Amma's Help is Flowing
Relief Effort Updates
January 13, 2005
" Amma
is a beacon light of compassion. Mata Amritanandamayi Math is a
source of love. And the 100 crores Amma has given is the greatest
help for the government. Not only in Kerala, but throughout India,
Amma's help is flowing. This is a holy deed." Thus spoke Shri.
K.M. Mani, the Honourable Minister of Revenue of Kerala, today when
he cut the ribbon to the temporary shelters constructed by the Ashram
in Srayikkad today.
The shelters are now housing some 100 families until their houses
can be rebuilt by the Ashram. The shelters comprise a total of five
buildings located on five acres of land owned by the Math. Toilets,
bathrooms and a kitchen for the individual use of the families are
provided. And water and electricity are available 24 hours a day.
Swami Amritaswarupananda gave the welcoming speech.
Ashram to Construct 1000 Houses in Nagapattanam
Nagapattanam, Tamil Nadu
As part of its 100 crore tsunami-relief aid package, the Ashram
is planning to construct 1000 permanent houses at Pattinacherry,
Samanthampettai and other villages in Nagapattanam.
The Ashram already had constructed temporary shelters at Samanthampettai,
which include provisions for clean drinking water for about 100
families. The Ashram is also constructing day-cay centres and community
halls for relief camps at Panangudi, Collectorate and Samanthampettai—complete
with colour television sets and provisions for clean drinking water.
The Ashram is fully involved in the relief and rehabilitation operations
along the coastal belt of Nagapattanam. Within a few days after
the tsunami, a group of volunteers from Coimbatore, Chennai and
Kochi—including students from Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham under
the leadership of Br. Abhayamrita Chaitanya—swung into relief
operations.
The Math identified Nagoor as its camp headquarters in Nagapattanam.
and set up a huge community kitchen, the biggest in Nagapattanam.
The kitchen served nearly 9000 people thrice a day in 12 relief
camps in and around Nagoor and Samanthampettai. The victims at these
relief camps profusely thanked the volunteers for serving steaming
hot nutritious food right on time every day. Milk was also served
to toddlers. Serving 9000 people spread over 12 relief camps is
no easy task and this was made possible by the commitment and dedication
of the volunteers.
A full-fledged medical team from AIMS (Amrita Institute of Medical
Sciences and Research Centre, Kochi) the state-of-the-art super
specialty hospital consisting of seven doctors and five paramedics
went around the coastal areas and attended over 300 patients every
day. A fully equipped and well-stocked mobile ICU accompanied the
medical team.
The volunteers also visited Pookaran Theru (also Nagapattanam District)
and distributed kits containing rice, dhal, edible oil, tea and
other essentials to nearly 100 displaced families.
Rajendran, one villager who lost his wife and two children, says,
"If not for the love and kind persuasion to eat food, I would
have starved."
The Amrita Tsunami Rehab Project
Amritapuri, India
Ashram doctors have been making regular rounds of tsunami relief
camps since the day after the disaster. Their immediate assessment
was that the villager's greatest problems were psychological—chiefly,
anxiety and depression.
Anxiety
and depression can be symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder.
PTSD is a debilitating condition that can follow any terrifying
event. Often people with PTSD suffer from flashbacks, nightmares,
a general feeling of fear, agitation and emotional numbness. They
also tend to avoid stimuli that remind them of their traumatic experience.
PTSD can lead to alcohol and drug abuse, chronic anxiety, depression,
low self-esteem, guilt, panic attacks, and, in general, it can make
functioning properly in society difficult.
In order provide free assistance to tsunami victims suffering from
PTSD—as well as other psychological, physical, social and
financial problems—AIMS, the Ashram's super-specialty hospital
in Cochin, has formed a team comprising psychiatrists, medical doctors
and social workers to undertake what is being called the Amrita
Tsunami Rehab Project.
Since the project began on 6 January, the team has been making
regular rounds of the relief camps in area surrounding the Ashram
and speaking with the tsunami victims.
"The first phase is simply helping them to drive out their
inner sorrows," says Dr. Siju, an AIMS psychiatrist participating
in the project. "It's important to get them to pour out their
grief."
According to Dr. Siju, most people emotionally transcend the bulk
of their losses within the first six months. During this period
of acute grief, it is impossible to make any diagnoses. However,
through the next half a year, the doctors and social workers will
be speaking with the villagers, helping them to open up and shed
their pain, as well as finding out all the other areas in which
they are having problems.
Assessment is the second phase. After six months, who are the people
still locked in their despair? Who is still startled by loud noises,
suffering from recurrent nightmares, etc? Once the people are assessed,
a plan of treatment can be laid out—both pharmacological and
non-pharmacological.
As for villagers who had been diagnosed with psychological problems
prior to the tsunami, the team will immediately help them in continuing
their treatment.
Psychological maladies are not the only problems with which the
Amrita Tsunami Rehab Project is helping the villagers. Its focus
is wide-ranging, and the team will be assisting with all types of
problems—psychological, physical, social and financial.
"When anyone is under a great amount of stress, its easier
for them to contract diseases," says Dr. Jagatlal, a biochemist
participating in the project. "So we will be there to monitor
and treat that. We will also help the villagers to communicate with
government officials regarding any problems they may be having—helping
people adjust to the lack of privacy they are experiencing in the
shelters. Another big problem in the villages is alcohol abuse,
so we will be helping them with that as well."
With a tragedy of this magnitude, there are so many areas that
typically fall through the cracks. For example, in the past week
the team has spoken with four couples that have lost all their children
and are now in a most unusual situation: after having their last
child, the wives had all undergone reproductive sterilization surgeries.
The team is going to assist these women in having their procedures
reversed at AIMS so that they once again can have children.
According to the doctors, each segment of society is suffering
from problems specific to itself.
Many elderly are now feeling neglected, as their children are paying
less attention to them, focusing primarily on their own children.
Some old people have lost their caretakers altogether. And those
who are prone to hypertension are having problems due to general
stress. It also is common for them to suffer from obsessive worrying.
"More than anyone, it seems to be the mothers who are suffering
the most," says Dr. Siju. "Being fishermen, the men are
strong and used to dealing with the sea, but the mothers are very
much shaken."
Although some children are showing signs of emotional problems,
for the most part they are faring the best, say the doctors. "Being
in the relief camps has actually been good for them," says
Dr. Siju. "They are playing all the time, so they are very
happy. The camps have really helped them."
With the opening of the Ashram's temporary shelters on 13 January,
many of the villagers are finally moving back to the Alappad peninsula.
Dr. Siju says that this actually will be very beneficial for them
psychologically, as it will help them desensitise to being near
the ocean.
This most important aspect of the Amrita Tsunami Rehab Project
is that it is amrita—undying. The doctors and social workers
are not going anywhere any time soon. They will take their time
and handle each situation with the time and attention it needs.
They will be here every day, helping the villagers get through this
difficult time.
- Reports by Tulasi, www.amritapuri.org
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