|

Katrina one year later: remembering, rebuilding
Aug. 25, 2006
A UMNS Report
By Kathy L. Gilbert*
For many along the U.S. Gulf Coast, the countdown to the new year will start
Aug. 29 — not Jan. 1.
Hurricane Katrina hit Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana Aug. 29, 2005, followed
less than a month later, on Sept. 24, by Hurricane Rita, which struck Texas
and Louisiana.
As the anniversary of Hurricane Katrina approaches,
United Methodist churches everywhere will pause to remember lives lost and
give
praise for lives saved.
Special services will be held, and congregations will collect an offering Aug.
27 for the Council of Bishops’ Katrina Church Recovery Appeal.
United Methodist News Service will carry a series of stories running from
Aug. 25 to Sept. 1 profiling the work volunteers have done in the past year
to restore order to the chaos left behind by the storms. The series will feature
an interactive coastal map pinpointing churches damaged and destroyed as well
as churches rebuilt and restored.
United Methodist volunteers have put thousands of hours into the recovery effort and donated $7.6 million in relief supplies. The United Methodist Committee on Relief raised more than $66 million and was recognized by Newsweek magazine as one of the “big names in Katrina relief.” In New Orleans, Katrina damaged 90 churches and
displaced 80 pastors. In Mississippi the entire coastline from Pearlington
to Pecan
was flattened and more than
300 churches suffered some damage — seven of them destroyed. In neighboring
Alabama, one church was destroyed and another dozen suffered damage.
Hurricane Rita damaged church property in Beaumont, Port Arthur, Orange and
Bridge City in Texas and in Lake Charles and Cameron Parish in Louisiana.
Remembering
A
variety of services and vigils at United Methodist churches will mark the
anniversary of Katrina.
The Seashore District of Mississippi will host an Aug. 26 Hurricane Katrina
Remembrance Service at Seashore Assembly in Biloxi.
The 10 a.m. service will remember the lives lost in the storm and lift up
in prayer the pastors and others who have been on the front line of relief
and recovery. Bishop Hope Morgan Ward, the episcopal leader of the Mississippi
Area, will speak. In the event of rain, the service will be held at First United
Methodist Church, Biloxi.
The doors of United Methodist churches in the New Orleans area will be open
for prayer vigils 7-8 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 27, and Monday, Aug. 28. Vigils
will be held at Munholland, First Street, Bethany, Aurora and Aldersgate United
Methodist Churches on Sunday.
Additional vigils will be at St. Matthew’s, Rayne, Covenant, Gretna
and Hartzell Mt. Zion United Methodist Churches on Monday night. An interfaith
service will also be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 29, at St. Louis Cathedral
and Jackson Square in New Orleans, and a service of “Remembrance, Thanksgiving
and Hope” is planned for 7 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 27, at First United Methodist
Church in Baton Rouge, La.
Rebuilding
The Council of Bishops is inviting United Methodist churches to support the
Katrina Church Recovery Appeal by receiving a special offering on Aug. 27,
the Sunday closest to the one-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.
United Methodist Communications has developed
Katrina Church Recovery Appeal worship resources, including an order of worship,
children’s
sermon, and bulletin insert. More information is available at http://umc.org/churchrecovery.
Katrina Church Recovery Appeal DVDs are also available from district offices
in the U.S. annual conferences.
Proceeds from the sale of wristbands inscribed
with the words “rebuilding
churches and communities” will also benefit the Katrina Church Recovery
Appeal. Bracelets are $2 each, with free shipping of orders of 50 or more.
Order by calling (888) 346-3862 or going online to the appeal Web site.
Writing in the Mississippi United Methodist
Advocate,
Bishop Ward gave thanks “for
every prayer, every gift, every effort” United Methodists have given
to help the Gulf Coast recover.
“You have continued in generosity during the past 12 months. How thankful
I am for the light that shines through you,” she said. “On Aug.
27, may we once again be amazed by the overwhelming generosity of the connection
of United Methodist people.”
*Gilbert is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in Nashville,
Tenn.
News media contact: Kathy L. Gilbert, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or
newsdesk@umcom.org.
|