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Home > Today's Christian > 2005 > July/August

A Flood of Mercy
In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, churches throughout the South are opening their doors to evacuees.
By Mark Ellis; Senior Correspondent, ASSIST News Service


A Flood of Mercy
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As former residents of New Orleans and the Gulf face a future full of uncertainties following Hurricane Katrina, Christians throughout the South—a thousand points of light—have already opened their homes and are caring for evacuees.

"Life as we knew it just a few days ago will never be the same," says Suzanne Williams, a member of Living Word Church in Mansfield, Louisiana. Their church's former youth building is now home to 13 members of the Thompson family spanning three generations. "These are wonderful people, who know they're blessed to be alive," she says. "We're preparing to take in 50 more people."

Mansfield, once a fairly prosperous town in the northwest corner of Louisiana, is somewhat of an economic basket case today. It shrunk from a population of 16,000 to just 4,500 after several industries shut their doors a few years ago. The jobs were exported overseas.

It lies in the heart of a broad swath of territory that served as a landing pad for evacuees fleeing one of the worst disasters in American history. "All the people that did evacuate and found hotels and motels are now faced with no place to go," Williams says. "They are looking for relief in shelters that are springing up everywhere—mostly in churches," she says.

"Now is the time to put love in action," she adds.

Living Word is a church of about 200, typical of the small churches of rural Louisiana. The church already spent $1,000 for food, clothing, and supplies to take care of the Thompson family in the first four days. They estimate it will take thousands—perhaps hundreds of thousands of dollars—to house 50 more people for 6 to 15 months.

Pastor Glenn Rogers, of Living Word, is overseeing the relief effort among nine other churches in Mansfield. "We're overwhelmed with the responsibility right now," Rogers says. There are 100,000 evacuees in the Shreveport area, about 30 miles north of Mansfield, he says. The overflow is filtering into smaller communities along the interstate highway like Mansfield.

"They run out of gas and don't know where to go," he says.

The dimensions of the evacuation are historically unprecedented. Pastor Rogers cites 1.3 million in the process of being relocated from the greater New Orleans area, and possibly as many as 3 million from the entire region. "We have over 1,500 people camping at one park near us," he says.

After the crisis hit, members of the church signed their names to a volunteer list to cook meals, do laundry, run errands, and haul supplies for new arrivals. Many also signed up to donate extra sheets and blankets, pillows, towels, clothes, baby formula and many other items on a list that's growing rapidly.





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