Thousands offered their services after quake in May 2008, and some remain, reports Gao Qihui in Sichuan.
The 8-magnitude earthquake struck Sichuan province at 2:28 pm on May 12, 2008. It killed at least 69,227 people and left more than 5 million homeless. Thousands of people poured in to the area to help, among them many foreigners – rescuers, charity workers, doctors, psychotherapists, construction engineers and general volunteers.

Children play chess during break at a primary school in Mianzhu, Sichuan province. Foreigners have played a significant role in reconstruction efforts in the province that was hit by an 8-magnitude earthquake on May 12, 2008. Zhang Tao / China Daily
Nearly three years later, some of the foreigners remain, helping local communities and their residents move on. Some work for international organizations, others as individuals. At least 20 international non-governmental organizations are helping reconstruction efforts in Sichuan, according to Gao Guizi, a coordinator of the Sichuan May 12 Non-Government Assistance Service Center.
Three foreigners who have been there since the disaster – an American, a Malaysian and a Singaporean – tell China Daily their stories in the earthquake-hit zone.
Initial goal makes way for one that succeeds
Roland Catellier was visiting his son about that time in Pensacola, Florida, 537 kilometers from his Tampa Bay home in the US Southeast. His son’s question started him on a longer journey: “When will you start doing volunteer work again?”
Catellier, then 59, had spent 17 years traveling the world doing volunteer work. He had put that aside for some years to tend to family and business but the earthquake, and his son, started him thinking.
He determined his purpose – helping the homeless rebuild – and started the process of forming the Disaster Relief Shelters Foundation. He arrived in Chengdu, Sichuan province, in June 2008 and made a one-day visit to Mianzhu city, where the quake had killed at least 11,117 people and left more than 180,000 families homeless.
He was more impressed than shocked. Catellier had seen other disasters, including US hurricanes Andrew and Katrina, but in Mianzhu, temporary water facilities and banks were already operating. He found people who were busy and carrying on their lives.
Catellier initially wanted to donate houses to villagers. Through a Peking University professor he had met online, he was introduced to officials of Maoxian county, Aba Tibetan and Qiang autonomous prefectures in Sichuan.
He met the Maoxian officials in July and told them he wished to donate five small houses. But the officials were worried: What about the others who were homeless? Catellier couldn’t afford to house them, too, so his first idea was set aside.
Not long after, someone who had attended the meeting with the Maoxian officials asked if Catellier could build homes for state-supported elderly people and finish a sample unit in November 2008. Catellier said he felt encouraged that he had made progress.

He went back to the United States for a month to attend to details and arrange for a sample unit, a prefabricated house made from structural insulated panels made in China. But when he returned to China in November, he learned that graves had been found on the building site and the project was canceled.
Eleven months later, Catellier found his real opportunity through Sichuan Quake Relief (SQR), which had been trying to build a community center in Shihe village of Mianzhu city. An agreement was reached: SQR would pay for the land and foundation, and Catellier would be responsible for everything above it, including the water system and insulation.
The construction began on May 6, 2010, and it included lightweight steel framing to make the building more earthquake-resistant. Catellier supervised the construction and trained local laborers. He injured his back during the construction of the roof, and it took him 10 days to recover, but Di Kang Le center opened on Sept 12, 2010. The 100-square-meter building is a meeting and activity center for villagers and also provides a meeting place for grassroots non-governmental organizations.
“Now we have a place for the elders to gather to chat with each other,” a 63-year-old villager said.
“I am happy the center is used by so many people,” Catellier said.
His Disaster Relief Shelters Foundation was recognized by US federal authorities in December 2008, and with persistence his constant approach, Catellier overcame multiple obstacles to reach his goal. “My attitude is that the impossible takes a little longer.”
Now he is running a social enterprise in Chengdu to provide graduate students the opportunity to start an undertaking through a business-to-entrepreneur website. The enterprise, Catellier said, will use a significant portion of profit to “donate more small community centers or small school buildings to remote villages all over China.”
Experience and encouragement pay off
Jeyathesan Kulasingam, a Malaysian staff member of International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Society (IFRC), was preparing to rotate out of Indonesia after finishing his mission there. He had worked in reconstruction after the 2004 tsunami and, given several options, chose China as his next post.
He arrived on July 20, 2008, and was surprised. Survivors he talked to in hospitals were already thinking of rebuilding and planning their next steps. Grassroots and international non-governmental organizations were already working to help people recover mentally.

Kulasingam, 43, believes that kind of recovery is a long-term process, and he started working with Red Cross Society of China (RCSC) to help people in Sichuan’s disaster areas return to normal life in terms of their mental health.
He helped design psychosocial programs and implement activities to speed the rebuilding of networks among groups, such as children, women and the elderly. Other activities were developed to identify people who needed psychological treatment to deal with depression.
“But it is not a one-off thing and we do it every day,” Kulasingam said.
It is not just about having fun and playing games, he said, but a program that systematically brings people to see the process of healing and readjustment. “We have dealt with people who lost their legs and hands and helped them accept the fact and regain their normality.”
One is a woman from a village in Mianzhu city who had suffered multiple leg fractures. When Kulasingam met her in October 2008, she was afraid to be treated because she didn’t think she could recover. She dismissed the idea of surgery.
Kulasingam and his team visited her and her family frequently and explained to her how, if she recovered, she could again participate in work and family life. They went with her to physiotherapy sessions to provide encouragement. Finally, the woman agreed to have surgery during Spring Festival in 2009.

