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Catholic News Herald

Serving Christ and Connecting Catholics in Western North Carolina
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Prayers are answered daily as truckloads of supplies arrive at Immaculata Catholic School for victims of Helene. Volunteers unload supplies on Oct. 3. “Thumbs up to Catholic Charities, the Diocese of Charlotte, numerous parishes, and countless individuals who have delivered goods,” the school reports. “Please keep the shipments coming.” (Provided photo)

The Latest:

  • More than 200 people in 6 states have died due to the storm – over 100 in North Carolina – as search and rescue efforts continue.
  • Over half of the counties in the Diocese of Charlotte have been designated FEMA disaster areas.
  • 44 of the diocese's 92 churches are located inside this territory. Most sustained only minor damage and are now serving as aid distribution sites.
  • Truckloads of aid are running several times each day from the Diocesan Pastoral Center in Charlotte and its three high schools to affected areas.
  • Online donations to assist in long-term recovery and rebuilding efforts continue. Join in giving.
  • Volunteers and donations of supplies are still urgently needed. How to help.
  • Masses and the sacraments are still being offered although the Sunday Mass obligation remains lifted by Bishop Martin.

 

Parishes, schools respond with supply drives; Catholic Charities donations top $950K

CHARLOTTE — Late Friday night, as the first photos and cries for help emerged after Tropical Storm Helene ripped through the North Carolina mountains, Father John Putnam texted his staff at St. Mark Church:

“There’s a great need for supplies for diapers, canned goods and water in the mountains. We have folks that can deliver on Sunday. Can we get a blast out?”

By dawn Saturday, parishioners and neighbors who had seen the social media blast began dropping off supplies at the Huntersville Church. By afternoon, St. Mark had delivered its first truckload to the Statesville airport for transport to remote mountain regions. Remaining supplies went into a truck for church volunteers to drive 150 miles to Waynesville, home of St. John the Evangelist Parish, where friends and family live.

In Concord, Dan Ward was on his way into Mass on Sunday morning when he fully understood how devastating Helene had been. As the properties and risk manager for the Diocese of Charlotte, Ward had the principal of Immaculata School on the phone describing the scene around her after record rainfall in Hendersonville.

“There is damage everywhere. Trees are down. Houses and roads are washed away. There is no power – and no water,” Principal Margaret Beale told him.

“It wasn’t just what she said – it was how she said it,” Ward recalls.

He skipped Mass and called his bosses.

Over the next few hours, Beale’s hint of desperation and the trickle of news from the mountains – of people being swept down rivers, of homes washing away, of trees trapping people in neighborhoods with no way in or out – unleashed what would become an unprecedented outpouring of support from across the diocese “to get people what they need – now.”

That’s how Monsignor Patrick Winslow, the diocese’s vicar general and chancellor, described what he and Bishop Michael Martin wanted to see in response to the storm. From the diocese’s central administration. From priests and parishioners. From Catholic Charities, and schools and ministries. Everybody who could help, should help.

“For those of you who are suffering so much from this natural disaster, especially those who have lost loved ones, please know you are not alone! Motivated by the image of Christ Crucified, we stand with you, we love you, and we are lifting you up in constant prayer,” Bishop Martin wrote Wednesday in an email to the faithful. “The good people of our diocese are also pitching in to get you the help you need, now and over the long haul.”

In a similar message to priests, he noted their pastoral mission in addition to supply drives and fundraising: “It is at times such as these that we are called as shepherds to lead our communities. We may not be able to provide for every need presented to us in this moment, but we can accompany – walk with all those who are struggling…While water and power may now be scarce, God’s love and our ability to make that love real are in abundance.”

St. Margaret Mary Church has been serving as a distribution point in Swannanoa, despite a large oak tree that fell on the roof during the storm.

Support now and later

Helene crashed ashore in Florida Sept. 27 as a Category 4 Hurricane, churning through six states and killing more than 200 people, according to media reports as of Thursday – including more than 100 in North Carolina – as it became a Tropical Storm, making it one of the deadliest storms in the U.S.

North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper called it “one of the worst storms in modern history for parts of North Carolina.”

More than half of the Diocese of Charlotte’s 46 counties have been declared federal disaster areas, territory that includes 44 of the diocese’s 92 churches. While church buildings sustained only minor damage, the people and communities they serve are devastated. So, on a dime, the diocese and its Catholic Charities agency have transformed many of its churches and schools into relief centers – either collecting supplies for dispatch to western North Carolina or, in ravaged areas, serving as distribution points for weary residents, who are hungry and thirsty and cut off from the outside world.

“The best cell phone signal anywhere is right here on the property of St. Margaret Mary – but that’s how God works,” said Claudia Graham, the church’s assistant who is leading relief efforts as the parish awaits the appointment of a new pastor.

