Red Cross Phone Home
Friends wonder what it’s like when my husband, Glen, and I deploy to disaster zones—at times living in what some consider to be hardship conditions. Here’s a little insight:We fired up our generators in the plaza of a small town in Puerto Rico. When we first arrived the town looked deserted, but people came out of their houses as word spread that the Red Cross was setting up a communication station so people could call, text, and send email to their loved ones. Neighbors plugged their phones into Red Cross charging stations as hundreds waited to call family members for the first time since Hurricane Maria struck. Even though cell service and electricity were down on the island, our equipment enabled crowds of excited people to talk and text family members from the plaza to let them know they were safe.For anyone without their own working phone, the Red Cross provided phones with prepaid Skype accounts so that no one was left out.
Red Cross Daily Life in a Disaster Zone
Watching Hurricane Maria develop 175 mph winds I cringed as it leveled much of Dominica, St Croix and Puerto Rico. Glen and I had planned a personal trip to Italy, but postponed it after talking to the Red Cross damage assessment team. Here was a chance to make a big difference.
The Red Cross deployed us to Puerto Rico as soon as the island’s runway was cleared of debris. Glen arrived with the first wave of responders on a FEMA-chartered plane the day after Hurricane Maria and I joined the next day. It was strange to land at an airport where the lights were off, unloading our own cases of equipment from the underbody of the fuselage. .Unloading equipment at the airport. Our headlamps came in handy while working out logistics.Our fellow Red Cross volunteers came from all over the U.S. and the globe. Before we arrived, someone had arranged for us to sleep on cots in the basement of a church. We had working toilets, purified water and all the nutrition bars and trail mix we could ever want. We were so busy that our cots felt fine and, in truth, our days were so full that we fell asleep pretty quickly. The intense, shared mission forged fast friendships inside the close living quarters. We were all issued headlamps—required equipment for anyone needing to thread their way through 70 cots at night.Our staff shelter – the Basement of a church where we slept with 70 new friends.There was much joking and no complaining amongst Red Cross workers; the needs and losses of the people we help are so much greater than our own temporary inconvenience. So even in moments of weakness, when people feel like having a pity party, they get over it fast.
No one sleeps in late on a disaster, but we do get coffee. We left early each morning because our jobs required us to travel some distance across the island—detouring around fallen trees and floods from the almost daily rain storms.
Connecting with the community—on many levels
In the hardest hit towns, I shared tears with residents from time to time. Imagine the frustration and fear of being separated from your family after a natural disaster with no way to contact them or to know their fate. Red Cross helped bridge that gap. Our communication station turned out to be greater emotional support than I ever anticipated.As in every disaster, we experienced generosity from people who have been through trying times—like when one community prepared rice and beans for us from their limited stores. Disasters make you realize that it doesn’t matter how much money you have or your social position is in the world. Catastrophe is a big equalizer and all we really have are each other.Once people connected with their families they seemed lighter and happier. In one small town a twenty-something woman walked up with a smile, wearing a t-shirt stating, “I don’t need help, I need WiFi.” I’m not sure her neighbors agreed with her priorities, but our Red Cross team was certainly the answer to her needs.