Two weeks after the festival, she opened a small store in front of her house. When Kulasingam met her then, he saw a confident and smiling person. Now she walks without a cane and her injured legs are strong.
“We are touched and encouraged by the progress of people,” Kulasingam said.
Those who provide help also progress, he said. As an experienced delegate of IFRC – he started with Red Cross 30 years ago, in primary school, as a volunteer – Kulasingam has worked to develop local Red Cross branches by training staff members.
At the beginning, he said, the programs were strange and the staff members reluctant. “They have to depend on technical support from people like me,” he said, and now they have taken leadership of the programs.
That makes Kulasingam believe his program is sustainable and institutionalized. “Nobody is waiting for something, but moving on. They keep progressing.”
In time, local Red Cross branches will feel ready to run their programs and won’t need his technical assistance. Then Kulasingam can move on to his next post.
Lesson begins on resiliency and culture
Timothy Sim’s father died that day, so he had other things on his mind. It was two weeks before Sim, a psychotherapist in Singapore, would learn about the devastating earthquake.

Over the next two-plus years, he would learn the importance of familiar cultural elements and that “people themselves have the resilience to recover from misfortune”.
As a PhD social worker, he knew about devastation from his work with adolescent drug abusers and ex-offenders and their families in Singapore and Hong Kong, but nothing about relief work or disaster management. Nevertheless, he accepted immediately when a friend who worked for an international charity invited Sim to join its relief work in Sichuan.
Sim, now 45, already had been scheduled to leave the National University of Singapore to join The Hong Kong Polytechnic University (PolyU) on July 2. He took personal leave to visit Chengdu, the capital of Sichuan, on June 4 and then go on to the quake-hit areas. It was the first of many trips to Sichuan; he spent 103 days there in 2009, his peak year.
In the first 12 months, Sim trained medical professionals, psychologists, teachers and social workers to deal with mental health issues in a traumatic situation. He organized summer children’s projects that developed into the Sichuan Expanded School Mental Health Network, which PolyU established in February 2009. Sim then focused on that project, which covers five schools in disaster areas.
But he felt some resistance, and learned about a local saying: “Be mindful of fire, theft and psychotherapy.” So how could mental health professionals provide appropriate services in a disaster? By teaching less and serving more as a catalyst so people could find their own way back.
In September 2008, Sim met four teachers from Yingxiu Primary School, which lost about 400 students in the earthquake. Three of these teachers had lost a wife or child. Their psychological trauma was deep, but they weren’t open to psychological therapy.
During Spring Festival in 2009, in response to their wish for a short break, Sim arranged for them to take a trip to Yunnan province. He thought it was a good opportunity for these teachers to air their accumulated sorrows.
It worked. After they returned, Sim could see they had begun to relax, compose their emotions and plan for the future. Those who had been widowed even started new relationships and eventually married again.
Several months after the trip, the four voluntarily began to tell Sim about their experiences and feelings, and that they worried some of their cherished memories would be forgotten. He interviewed them individually and recorded what they said. When he gave transcripts to the teachers, one of them told Sim, “You have helped me to organize my past experiences and I can close the page now.”
One recovery technique came to Sim by happenstance in Yingxiu, the earthquake’s epicenter, in February 2009. The town had lost about 80 percent of its population.
He was walking down a street when he saw people dancing – dynamically and spontaneously. He learned that it was an after-dinner practice of the local people called guozhuang dance, a Tibetan and Qiang ethnic folk dance.
The idea of holding a show of guozhuang dance came to Sim’s mind, and on May 1, he and the local government sponsored the show. It attracted more than 2,000 townspeople.
“Their mental outlook appeared really good, and they were dancing joyfully,” Sim said. “They have their own power to recover.”
Sim and his social worker team in schools started to utilize indigenous elements to help children. They used traditional Chinese New Year painting activities to attract students. They invited a dance teacher, Liao Zhi, to work with handicapped students in Hanwang Primary School.
Liao had lost her legs in the quake but persisted in dancing. She uses prosthetic legs and performs on a big drum. The children watched, and learned.
A dozen of them danced as a group at their school, and the audience was shocked into silence. In May 2010, Sim arranged for these students, half of whom had lost legs or hands, to perform their dance in Hong Kong to demonstrate resilience from disaster.
Changes came to the local people, but it was not all one-way. Sim said his attitude to his work of psychological therapy has changed as well.
“I need to respect the people I serve, listen to them and know the resources they have that can be used to help them,” he said. “What I teach my students right now is totally different from two years ago.”




