Helping Nagapattinam to Overcome
Nagapattinam, India
December 18, 2005
"When difficult circumstances arise in life, there are two
ways to respond. We can either run away in fear or kindle the love
within and try to overcome," Amma said. She was talking to the 60,000
people or so who'd come to have her darshan in Samanthampettai,
a small village in Tamil Nadu's Nagapattinam District. Considering
the crowd it was a pretty heavy statement. A year ago when the tsunami
hit India, Nagapattinam became an international household name—8,000
dead.
Tonight's program was the first that Amma has ever given in the
district, but her second visit. In February, just six weeks after
the tsunami, Amma came to Samanthampettai and walked door-to-door
through a relief-camp set up by the M. A. Math. She personally dried
the eyes of hundreds that day, listening to family after family
tell her who'd died and how.
Tonight, the M. A. Math officially handed over certificates to the
375 homes it has completed in Nagapattinam thus far: 340 in Samanthampettai,
25 in Akkaraipettai and 10 in Pandagasali.

Dr. J. Radhakrishnan, the district collector, gave a short speech
in which he called the work of M. A. Math "remarkable" and said
that it was "the first organization to finish an entire community
in-full." In fact, some 45 NGOs [non-governmental agencies] are
currently working to complete tsunami-relief houses in Tamil Nadu.
So far, all of them put together have completed about 1000 homes;
50 percent of these have been built by M. A. Math. The 375 houses
built in Nagapattinam took only 180 days to complete—more than two
houses per day.
Among those to receive the certificate of ownership to his house
during Amma's program was Vijayan, a fishermen who, along with his
home, lost his grandmother in the tsunami. After having Amma's darshan
he said, "If Amma had not been beside us, we would have been left
totally aimless, with no aspiration to live. In fact, for three
months we did not go out into the sea. But during that time, Amma
gave us everything: food, shelter, education, medical care, even
clothing and soap."
Rajeswari, Vijayan's sister, has been attending classes offered
by the M. A. Math for tsunami-affected youth. She says that the classes
have inspired her and many other girls in the village to complete
their basic education and that it is becoming quite common to hear
girls speak of pursuing higher studies—something that previously
was not given too much importance.
Run away in fear or kindle the love within and overcome—Amma has
provided the options, but she has also led the way to the only true
choice. For, by coming into their midst and wiping their tears with
the end of her sari, Amma, in fact, has already begun breathing
life into the very love she is extolling them to kindle. As one
attendee remarked, "Amma is not just rebuilding their houses; she
is rebuilding their faith in life itself."
-- www.amritapuri.org
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