Brick by Brick
Amritapuri, India
August 21, 2005
As
the morning sun finds its way through the canopy of coconut trees
that shade Vellannathuruthu, a groups of volunteers plod back and
forth along one of the seaside village's dirt pathways carrying
loads of bricks—mostly upon their heads.
It's hard work. But these volunteers work steadily in an effort
to complete as quickly as possible the 1,400 houses the M. A. Math
is constructing in Alappad Panchayat as part of its tsunami-rehabilitation
programme.
The construction has been going on for the past couple of months,
and with 1,360 foundations already complete, the work currently
at hand is erecting the brick walls.
The
problem is that the interior locations of Alappad Panchayat are
accessible almost exclusively via various cramped and winding dirt
pathways—pathways that often pregnant cows have trouble negotiating,
not to mention lorries carrying a several tonnes of bricks. To make
matters more difficult, the monsoon season has rendered the land
very muddy, and small ponds are now overflowing, often submerging
the paths altogether. Therefore the lorries have unloaded the bricks
in central locations throughout the panchayat, and the ashramites
are spending their mornings schlepping them from point A to point
B, over and over again.
To
be frank, at the end of a four-hour shift, the men and women look
quite worn out, but spirits remain high, as their motivation lies
in helping families that have been homeless for eight months return
to normalcy. "When I first saw the images of the tsunami on
television from Europe, I felt so sad that I couldn't be there to
help in person," says Ed De Wilde, a 54-year old Belgium man
who is currently visiting Amritapuri with his family. "I gave
a donation, but it wasn't the same thing as being there to help
in person. So now I am happy that I can be here and really help
the tsunami victims."
Most of the Westerners still prefer to carry the bricks with their
arms, either cradling a stack in front of their body as they walk
or filling up a large burlap rice sack and slinging it over their
back. But a few have taken to the traditional Indian method—filing
a basket with seven or eight bricks and carrying it on top of their
head. One Westerner when asked how he felt after using the Indian
method for several hours joked, "About three inches shorter."
Using
a wooden board as a platform, some of the brahmacharis (renunciates
of M. A. Math) regularly make trips with as many as 16 bricks piled
up in this fashion. Adding to this a nice wade through knee-deep
water can make each trip a real exercise in mindfulness. But according
to M. A. Math history, 16 bricks is nothing. When the Amritapuri
temple was being constructed, more than a decade ago, one of the
current sannyasins (monks) had then set the ashram record,
carrying 45 bricks atop his head.
The brick carrying will most likely continue for several more months.
With each house requiring 13,000 bricks, it means that there are
18.2 million bricks to be moved about in all. But this
figure in no way daunts Amma's workforce. "We are not doing
anything," says one of the senior brahmacharis helping
with the work. "Amma is doing everything, so what is there
to worry about."
- amritapuri.org
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