Never mind that the beautiful old oak tree out front had fallen onto the roof of the 88-year-old church and remained there. Graham opened the church anyway and, thanks to an Oct. 1 delivery from the diocese, she was able to hand out supplies the next day – giving away food and water and diapers and baby formula to the people of Swannanoa, one of the communities hardest hit by the storm.

Swannanoa is the distribution point for one of three supply routes the diocese and Catholic Charities established right away. Waynesville is another receiving station – where supplies are divided between St. John the Evangelist Church and a 1950s diner called Jukebox Junction. In Hendersonville, Immaculata Catholic School was the first supply site to open, on Sunday, just hours after principal Beale made that fateful call.

As of Friday, dozens of truckloads of supplies had been delivered to affected areas, including trucks filled by parishioners of St. Matthew, St. Gabriel, St. Mark, St. Thomas Aquinas and others. All three of the diocese’s high schools got into the act, enlisting families and serving as supply drop sites.

Catholic Charities launched an online donation site that as of Friday afternoon had raised nearly $950,000 from more than 3,000 donors across all 50 states.

“While we’ll be there handing out water and providing food…our real impact is on the longer-term restoration of lives,” said Dr. Gerry Carter, executive director and CEO of Catholic Charities.

“It’s important to remember that when you’ve lost everything, it can frequently take months, if not years, to be restored. In addition to immediate financial assistance and the distribution of food, diapers and other essentials, we’ll also be there offering case management services to help rebuild and restore lives.”

In Swannanoa, Graham was rebuilding lives hour by hour, juggling tasks she’d never imagined. She provided food and comfort to a woman who had been plucked from raging floodwaters a few days earlier. She coordinated dispatch for a crew of parishioners with chainsaws to cut away fallen trees that trapped people in their homes. She also managed to get a visiting priest approved to respond to requests she was receiving for an anointing of the sick.

“There are helicopters flying low, seeking people who are homebound and hopefully we won’t have too many that are trapped inside,” she said. “We’re doing everything we can. I’m even letting people use our dumpster at the church. It’s filling up and it’s not totally bear-proof, but I am hoping the trash service will start again soon.”

Immaculata School and Immaculate Conception Church in Hendersonville have become a distribution center, handing out supplies to more than 1,500 families in a few days.

Sacraments and Satellites

The drive from Charlotte to Waynesville, which normally takes about three hours, took five for relief teams to reach St. John and Jukebox Junction in the initial days.

The diner, owned by St. John the Evangelist parishioner Mike Graham, lost power but managed to cook up – then gave away – all of its food. It has remained open as a drop zone for supplies from the diocese and others. A steady flow of people living in surrounding Canton, Cruso and Waynesville came around for supplies – greeted by parishioners from St. John and others who are helping with distribution.

Father Paul McNulty, the Waynesville church’s pastor, has spent his days checking on parishioners and other community members, ferrying supplies, and bringing prayers and sacraments to those in need. His church overlooks the Frog Level business district of Waynesville, which during the storm stood under six feet of muddy water.

Among parishioners helping out are Father Aaron Huber’s parents, who live in Cruso, and on Sunday climbed to the top of Cold Mountain to secure cell service to call their son, who is based at St. Mark and serves as chaplain of Christ the King High School in Huntersville.
“It was a huge relief to hear from them,” Huber said, “and they told me how hard they’d been hit in that area – so St. Mark made those communities their mission to serve.”

On Wednesday, Catholic faithful left Wilmington at 4 a.m. for Waynesville, where 12 hours later they had established Starlink satellite service at St. John the Evangelist, bringing internet service to people desperate to reach out to loved ones for the first time in a week.

In Asheville, determined also to serve people’s spiritual needs, St. Eugene Church kept Masses going immediately after the storm, even without power. Just two couples made it on Saturday evening, a Mass lit by candlelight and the waning sun. The group prayed for those affected by the disaster, and family and friends who were ill. Mike and Eileen Crowe attended: “It was a nice little oasis to take your mind off things…, Mike Crowe said, “very intimate.”

Residents unload supplies from a truck dispatched Tuesday by the Diocese of Charlotte to Swannanoa, one of the worst affected communities after Tropical Storm Helene hit western North Carolina. (Gabriel Swinney | Catholic News Herald)

A light in the darkness

On Wednesday, the diocese’s relief efforts intensified in Asheville. That Monday, Mike Miller, the former principal of Asheville Catholic School, had reported that conditions remained dire across the city. Basic necessities remained in short supply.

“Water is the biggest problem right now,” Miller said. “Unless someone has a well that wasn’t over-washed with flood waters, people don’t have clean water or water service. If anyone is donating, water is crucial.”

