training of
the villagers with financial support from
ECHO. They learn how to minimize the effect
of a disaster and how to prevent a disaster
from being a major disaster. Today many
of the villagers have showed up in the local
school to attend the LWF meeting.
"We prevent the disaster
by helping each other making our houses
safe. We construct the houses on bamboo-sticks
so that the water will not reach the floor
level. We can minimize the effects of the
disaster but we can’t prevent it completely
though. Every year somebody has their house
flooded and they loose their belongings.
We help them by collecting money in the
village and by constructing a new house
without charge," tells one of the participants.
|