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CNS PHOTO | DAMIR SAGOLL, REUTERS
Rosario Capidos cries while thanking God that she and her family survived Typhoon Haiyan as she prays during Mass inside the damaged Minor Basilica of the Holy Child Nov. 17 in Tacloban, Philippines
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November 25, 2013
SIMONE ORENDAIN
CATHOLIC NEWS SERVICE
MANILA, PHILIPPINES – In the week after Super Typhoon Haiyan cut a path of devastation across the central Philippines, faith remained strong among the hardest hit.
At Villamor Air Base in Manila, Roel Gonzales, 42, of Leyte province smiled while aid workers sang Happy Birthday to him Nov. 15.
It was a sweltering late morning with the sun approaching its peak, but everyone was shaded under a covered court. They sat in circles on plastic chairs, eating noodles with the speed of those who had not eaten for days.
In fact, they had not. They were among the hundreds of thousands left homeless by the brutal storm that tore through homes and damaged the infrastructure of a number of island provinces.
A storm surge that Haiyan churned up brought five-metre waves to Tacloban, the obliterated city on Leyte's east coast that took the typhoon's worst hit.
"All of a sudden all the houses were gone," including his, said Gonzales, who lived right outside Tacloban. "You can't find any trace of it, not one piece."
The storm surge left countless corpses in its wake.
Gonzales counted himself lucky. His wife and their three children were together with him.
"So many people were lost," he told Catholic News Service. "But we're still here. We're still alive."
His 14-year-old daughter sat with a guitar in a soft case tucked between her lower legs. "Even that survived," he said.
His eyes started to water when he described how, on the day before Haiyan slammed the country, he picked a high place on the wall to hang the guitar. Gonzales said he wanted to save it because it was from his daughter.
It floated away when the house washed away, but after the storm passed he saw it floating by a wall.
HUNGER
Gonzales said the family left for Manila because, like the many people the storm displaced, they were starting to go hungry, and he worried his children might get sick with no medicine available.
In Tacloban, aid was very slow to arrive to places beyond the city limits. Debris, dwindling fuel and poor communication lines made it hard for relief goods to move to the people who needed it.
Gonzales said he never once lost faith in God.
"You have to trust in the Lord first of all," he said. "If you don't have faith, it's very hard. And I really believe, this was really meant to be. He saved us. He let us live. . . . He's given us more time on this earth to honour him."
TANGLED WEB
"The streets of Tacloban are sort of a tangled web of destroyed houses, overturned cars and dead bodies," said Eoghan Rice, communications for the Irish Catholic aid agency Trocaire.
"It's like somebody picked up the city and just threw it in the air and let the pieces fall randomly," Rice told CNS by phone from Ormoc, a badly hit town on the western side of Leyte.
He said after seeing the damage wrought by Haiyan, a person's faith gets even stronger.
"I think it's heartening to see people all over the world, America, Europe and Asia, responding to this . . . to show solidarity and support to people who are just going through something horrific," Rice said.
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