Across the diocese, parishes have been jumping in to assist.

In Concord, St. James the Greater Parish organized a supply drive through the Concord regional airport as part of Operation Airdrop. In Greensboro, St. Paul the Apostle and St. Pius X also coordinated and collected supplies.

And although classes have been canceled this week due to flooding damage, Hendersonville’s Immaculata School has remained a hub at ground zero.
Principal Beale wept when she learned the first supplies would reach her on Sunday, the same day she’d issued her call of distress.

On Monday morning, after a long traumatizing weekend, dozens of people waited in the parking lot for the distribution of supplies to begin.

“Friday was a tough day,” she said, “and it’s really frustrating for a school that has gained so much momentum. But then you get on the other side of the storm and you see how horrific the damage is, you realize you are blessed. There isn’t anything that’s happened at our parish or school that can’t be repaired. We are such a strong community that we’ll come back from this."

— Catholic News Herald staff. Photos provided and by Gabriel Swinney for the Catholic News Herald.

Catholic Charities Diocese of Charlotte has taken truckloads of supplies to western North Carolina this week.

Special collection set for this weekend to assist storm victims

CHARLOTTE — Parishioners across the Diocese of Charlotte are invited to participate in a special second collection to benefit victims of Tropical Storm Helene, which has devastated communities in several states including western North Carolina. The collection will be taken up at Masses the weekend of Oct. 5-6.

All funds raised will go toward helping both the local parishes hit hardest by the storm and Catholic Charities’ efforts to help individuals and families in these communities. Your financial support will provide life-giving essentials like clean water, food, diapers, baby formula and more. Your support will also help with long-term recovery efforts as individuals and families work to rebuild their lives.

To donate, place your contributions in the specified collection at your parish, making checks payable to your parish and marked “Helene Relief Effort.”

 

How can you help?

Electricity, drinkable water, food, medical care, and cell phone service are in critically short supply in western North Carolina in the aftermath of Tropical Storm Helene. The Diocese of Charlotte and Catholic Charities have set up ways you can help those affected:

  • DONATE MONEY: Monetary donations are the fastest, most flexible and most effective way to support emergency relief efforts – local responders on the ground can use the funds to help people with immediate as well as long-term needs. Give securely online: www.ccdoc.org/helenerelief
  • DONATE SUPPLIES: Emergency relief supplies are being collected at these key locations across the diocese:
    • Charlotte area: Diocesan Pastoral Center, 1123 S. Church St., Charlotte, N.C. 28203
    • South of Charlotte: Charlotte Catholic High School, in front of the MACS Fine Arts Center, 7702 Pineville-Matthews Road, Charlotte, N.C. 28226
    • North of Charlotte: Christ the King High School, 2011 Crusader Way, Huntersville, N.C. 28078
    • Triad area: Bishop McGuinness High School, 1725 NC-66, Kernersville, N.C. 27284
    • Greensboro: St. Paul the Apostle Catholic Church, 2715 Horse Pen Creek Road, Greensboro, N.C. 27410. Please deliver to the Snack Bar door, located on the side of the Parish Life Center, 8 a.m.-8 p.m. daily this week. Donated items are planned to be transported on Friday.
    • Concord: St. James the Greater Church, 139 Manor Ave. S.W., Concord, N.C. Bring donations anytime 10 a.m. to noon until Friday, Oct. 4, to the church office or the preschool.

Items particularly needed are: bottled water, sanitary wipes, nonperishable food (easy-open cans, peanut butter, granola, etc.), baby food, formula, diapers, pet food, Ziploc bags, flashlights and batteries.

Note: If you are making donations that will be flown via Operation Airdrop from the Statesville or Concord airport, please check their list of approved and restricted items here.

 

Need help?

Use the state’s 211 service (call 211 and press 1, or go online to nc211.org) to find information about getting food, water and shelter; finding loved ones; checking current road conditions; filing damage and insurance claims; and other issues. Use 911 only for emergencies.

People impacted by Helene are urged to follow local advisories, including those for boiling water, staying off area roads, and picking up food aid and other emergency supplies.

