by
Susan Palmes
Scenes
of devastation wrought by super typhoon “Yolanda” in Central
Visayas
in the Philippines caused anxiety and drew sympathy from Fil-Americans here
at North Carolina.
Len
Stevens, a native of Albuera, Leyte which is three hours drive to the
capital town Tacloban, said she last made contact with her family at
past 12
midnight.
She
said she talked with her sister Hazel about the typhoon since her
family
lived near the ocean. Len said she's worried because it had
been two days and
she had yet to contact her family through Skype.
Len's
parents are Fe Bignay and Edwin Bignay and her sisters are named
Junerose and Hazel. Len Stevens, the eldest, had been here in
Charlotte for
two years already and is pregnant with her first baby.
She
said she she grew up in the Philippines and learned to live with the
huge
waves caused by typhoons. “But this is different, I saw on TV
that banana trees
were toppled.” Len said.
Another
Filipino-American, Ghing Vought, said she couldn't contact her
parents
in Mahplag, Leyte, one of the hardest hit in the Philippines.
"Even
my sisters in Manila also tried to contact them- no luck.” Vought
said.
For
her part, Annete Ray is sad that she couldn't contact her father Nido
Amores of San Remegio town, Cebu.
She
said it has been a month that she last talked with him along with her
half-
brothers. She learned about the news here in Charlotte and is
hoping that she
could make contact with her father soon.
PinoySa Carolinas contacted Florami Cuardero-Lee, the president of the
Fil-
American Association in North Carolina (FACC) and asked if the
association has
information on how many Filipinos came from the
affected areas.
“We
don't have the geographical population of our members what islands
they're from, all I know is they're Visayans or Ilocanos. But I have
friends from
north of Cebu that were badly affected,” she said.
A
report by the Philippine Daily Inquirer stated that President Benigno
Aquino
III ordered the military and all search and rescue teams to
locate both
survivors and the dead in the communities badly hit by
Yolanda, which made
several landfalls in Central Visayas last Friday.
A
report from Reuters said the initial death toll in Leyte reached
10,000, with
70 to 80 percent of the province destroyed. Relief
assistance from the
government and groups are headed to the affected
areas.
No comments:
Post a Comment