Camp Coast Care feels
somewhere between church camp and the TV series MASH,
and even for an extrovert like the Rev. Joe Robinson,
site director, the combination can sometimes be
overwhelming.
"Who just arrived today?" Robinson calls
out to some 100-plus volunteers assembled on the Coast
Episcopal School gymnasium bleachers for 6 p.m. Evening
Prayer and the next day's work assignments. "Well,
we saved some work for you! Where are you from?"
Answers vary: Tulsa, Oklahoma; Stanton, Virginia;
Loudon, Tennessee; Heath, Texas; Laguna Beach,
California; and, enough cities in Alabama—Prattville,
Montgomery, Anniston—to prompt a follow-up: "Is
anybody left in Alabama?"
Next question up: "Who leaves today?" After
the hands go up and appreciative applause rings out,
Robinson instructs: "Our only expectation is you
send us all your friends and all their money."
The daily ritual includes prayer, a review of the
rules, and a reminder of purpose. "This is not
about you or me but about the people you come to help
and serve," Robinson tells the gathering.
"No one here complains about the color of the
rug in the chancel or the misspelled words in the
bulletin," he says. "The focus here is on the
actual work of the church, about bringing God's presence
to the lives of others through our labor, our time, our
energy. This is what church was supposed to be about in
the first place. Lives get changed while doing this
work. Some will be yours."
Important, Holy, Shared by
All
Volunteer doctors and nurses, a pharmacist and mental
health counselor occupy a blue and white tent, pitched
near the gymnasium on the grounds of the Long Beach
school. The clinic, which has seen 20,000 patients since
it opened, within weeks of the hurricane, is sandwiched
between tents that house the 'Katrina Boutique' where
donated clothing is sorted and distributed, and a tool
shed where chain saws, wheelbarrows, ladders, axes and a
host of other tools stored have been used in clean up,
recovery and repair of more than 700 cracked and
shredded homes to date.
Approximately 182,000 hurricane survivors have been
served by the camp, a joint ministry of
Lutheran/Episcopal Services of Mississippi. Shortly
after Katrina struck August 29, the camp was organized,
using tents, recreational vehicles, trailers and the
school gymnasium as a combination volunteer sleeping
area and cafeteria. It continues to serve as a
distribution center for food and clothing, and cleaning
and personal hygiene products, the clinic and a base for
the work crews.
All with a permanent staff of eight and a total of
3,000 volunteers thus far, from a variety of faiths and
denominations even "including a Confucionist,"
and some from as far away as South Africa, Russia, and
Bermuda, who arrive and leave daily, Robinson says.
"All work here is important. All work here is
holy. All work here is shared by all of us,"
Robinson tells the group regularly. It takes 35-40
volunteers to staff the camp, in addition to work crews.
The camp can accommodate up to 200 volunteers a day at
an operational cost of $20 per volunteer.
But, five months later, the recovery work is massive
and ongoing, Robinson acknowledges. Salvage and repair
work has yet to begin on some homes; many people have
not returned. Officials list the death toll at more than
1,300 lives and damages in the billions of dollars on
the Gulf Coast. According to the Red Cross, Katrina
destroyed 68,729 houses and apartments in Mississippi
and another 65,237 suffered major damage and an
estimated 100,318 had minor damage.
The disaster takes a personal toll, said Martha
Kirkley, a marriage and family therapist and volunteer.
Post traumatic stress disorder is a fact of life for
many survivors, as is increased alcohol and spousal
abuse, insomnia, anxiety and panic attacks and
difficulty making decisions.
"I saw a woman the other day who'd been living
in her car for three months," she said. "I saw
another woman, whose husband was a shrimper. He tried to
stay on his boat during the hurricane and was blown
away. The roof of their home was blown off, also. She
couldn't stop crying, was having panic attacks, like
anyone experiencing too much stress."
Practical snafus take a toll, too, such as hundreds
of unusable FEMA trailers, insurance company delays,
that indicate a three-to-five year recovery period,
Robinson said. He urged active volunteer participation
for the long haul. "The spirit of the people in the
camp is wonderful."
Robinson moves from the onsite double-wide trailer
that houses staff office space to another trailer a few
yards away that serves as his living quarters. A plastic
pink flamingo and two chairs are perched by the door.
"There is a willingness of volunteers to do a
variety of jobs," he says. "There is worship,
with a distinct Episcopal flavor, a community aspect and
a theology of abundance in a place of great
scarcity."
'A Wonderful Spirit, A
Monastic Feel'
For Van Bankston, assistant site manager, the camp
has a monastic feel "of working, praying, and
eating together with a sole purpose in mind. We joked in
the beginning that this wasn't the real world, because
it was so disconnected from our real lives, but it has
become the real world," said the former interior
designer and artist.
He arrived six days after the hurricane to
"devastation everywhere. Streets were blocked,
people were walking around in a daze, electrical wires
were down. The bishop gave us the school gym, where
three walls had been blown out. Eighty-five percent of
the roof was gone," recalled the 51-year-old
Mississippi Delta native.
"There was no water or air conditioning. It was
112 degrees. We had to start every day working out one
problem after another. Nobody had done this before; no
one had lived through anything of this magnitude. But,
it was amazing," he continued. "The next
morning, an 18-wheeler arrived at the school from
Canada. They had food and water and we just said, 'Good
morning and thank you and opened the doors. We knew more
people and supplies would be coming.'"
Camp Coast Care is "the best mental, physical
and spiritual space I've ever been in, in my life,"
declares Angel Scott, 27, religious studies major at the
University of Oregon in Eugene who went online as soon
as she heard about Katrina. "The Diocese of
Mississippi was the only church asking for volunteers. I
said, 'that's me.' I bought a plane ticket five minutes
later." That was last October; Scott supervises the
loading dock where crates of water, food and medical
supplies are delivered.
"The presence of the Spirit here has been
absolutely amazing," says Scott, who just received
a shipment of fresh oranges from Florida and a boatload
of mini Chiquita bananas. "Up till now, I've never
been open to seeing God's grace working in the world.
Minute by minute, I see God's grace. Someone shows up
with the skills we need. A truck arrives at the moment
we need it that we haven't expected. It is a profound
experience of community. People show up from all over
the country with the sense of purpose to serve the
people of Mississippi."
"It's wonderful," said Frankie Threlkel,
72, a Pass Christian resident whose home sustained major
structural damage and a medical clinic patient. While
waiting for her cousin so they could go 'shopping at the
grocery store' together, she praised volunteer efforts.
"It's wonderful work. It makes me know somebody
cares."
'Best Witness is Witness'
The difficult part, says Robinson, is figuring out
the next steps. "There are no models for anything
of this magnitude," he said. "But the good
news is God and God's people are being served here.
"We need as much as possible for bishops and
clergy and laity from across the country to come and see
the needs and the response," he added. "They
will be better ambassadors as a result. The best witness
is witness. Nobody leaves here unchanged."
Pat Patterson, of Stanton, Virginia, agreed
whole-heartedly. "This place reaches the most
people with the biggest heart. We'll keep coming back
until they don't want us anymore," said Patterson,
who celebrated her 62nd birthday at the camp.
"There's a reason for being born and I feel like
this is the reason. It's great here! I love it!"
she said of her duties as parking lot attendant. "I
am the first and last person people see when they come
here. I feel like the bookend of their experience.
"When we came back in November, people said,
'why are you going to Mississippi? Katrina's all cleaned
up,'" said Patterson, a Unitarian Universalist.
"It's not cleaned up, but I can see an improvement.
I thought back in November that this will never be
cleaned up, but we're getting there. Little bits by tiny
bits."