Italian Franciscan says he fears Banda Aceh parish will never recover
by Stephen Steele
Catholic News Service BANDA ACEH, Indonesia (CNS) -- When Franciscan Father Ferdinando Seferi celebrated
a mid-January Mass in his shattered parish in Banda Aceh, only six parishioners were among the
30 people who attended the service.
Twenty-five members of the parish were killed in the magnitude 9 earthquake
and subsequent tsunamis that claimed the lives of about 166,000 Indonesians. The rest of the
350 parishioners fled to other parts of Aceh province or to the Indonesian capital of Jakarta
for fear that recurring tremors would lead to a more powerful earthquake and flooding.
Sacred Heart Parish -- 75 percent Indonesian-Chinese and 25 percent Batak,
an indigenous tribe -- was established in 1926 by Dutch missionaries and is the only Catholic
parish in Aceh province. Father Seferi, an Italian, said he fears that his parish will never
recover from the tsunamis' devastation.
"My ultimate sorrow is that my parish has been dismantled," he told Catholic
News Service Jan. 18
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Only two bodies of missing parishioners have been located and received a
Catholic burial, he said. In the weeks following the tsunamis, survivors asked Father Seferi
to bless the spots where their loved ones disappeared.
"We have suffered so much, and our suffering is compounded because we cannot
find their bodies," he said.
He said he doubts the Batak will return to Banda Aceh and instead will choose
to return to their original villages. He said the Indonesian-Chinese may decide to remain in
Medan, provincial capital of nearby North Sumatra province, or Jakarta; either way, the already
small parish will lose a substantial number of members.
"As long as the memory of their apocalypse is on their mind, they will not
return," he said.
Father Seferi said the parish will use money from the international aid network
Caritas to rebuild the homes for parishioners "wherever they prefer."
"But we cannot think of rebuilding, because right now they need medicine,
they need food," he said.
Despite the fact that Aceh is an overwhelmingly fundamentalist Muslim province,
Father Seferi spent the early part of the day blessing corpses dragged from the city's debris.
"I bless all the dead because there is only one paradise for both Christians
and Muslims," he said.
Sacred Heart, located along the Alur Naga River, sustained extensive damage;
the water level rose more than 26 feet above church walls. The parish was spared a massive number
of casualties because Father Seferi was celebrating Mass Dec. 26 in Meulaboh, on Aceh's northwest
coast. Had Mass been celebrated in Banda Aceh Dec. 26, the entire parish could have been wiped
out, the priest said.
Father Seferi was buying food for a sick parishioner in Meulaboh when the
earthquake struck.
"I was compelled to fall to my knees, grab the earth and praise the awesome
power of God," he said.
The quake lasted for about five minutes. About a minute or two after the
earthquake ended, buildings in Meulaboh began collapsing one by one, he said.
Shortly after the quake, the town's residents emerged on the streets smiling,
believing their few moments of terror had ended.
"It was then that we forgot what they taught us in school -- that after an
earthquake along the coast, a tsunami will follow," he said.
The giant wave reached 50 feet in Meulaboh, destroying the city and killing
thousands, he said. Father Seferi survived by escaping to the second floor of a mosque.
The priest, clearly traumatized by the experience, said he blames himself
for not preventing a catastrophe in Meulaboh.
"This is the great sin of my life for which I need to repent. For if I had
not fallen to my knees to praise the Lord, I could have warned more people; if I had said 'save
yourself,' so many people may not have died," he said.
U.S. Camillian Father Scott Binet of Milwaukee, Wis., a medical doctor who
arrived in Indonesia in early January, said he would encourage Father Seferi to take a leave
of absence from the parish.
"He knows he's struggling and I think he's fighting it. But this experience
has taken a terrible toll on him. The decision is up to him, but I think he would benefit to
leave Banda Aceh for a while," he said.
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