News

Mormons, Baptists assist in tornado cleanup

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (RNS) Mormon missionaries are often unwelcome guests
when they knock at local front doors wearing white dress shirts and
holding a Book of Mormon.

But after a tornado, when Mormon missionaries arrive in work clothes
carrying chainsaws to help clear fallen trees, they are a welcome sight.

More than 4,000 volunteers for "Mormon Helping Hands" have been
working in tornado-ravaged areas across Alabama, descending from
Georgia, Louisiana, Tennessee and Kentucky to help.

Jacob Hamilton of Pleasant Grove, Ala., said a group of 15 Mormon
volunteers came to his yard on a Saturday afternoon and asked if he
needed help removing fallen trees. He signed a waiver and the crew did
in one hour what it would have taken him days to get done, he said.

The only way he could identify them was by their yellow shirts that
had the "Mormon Helping Hands" logo above the words Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints.

"They never tried to tell me about their Mormon faith," said
Hamilton, who attends a Baptist church. "The Mormons were just going
door to door. It was a great blessing. They know their way around a
chainsaw."

Faith groups have played a major part in tornado relief, said Julie
Wright, director of operations for the Greater Birmingham Area Command
for the Salvation Army, an evangelical denomination that has the largest
church-run worldwide disaster relief program.

"We've had everybody from Gardendale First Baptist to the Islamic
Relief Agency that's been here," said Wright. "We've had people come
down every day to volunteer. It's been a tremendous response."

The Southern Baptist Convention and Catholic Relief Services are
among the largest religious relief agencies worldwide and are working in
tornado relief. In Alabama, Southern Baptists have deployed 7,742
trained and certified emergency volunteers, many who have experience in
earthquake efforts in Japan and Haiti, said Mel Johnson, state
strategist for the Alabama Baptist Convention's disaster relief
ministries.

"We work hand in hand with the Red Cross," Johnson said.

Southern Baptists have nine feeding units and 30 shower trailers at
Alabama tornado relief sites, and have cooked more than 177,000 meals.
Chaplains have counseled more than 5,000 clients, Johnson said. Crews
travel at their own expense and typically stay a week, sleeping on
Sunday school room floors.

"It is hot, hard work," Johnson said. "But people do it because it's
an opportunity to bring hope."

The Baptist cleanup and recovery crews, who also cut and remove
trees, often end up working with Mormons and other religious volunteers.

"Catholics, Lutherans, Methodists, they all bring certain things to
the table," Johnson said. "The community of faith is usually the first
to respond. They have compassion; that's where they live."

The Mormons, who have no paid clergy, rely completely on volunteers
who spend weekends working and sleep in tents at Mormon churches.

"It's just being a good neighbor, assisting people when they're in a
time of need," said Seth Clayton, bishop of the Columbiana ward of the
Latter-day Saints, who took part in a tree-clearing effort in
Tuscaloosa.

"We believe in service," Clayton said. "Many hands make light work."

Greg Garrison

Greg Garrison writes for the Birmingham News in Birmingham, Ala.

All articles »