The scale of devastation is enormous, said Fr. Agbonkhianmeghe Orobator, president of the Jesuit Conference of Africa and Madagascar, noting that the “real devastation is the lives that have been lost.”
The cyclone, called Idai, lashed Beira, Mozambique with winds of up to 165 kilometres per hour March 14, then tore inland through Zimbabwe and Malawi.
The floods it caused “have wiped out entire villages” and roads; hospitals and schools have been destroyed, Orobator said on the website of the Jesuits in the Zimbabwe-Mozambique province.
Also on the March 25 website newsletter, Raul Chacuamba, a young Catholic in Beira, Mozambique’s second-largest city that was almost entirely destroyed, said many people “are still with no food and water and it’s dangerous.”
“Our churches have been greatly damaged,” Chacuamba said, noting that in one parish “a big wall came down and broke all the benches, the church is now totally destroyed.” At another parish, a large tree used for Christmas celebrations fell and damaged the church.
Three parishes have collapsed and another 19 have been badly damaged in the Archdiocese of Beira, according to its Facebook page. Sixty chapels as well as church properties, including the archbishop’s residence and offices, have been damaged, it said.
The storm also took off the roofs of seven Catholic schools that serve 9,500 students in the archdiocese, it said.
“As a church, through the parishes and Caritas, we are activating an emergency plan to face the most urgent needs,” the archdiocese said.
Rescue teams in Mozambique moved hundreds of people displaced by the cyclone’s flooding to safer shelters March 25. Some 128,000 displaced people are now in camps across the vast flooded area of Mozambique, Land and Environment Minister Celso Correia told reporters.
The United Nations warned that stagnant water, decomposing bodies and the lack of sanitation in overcrowded shelters in Mozambique could create breeding grounds for water-borne diseases such as cholera and typhus.
With homes and other buildings also flattened in Zimbabwe, much reconstruction will need to be done in terms of housing and “providing shelter to the families,” said Fr. Frederick Chiromba, secretary-general of the Zimbabwe Catholic Bishops’ Conference.
“Psychosocial support needs to be part of the program to help people recover,” he said, according to the Jesuits’ newsletter. More than 40 volunteers are ready to provide counselling at Harare’s Dominican convent school, he said.
Fr. Shepherd Munaro, secretary in Mutare diocese, Zimbabwe, said some people in badly affected areas of the country are walking long distances to get basic supplies.
They “are really in shock and pretty much shaken. They do not know where they will go from this point onward,” he said.
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