“If I hadn’t had a sump pump,” she said, “it would’ve come out through the windows and doors.”
On Granite Avenue, a street now dotted with condemned houses, a woman and her husband had just finished remodeling their basement the very day the water started to rise.
The thought that someone like a disaster relief volunteer would show up at her front door had never occurred to her or other residents of the area.
Now, pairs of disaster relief volunteers from the Minnesota-Wisconsin Baptist Convention braved the stench of the woman’s home with white masks, rubber boots and large plastic buckets to remove debris that reached the upper-floor windows.
Six people in Reedsburg accepted Christ as volunteer teams and chaplains helped meet physical and emotional needs. The community came together as neighbor helped neighbor.
The situation was worse in Iowa City, Iowa, where University of Iowa students sunbathed on high ground above campus streets flooded by the Iowa River. Businesses were closed. Utilities were shut off. Residents sloshed around in rubber boots with boats full of their belongings in tow.
“In our son’s neighborhood in Cedar Rapids, people’s belongings are piled head high,” said a retired Methodist minister who came with his wife to survey the damage.
When he saw the Alabama Baptist disaster relief unit gutting a home across the street, he quoted Matthew 25:40: “I assure you: Whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of Mine, you did for Me.”
Sandbag walls helped some, but not enough to hold back an overwhelmed Iowa River. And this made sketchy the situation in Missouri, where the floodwaters crested June 26 in St. Louis suburbs such as Clarksville and Winfield.
Three or four major levees in Missouri have buckled due to pressure from the mighty Mississippi River, a situation so tenuous that even muskrats burrowing into the levees or a passing motorboat can cause a threat. In these areas, homeowners already have evacuated. Some had to be taken out by boats provided by neighboring county fire departments.
Only a few miles away, the Mississippi continued to fill neighboring farmland and communities. National Guardsmen watched over flooded neighborhoods to prevent possible looting while residents waded, unprotected, through water that officials warned could be dangerously contaminated with bacteria, sediment and fertilizers.
The water peaked in the area last week. County officials asked for volunteers to fill 50,000 more sandbags to fortify the Pin Oak levee, where the river has softened the ground and where a breach would flood more than 100 homes.
As with most areas downriver, as one resident put it, “the waiting is the worst.”
In all, Southern Baptists have served 3,807 volunteer days, prepared more than 180,000 meals, cleared out 117 homes from mud and other flood debris, provided 1,218 showers and made more than 1,800 chaplaincy contacts in the Midwest flood region.
Western Recorder issue date: July 1, 2008
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