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Pray. Work: students from St. Joseph's school, many of whose parents are
becoming Habitat homeowner partners, perform for visiting volunteers |
KUTTAPULY, 11th August 2005: Despite the friendly invasion of foreign
Habitat volunteers, the rhythm of the day continues in Kuttapuly.
Before daylight, fishermen go to sea in their open boats. When Habitat
teams arrive on site at 8 o’clock in the morning, children in crisp
uniforms, the girls with their hair neatly braided, are putting on their
backpacks.
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| Almost: Habitat's 200,001st house nearly ready for moving in |
As the work progresses and the sun gets higher, the sea breeze picks up a
sharp, salty odor of fish drying in the sun. The dogs that have dug into
the sand piles find new places to sleep as the workers get busy and the
shady places move.
The front of Michel’s house, the 200,001st house, has been whitewashed a
pale, sky blue. Two of the tallest volunteers – Julius Wejuli from Uganda
and John Smart from Knoxville in the US – are on ladders wielding brushes
at a rapid clip on the side walls. Mark Crozet, Habitat’s senior
vice-president of resource development, reaches the high places inside.
The team of volunteer roofers is on top of things at Seelia’s, their fourth
house. Seelia keeps an eye on developments when she passes by on her walk
from her one-room store to the temporary thatch house she shares with her
two daughters and two frisky, week-old goats. Indian volunteer Priyanka
Kripalani seems to have mastered the “top-spin forehand” throwing motion
needed for applying plaster and Carolyn Beal, USA, gives it a smooth finish.
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| Happy: Habitat homeowner Mrs. Seelia in front of her nearly-completed new
home relied on neighbors' when the tsunami left her old home with a leaking roof |
In honor of Habitat for Humanity, St. Joseph’s Higher Secondary School has
prepared a program of dance and a physical exercise demonstration involving
all 600-plus youngsters. At the end, volunteers from Knoxville plant a tree
near the school entrance that, like the houses, will shelter the next
generation in Kuttapuly.
“Pray. Work,” the motto over the school entrance, applies to everyone here
as well.
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