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image by Libna Stevens/IAD
Milourdes Richars points where she was sitting seconds before
part of the ceiling of the Adventist Bible Auditorium fell when the
earthquake hit Haiti last month.
Port-au-Prince, Haitiā¦.[Libna Stevens/IAD]
Milourdes Richars is a survivor. Just like the millions who were
spared by the 7.0-magnitude earthquake which crumbled buildings and
homes last month in the capital city of Port-au-Prince, Richars, an
active Seventh-day Adventist, wants to tell her story.
Richars was among a group of 50 church members who were gathered at
the Adventist Bible Auditorium Church in downtown Port-au-Prince
when the earthquake struck.
"I was sitting there," she pointed at the pew near the back of the
church where chunks of the cement roof still lay on the floor. "I
was compelled to move closer to the group as we were about to kneel
to pray. We began to pray and we felt and heard the church shake. We
kept saying Jesus, Jesus, save us, and asked the Holy Spirit to be
near us."
Minutes later she saw where a piece of concrete had fallen on the
spot where she had been sitting seconds before.
Richars, 55, remembers the painful moments after the quake.
"It was like labor pains," says Richars, a mother of five grown
children. "We were all shaken and soon after injured people came
into the church grounds. I had dying people in my arms."
A Seventh-day Adventist for 33 years, Richars, who has been the
personal ministries director at her church, says every day since the
quake she praises God and thanks Him for sparing her life and the
life of her husband and five children.
"This has put me closer to Jesus," she testifies.
Her house destroyed, she now lives on the grounds of the church
along with nearly 1,000 who take shelter there. She offers words of
encouragement to those around her. She is active in the worship
services held daily and every Sabbath.
"Jesus has been so good to me, and I just want to continue serving
Him," Richars says.
For Jacque St. Vil, serving is all he can do now. Before the
earthquake, he was a math teacher at the Adventist school on the
campus of the Adventist University in Diquini, but now he visits
different churches with Bible in hand and speaks to those taking
refuge.
His is a sad story.
"My wife and son were killed when our home collapsed on them that
night of the earthquake," says St. Vil, head elder of the Cedon
Adventist Church in Delmas, a region not far from downtown
Port-au-Prince. St. Vil had just left his home seven minutes before
the earthquake hit to run an errand. "Now it's just me."
St. Vil clings to serving the church. With no news on when he'll be
able to return to teaching, St. Vil focuses on offering hope to
anyone who will listen.
"We have to always stay strong for Jesus and keep moving forward,"
says St. Vil.
Richars and St. Vil are not alone. There are thousands of stories
still untold.
There are more than 27,000 Seventh-day Adventists who have lost
their homes and many of them are mourning the loss of family
members. Yet they are clinging to God and serving the church as they
look for ways to rebuild their lives.
Church leaders are still doing as much as they can around the clock
to provide basic needs to all the members taking refuge on 75 of the
church's properties in the capital city. Almost immediately
following the quake, the church began assessing damage to its
facilities and providing spiritual guidance to the survivors. (See
initial relief response by the church
here).
To view photos of the damaged of the Adventist Bible Auditorium, go
to
http://www.flickr.com/photos/interamerica

image by Libna Stevens/IAD
Jacque St. Vil [left] focuses on bringing comfort to others even
after his house collapsed killing his wife and son during last
month's earthquake. Dr. Elie Henry, [right] vice president for the
church in Inter-America translates his story.
For more information
on the progress of the church in Haiti, visit us at
http://www.interamerica.org/
-Published: Wednesday, February 10, 2010 8:37:31 PM
-Source: West Indies Union Website
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