A drone view Sept. 29, 2024, shows rescue personnel working in a flooded area in Asheville, N.C., following the passing of Tropical Storm Helene.
A drone view Sept. 29, 2024, shows rescue personnel working in a flooded area in Asheville, N.C., following the passing of Tropical Storm Helene.
Western North Carolina has been devasted by the after affects of Hurrican Helene.
Western North Carolina has been devasted by the after affects of Hurrican Helene.
Western North Carolina has been devasted by the after affects of Hurrican Helene.
Western North Carolina has been devasted by the after affects of Hurrican Helene.
Catholic Charities Diocese of Charlotte loads up supplies to bring to those in need.
Catholic Charities Diocese of Charlotte loads up supplies to bring to those in need.
Holy Trinity Middle School students load water and supplies to be taken to western North Carolina.
Holy Trinity Middle School students load water and supplies to be taken to western North Carolina.
Holy Trinity Middle School students load water and supplies to be taken to western North Carolina.
Holy Trinity Middle School students load water and supplies to be taken to western North Carolina.
Seminarians load a truck full of supplies donated at the Diocese of Charlotte’s Pastoral Center.
Seminarians load a truck full of supplies donated at the Diocese of Charlotte’s Pastoral Center.
Immaculata School in Hendersonville has become a distribution center, handing out supplies to more than 1,500 families in a few days.
Immaculata School in Hendersonville has become a distribution center, handing out supplies to more than 1,500 families in a few days.
Supplies of diapers, nonperishable goods and water were taken to the Statesville airport to be flown in to the devastated areas, including Waynesville and Hendersonville.
Supplies of diapers, nonperishable goods and water were taken to the Statesville airport to be flown in to the devastated areas, including Waynesville and Hendersonville.
Volunteers deliver bottled water from Charlotte to Immaculata School in Hendersonville for distribution to people in need.
Volunteers deliver bottled water from Charlotte to Immaculata School in Hendersonville for distribution to people in need.
Immaculata School in Hendersonville has become a distribution center, handing out supplies to more than 1,500 families in a few days.
Immaculata School in Hendersonville has become a distribution center, handing out supplies to more than 1,500 families in a few days.
Kids also included notes of encouragement for those impacted.
Kids also included notes of encouragement for those impacted.
Kids also included notes of encouragement for those impacted.
Kids also included notes of encouragement for those impacted.
Parishioners at St. Mark Church are among many across the diocese stepping up to help those affected by the storm damage.
Parishioners at St. Mark Church are among many across the diocese stepping up to help those affected by the storm damage.
Parishioners at St. Mark Church are among many across the diocese stepping up to help those affected by the storm damage.
Parishioners at St. Mark Church are among many across the diocese stepping up to help those affected by the storm damage.
Supplies of diapers, nonperishable goods and water were taken to the Statesville airport to be flown in to the devastated areas, including Waynesville and Hendersonville.
Supplies of diapers, nonperishable goods and water were taken to the Statesville airport to be flown in to the devastated areas, including Waynesville and Hendersonville.
Parishioners at St. Mark Church are among many across the diocese stepping up to help those affected by the storm damage.
Parishioners at St. Mark Church are among many across the diocese stepping up to help those affected by the storm damage.
Supplies arrive to those in need.
Supplies arrive to those in need.
Supplies arrive to those in need.
Supplies arrive to those in need.
Some of the damage from the strong winds and heavy rains brought to western North Carolina by Hurricane Helene.
Some of the damage from the strong winds and heavy rains brought to western North Carolina by Hurricane Helene.
A large tree also toppled over in the parking lot at St. Stephen Church in Elkin.
A large tree also toppled over in the parking lot at St. Stephen Church in Elkin.
The storm washed out roads and devestated western North Carolina.
The storm washed out roads and devestated western North Carolina.
A tree fell on St. Margaret Mary Church in Swannanoa.
A tree fell on St. Margaret Mary Church in Swannanoa.
Supplies arrive to those in need.
Supplies arrive to those in need.
Supplies of diapers, nonperishable goods and water were taken to the Statesville airport to be flown in to the devastated areas, including Waynesville and Hendersonville.
Supplies of diapers, nonperishable goods and water were taken to the Statesville airport to be flown in to the devastated areas, including Waynesville and Hendersonville.
Supplies arrive to those in need.
Supplies arrive to those in need.
Supplies arrive to those in need.
Supplies arrive to those in need.
Supplies arrive to those in need.
Supplies arrive to those in need.
Supplies arrive to those in need.
Supplies arrive to those in need.
 Volunteers unload supplies on Oct. 3 at Immaculata Catholic School.
Volunteers unload supplies on Oct. 3 at Immaculata Catholic School.
A load of supplies is blessed at Bishop McGuinness High School
A load of supplies is blessed at Bishop McGuinness High School
Bishop McGuinness High School students organize supplies.
Bishop McGuinness High School students organize supplies.
Supplies are being handed out at Immaculata Catholic School.
Supplies are being handed out at Immaculata Catholic School.
St. Luke in Mint Hill collect supplies for those in need.
St. Luke in Mint Hill collect supplies for those in need.
Supplies are being handed out at Immaculata Catholic School.
Supplies are being handed out at Immaculata Catholic School.
St. Patrick School in Charlotte also held a supply drive.
St. Patrick School in Charlotte also held a supply drive.