Tsunami’s waves were wakeup call
- Share via
How do you put a silver lining on the instant deaths of more than
200,000 people -- more than the population of Newport-Mesa? You
don’t.
But that doesn’t mean that the waves that caused so much
devastation in a land many of us will see only on the evening news
hasn’t hit home in more subtle ways.
As the world comes to the aid of the Dec. 26 tsunami victims, so
has Newport-Mesa.
Students and parents at Newport Coast Child Development Preschool
have emptied their piggybanks to the tune of $15,000 for relief
efforts. Local restaurateur Sam Tila, owner of Royal Thai Cuisine on
West Coast Highway in Newport Beach, raised at least $10,000. And
other eateries, like JACKshrimp in Newport Beach and Taco Mesa in
Costa Mesa are working toward similar relief efforts.
A classroom discussion at TeWinkle Middle School turned into
$6,000 in five days. A local state senator wants tax breaks for
people who give money to the cause. Newport Beach doctors flew to
India, with a chance of tending to those injured in the disaster. The
examples of giving go on, including local people who were caught up
in the disaster. Costa Mesa resident Steve Abrams, who was
vacationing in Phuket, Thailand, with five friends, ended up trying
to save people from being swept away like ants by the water.
Of course, this community has no grand claim to giving to the
relief efforts any more than cities across the country and the globe.
We tout the giving here not out of selfishness or even praise, but
for the very reason the givers’ stories have been presented on these
pages -- through them, we see our community’s humanity, the best of
people in the worst of times, and we see how connected we can be to
the rest of the world.
In the Dec. 26 disaster itself, we see how fragile we really are
compared to the forces of nature. And we’ve seen that through the
eyes of local people who were in South Asia on that December day.
And yet, as our own community rightly looks to the shores of
Indonesia and Sri Lanka, we can’t also forget other real dramas that
envelop places like Ethiopia, where almost half of a population of 70
million is malnourished. For that matter, we can’t forget about our
own backyard -- the soup kitchens of the world, the clinics that
serve the needy -- who could always use a donation or a kind service.
No. There is no silver lining in the wake of those terrible walls
of water, but it sure was a wakeup call.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.