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Tsunami survivor tells of ordeal
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A UMNS photo by Michelle R. Scott, UMCOR Lenni (center) sits with her two daughters in their room at the Cadek Permai temporary housing center.
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| Lenni
(center) sits with her two daughters in their room at the Cadek Permai
temporary housing center near Banda Aceh, Indonesia. Lenni lost her leg
as a result of injuries suffered in the Dec. 26, 2004, tsunami. With the
help of the United Methodist Committee on Relief, she plans on opening a
bakery to support her family. The agency is helping displaced people
through its livelihoods program, which trains people in small-business
startup and management and supplies them with needed equipment. A UMNS
photo by Michelle R. Scott, UMCOR. Photo #06687. Accompanies UMNS story
#363. 6/15/06 |
June 15, 2006
By Michelle R. Scott*
BANDA ACEH, Indonesia (UMNS) — Lenni survived the tsunami partly
because she was lucky and partly because she is a woman of great courage
who knew she needed to survive for the sake of her children.
She recalled her story one Tuesday afternoon in April while her
youngest child slept peacefully in a hammock on the porch of the
barracks where she lives with four of her six children.
The United Methodist Committee on Relief is helping her restore her
life along with the other families living in the Cadek Permai temporary
living center just outside of the city of Banda Aceh. Her two oldest
children are married and live away from home.
Lenni remembers being awakened that Sunday morning by an earthquake.
She and her husband gathered the children and ran outside to safety.
When it seemed that the shaking had stopped they returned to the house
to clean up.
While they were returning fallen dishes to their shelves they felt a
second tremor. Once again Lenni and her family went outside, only this
time they saw people running toward the town.
She says they were quiet -- no one was shouting, just running. Cars
and trucks loaded with people headed away from the ocean. She asked her
neighbor what was going on. Her neighbor went to the road to find out
but never came back.
Lenni and her husband gathered their children and put them on a truck
and told them to go to their grandmother’s house in town. She and her
husband slowly followed the crowd on their motorbike.
Then the wave came. They were at the edge of it and were knocked
down. Lenni was thrown some distance in the crash and her husband was
underneath the bike trying to get out when the next wave came, with
pieces of the neighborhood rolling inside.
Lenni recalls hearing her husband yell instructions for her to hang
on to anything she could grab. Then she heard him crying out to God for
her protection. It would be the last time she heard her husband’s voice.
She describes the water that enveloped her as hot, black and
sulfurous. It pulled her under and sucked her out toward the sea. With
the third and the largest wave to wash into Banda Aceh that morning, “I
thought it was the end of the world,” Lenni says. The force of the wave
kept pushing her down into the water.
Alone in the Water
When she finally got to the surface, Lenni was not sure if she was
alive or dead. Then she tried to swim and realized how badly her right
leg had been injured. She tried to stay afloat with the use of only one
leg. She looked around and saw no one, no houses or trees, only black
water and blue sky. “God saved me,” she says.
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A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose A lone palm tree stands amid the wreckage of beachfront homes that were flattened by the tsunami in Banda Aceh, Indonesia.
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| A
lone palm tree stands amid the wreckage of beachfront homes that were
flattened by the Dec. 26, 2004, tsunami in Banda Aceh, Indonesia. The
United Methodist Committee on Relief is helping displaced people in
Indonesia and other places in South Asia through its livelihoods
program. The agency trains people in small-business startup and
management and supplies them with needed equipment so they can better
support their families. A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose. Photo #06688.
Accompanies UMNS stories #363. 6/15/06 |
Lenni found a floating tree to use as a raft and over time began to
talk to the tree because she felt so alone. She said, “Bring me
somewhere safe.” She either passed out or fell asleep when she heard a
voice saying “Wake up! Hold on to the tree or you will fall into the
water.” In her recollection the man who spoke to her was wearing white
with a long beard. She clung tighter to the tree as it drifted to a
nearby mountain.
She carefully climbed off the tree and found that she could not walk
because of her injured leg, which would later become so infected that it
had to be amputated. She found a wire lying on the ground and used it
and some sticks to make a splint.
Rescue
She spent the night at an empty house. In the morning, she heard a voice yelling “Is anyone here? Is anyone alive?”
She cried back, “I’m here!” but hid herself because the force of the
waves left her naked and she was embarrassed. The man called back, “Are
you a ghost or a person?” because he could not see her. She answered, “I
am not a ghost, I am still alive!” Lenni asked the man to throw her
some clothes because she was naked and ashamed. The man told her not to
worry, that everyone was naked from the waves.
The man called to some nearby people and they carried her to a
medical post where she received the medical attention she so desperately
needed. Her children found her at this site. They were all safe from
the tsunami because they went ahead on the truck.
Lenni is now able to walk with the help of a prosthetic leg and is
making plans for the future. She wants to go back to her business of
baking cakes and supplying local shops with them. UMCOR is assisting her
and the people in the temporary living center where she lives with
housing, jobs and other needs.
More information on the work in Indonesia and other parts of the world can be found at http://new.gbgm-umc.org/umcor/, the UMCOR Web site.
*Scott, an UMCOR staff member in New York, visited Indonesia this spring.
News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, (646) 369-3759 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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