No road ahead, turn around

June 16th, 2008 by Jody Herrington

TERRA HAUTE, Ind. – On my first day out in the affected neighborhoods to do assessments with OBI’s construction foreman, I could not believe that after nine days there was still standing water, roads washed out with water still gushing over them and water still seeping up from the saturated ground. Read the rest of this entry »

Road to nowhere

June 13th, 2008 by Bill Horan

TERRE HAUTE, Indiana - Terre Haute, a French expression for “high land,” looked like anything but high as we, in a tiny red mosquito of a plane, flew above flooded fields, farms and ruined homes that would never dry out to be what they once were. Read the rest of this entry »

Operation: Tank repair

June 13th, 2008 by David Darg

YAO JIN VILLAGE, China - The name of the game today was “tank repair.” Most villages in the quake zone have huge concrete water tanks for storage and most of these were cracked during the quake. The cracks range from hairline fissures to gaping 4-inch splits. Either way, cracks and water don’t mix. Read the rest of this entry »

China: Breaking ground, bringing relief

June 11th, 2008 by David Darg


YAO JIN VILLAGE, China – We had another action packed day. In Yao Jin, we diverted the water flow from the village water tank so that we could carry out some vital repairs. Read the rest of this entry »

Powering through the rubble

June 9th, 2008 by David Darg

SICHUAN PROVINCE, China - I was still responding to the death and destruction that had devastated Myanmar when I read the news: “Massive Earthquake Strikes Central China.” A few weeks later, I’m surrounded by death and destruction yet again. But despite the horrific 7.9-magnitude quake that rocked Sichuan Province, I am also surrounded by remarkable hope and resilience.
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Life begins again for earthquake-devastated village

June 6th, 2008 by David Darg

YAO JIN VILLAGE, China - Today’s site visit was excellent. The villagers were warm and exceptionally motivated. By tomorrow they will have finished the construction of the ‘bath house.’ Read the rest of this entry »

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