Ecuador: 'We celebrate the rites for the dead on the street every time another victim is found.'
Wednesday, April 20, 2016
"The bodies are beginning to decompose. We have no water and the power is being continually cut off. Our country is not prepared for this."
By Monica de la Morena
NEW YORK—In the streets of the Ecuadorian city of Portoviejo there is the
smell of decomposing bodies, and of burning. People are begging desperately for
water, food and blankets. Nobody sleeps at home, not even those whose houses
are still standing. "We are afraid that the earth will quake again,"
said a tearful Father Walter Coronel, amissionary in based in the Archdiocese
of Portoviejo.
San Gregorio de
Portoviejo, eleven o'clock in the morning. The thermometer shows 33 degrees,
that's winter in the capital of Manabi Province. A few days before the
earthquake it had rained non-stop for 12 hours. Hundreds of people had
therefore had to leave their houses. Father Walter rushed there a few days
prior to the quake. The missionary, who is currently working in the Ecuadorian
Amazon region, comes from Portoviejo.
The priest told
his story to international Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need: "It
was two minutes before the start of the 7 o'clock Mass on Saturday (April 17).
The priest, Roberto Carlos Garviami, was just introducing me to the 100
faithful who had come to the church of San José de Picoaza when the ground
began to shake.
“The earthquake
was very, very strong. Suddenly a large part of the roof fell a few inches from
me and buried Father Roberto Carlos. In a few seconds, fear, blood and cries
had spread through the parish church. I embraced two strangers. I could only
pray and ask God that it would stop as soon as possible."
Nobody was
killed in the church of San José de Picoaza. But in other churches of the
archdiocese and in the cathedral of Portoviejo many people lost their lives.
The 7.9 earthquake,
with its epicentre 100 miles from Portoviejo, caused buildings to collapse as
though they were made of paper. There was nowhere where it was possible to
celebrate Holy Mass, the Ecuadorian priest explained. The few parish churches
which had not been completely destroyed were heavily damaged.
"Whenever
another victim is found, we celebrate
the rites of the dead in the street, in corners of destroyed buildings,” said
Father Coronel, adding: “It is not possible to count the number of dead. This
is because in the hills whole rural areas are buried under rocks and trees. Nobody
has been able to get there yet. We know nothing about the rural population. Nobody
has managed to reach them yet. We're completely out of our depth."
In the city, he
said, "the bodies are beginning to decompose. We have no water and the
power is being continually cut off. Our country is not prepared for this.”
Damage in the Archdiocese of Portoviejo, Ecuador; ACN photo
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