Upcoming Events View All
9
The Three Comings of Christ: An Advent Day of Prayer

Saturday, 12/09/2023 at 8:30 AM - 3:00 PM

10
Behold The Lamb of God: An Advent & Christmas Concert

Sunday, 12/10/2023 at 2:00 PM - 3:30 PM

10
Mass in Memory of Our Children

Sunday, 12/10/2023 at 2:00 PM

13
Made for More Speaker Series

Wednesday, 12/13/2023 at 7:00 PM - 8:00 PM

13
Advent Stations of the Nativity

Wednesday, 12/13/2023 at 7:00 PM - 8:00 PM

19
Online Evening Prayer with Young Adults

Tuesday, 12/19/2023 at 7:00 PM - 8:00 PM

20
'Do you believe in miracles? Seeing is believing' presentation

Wednesday, 12/20/2023 at 6:30 PM - 9:00 PM

28
'Twas in the Moon of Wintertime Holiday Concert

Thursday, 12/28/2023 at 7:00 PM - 8:15 PM

1
New Year Country Church Tour

Monday, 01/01/2024 at 12:00 PM - 4:00 PM

Agiro Cavanda and his wife, Agera, waded through floodwaters outside their home in Pemba, Mozambique, April 29, in the aftermath of Cyclone Kenneth. Aid workers are struggling to find families to reunite with children who lost parents when a pair of cyclones hit the country.
Agiro Cavanda and his wife, Agera, waded through floodwaters outside their home in Pemba, Mozambique, April 29, in the aftermath of Cyclone Kenneth. Aid workers are struggling to find families to reunite with children who lost parents when a pair of cyclones hit the country.
Photo Credit: Mike Hutchings | Reuters

Aid workers struggle to reunite kids, families after cyclones

Hundreds died and more than 2 million people have been affected by cyclones in Mozambique

CAPE TOWN, South Africa — Helping children who lost their parents when a pair of cyclones hit Mozambique is among the most difficult work in the aftermath, an aid worker said.

“It’s not easy to find the links” to these children’s relatives, said Martina Zavagli, country representative for the Association of Volunteers in International Service Foundation, or AVSI.

“Many children are alone” in the camps set up on land belonging to the Archdiocese of Beira, she said in a telephone interview May 4.

The “trauma is enormous,” Zavagli explained, noting that the Italy-based Catholic foundation has social workers “who have been trained so they can help prepare the children in this very sensitive time.”

With high winds and torrential rain, Cyclone Kenneth made landfall in Mozambique’s northern region April 25, leaving at least 40 people dead out of the more than 240,000 affected.

Five weeks earlier, hundreds more died and tens of thousands had their homes and livelihoods destroyed when Cyclone Idai struck Mozambique before moving inland to Zimbabwe and Malawi. It made landfall near the port city of Beira and two of Mozambique’s major rivers overflowed their banks, submerging entire villages.

In total, an estimated 2 million people have been affected by the cyclones, with Idai considered one of the worst natural disasters to hit the southern hemisphere.

As with Idai, “villages have been flattened” in the wake of the second cyclone, the U.S. bishops’ Catholic Relief Services wrote in a statement.

“Roads have been washed out” and bridges destroyed, it stated, noting the threat of water-borne diseases, such as cholera, typhoid and malaria “spreading quickly in the hardest-hit areas.”

Tens of thousands of people from villages in the areas that are below sea level need help to be resettled, said Leah Marie Lucas of Caritas Mozambique in Pemba, on the country’s northeastern coast. Most are fishing communities, she said.

Mozambique is a long, narrow country of about 30 million people with a 1,500-mile coastline along the Indian Ocean.

With rising sea levels, which most scientists attribute to climate change, many people will never again be able to live in their old neighborhoods, Lucas said. Unable to return, people who fish and others have lost their livelihoods, she said.

Even when they know they have to, “it’s very difficult for people to leave their homes and communities,” she said. While Portuguese is Mozambique’s official language, “there are many cultural groups with different languages.”

In coordinating rescues and distributing aid, Caritas Mozambique and other Catholic groups have formed strong partnerships with their Muslim-based counterparts in Pemba, Lucas said.

Maria Auxiliadora Parish in Pemba, along with other church schools, housed more than 1,000 people of different religions who fled the storms.

In the crisis, the Church is managing “to receive everyone … Christians, Muslims and everybody else,” Father Ricardo Rosa Marques, parish priest, told the Associated Press.

“For us, it’s not important to know which religion a person may have,” it’s the person that matters, he said.

In Beira, Mozambique’s second-largest city, which was almost completely destroyed, “things were chaotic” in the camps for displaced people with “masses of people all in the same place,” Zavagli said.

The foundation established “child-friendly spaces” in the camps and is helping to protect women, she said. Women are open to abuse “if they get up in the dark to use the restroom, for example,” she said.

With “children now very far from the schools they were attending before” the storms’ destruction, teachers and parents in the camps are given materials to help with the children’s learning, Zavagli said.

Related Articles Module

From the Archive Module

Aid workers struggle to reunite kids families after cyclones 3991

Must Watch Videos

Now Playing

    View More Videos