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date:
09 29 2005
The
following is a letter from James Quilty, who is in Thailand finishing
up his work as leader of the Phuket Project's latest trip:
Even in the more remote places here in Thailand I hear about the Hurricane(s).
Up in Khon Kaen, about eight hours north of Bangkok by train, a town where
I sometimes felt I was the only foreigner and English is a very distant
second language, "Hurricane" was one of the few words heard from a Thai
that I understood.
Many want to know how far away I live from the hurricane and do I know
anyone there. At a Buddhist temple, a Monk asks about New Orleans and
when he hears I am from the states - he leads his fellow monks in a prayer
for the people suffering in the South of my country so far away.
I'm back in the south of their country again - back dealing with that
other disaster that never went away. It felt a little wrong at first to
leave the States to do some foreign disaster relief, but now that I'm
here I feel like I'm scouting the future for the people in the Gulf States
and I'm happy to report it's a very hopeful one where things do get better.
So much has changed since I was last here in May - it's now nine months
since the Tsunami and Phuket is a little too crowded for my tastes - I
was never here before the Tsunami but it seems that the tourists have
returned to these famed beaches. To see those images again of the Tsumami
and its destruction and then to see it now is night and day - the festivals
go on here just like the year before and so to will there be another Mardi
Gras down St Charles.
Up north of Phuket, in Kao Lak, the area hardest hit by the Tsunami, the
Monsoon rains that hampered rebuilding projects are ending, new homes
have been built and new longboats are ready for the fishermen.
It's hard to gauge what needs to still be done - I know that there is
still many people living in refugee camps and there is still a political
problem with land and who should get it - many of the new homes built
are for those who had proof they had lived on the land destroyed - many
did not and where they will go? Who knows.
The intensity of the aid effort over the region has clearly waned but
not among the people I've met - I work along side some really great people:
one volunteer here is a Marine who has done two tours in Iraq and about
to do a third, but spending some of his well-earned r&r doing relief work.
Most of it is manual labor - you couldn't pay me to dig holes for septic
systems back in the states and that's exactly what I'm getting here -
hot, sweaty, chain-gang kinda work - for free...well the payment is some
really good Thai food that I will miss when I return home after doing
my time.
I sometimes feel cut off from the world living in the States - Our news
is always focused on us and on today as if there is no tomorrow, but here
I feel I'm living in a small world - almost as small as a small town -everyone
is friendly neighbor - they know about my part of town and they wish us
well.
J
The Team at PhuketProject.org
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