by Simone Orendain
MANILA, Philippines (CNS) – The grandstand of Villamor Air Base was buzzing with teams of workers trying to help people displaced by the super typhoon that struck the central Philippines 10 days earlier.
Evacuees, fresh off the military planes that took them here, could make free phone calls, register for transportation to meet loved ones in Metro Manila, get help to start their lives over and receive some much needed stress-debriefing. That was where some local nuns stepped in.
Nymiah Pateros told Catholic News Service she was thankful for help from Assumptionist Sister Anna Carmela Pesongco.
“She said she would contact our family here,” said Pateros, who is from the town of Palo, just south of Tacloban. “She helped us, she has a cell phone. I don’t have a cell phone now. It got washed out and filled with salt water.”
Pateros was holding her one-year-old daughter in her arms, giving her juice from a small box. The 29-year-old, her husband, their daughter and three-year-old son, and her father all survived the typhoon’s howling winds and fast-rising water brought by a massive storm surge that smacked Leyte province.
She said her husband “was drifting in the water. And we clung to the branch of a tree. It was hard with two small children. I was so traumatized. That tidal wave, oh, the water was so strong!”
Pateros, a Catholic, said she also prayed hard that no flying debris like loose corrugated metal roofs would hit her head as she huddled to protect her children.
“When the storm slapped my back, it really hurt,” she said. “I just kept praying that my head would be fine.”
The family was able to stay in a house that was still standing. They had plenty of water, but there was little food. They were able to get some rice from a storehouse, but it was wet, so they dried it in the sun.
“It was already starting to smell sour. But we cooked it and ate it instead of dying of hunger,” said Pateros. “We just withstood it as best we could, but the children developed diarrhea.”
The family survived the storm and the hunger, but Pateros said hungry inmates who broke through a wall in the prison started to loot the remaining houses, and they went after the family’s neighbors.
“So we left. We ran away and we just came here,” she said.
Sister Pesongco, president of Assumption College in Makati, said the sisters from various orders are debriefing the survivors like the Pateros family to find out how traumatized they are, what they need and to facilitate finding their relatives.