Elia PowersHe traveled to Sri Lanka as...
Elia Powers
He traveled to Sri Lanka as a photographer, asked to document the
damage and recount a slice of the tsunami disaster.
As Mikel Flamm spotted his first subject and grabbed hold of the
camera lens, the true purpose of his mission came into focus.
“I’ll never forget what I saw,” the 54-year-old said. “A man was
sitting on a pile of rubble, on what used to be his home. I was taken
aback. Even reporters were distraught by what they saw.”
Flamm, a former Newport Beach resident, works in the
communications department at Habitat for Humanity International, an
organization that builds permanent homes for low-income families
worldwide.
Habitat for Humanity has focused the majority of its post-tsunami
rebuilding efforts in Indonesia, Sri Lanka, India, Thailand, Malaysia
and Bangladesh.
Flamm, a photojournalist and former newspaper reporter, has been
stationed in Bangkok, Thailand, for 15 years.
He was visiting family in Newport Beach on Dec. 26 when disaster
struck.
“He was almost in tears when he heard the news,” said Flamm’s
father, Don. “We were all disturbed, but he felt so close to the
situation.”
Flamm cut his vacation short when he accepted a two-week Habitat
for Humanity mission in Batticaloa, a city in eastern Sri Lanka.
He had been to the country in early December to visit a new
project site, but when Flamm returned on Jan. 7, he said he found a
vastly different landscape.
“Along the beaches, most of the homes we’d built were destroyed,”
he said. “It was shocking to see the damage.”
Flamm estimates that 100 Habitat for Humanity homeowners either
lost their entire properties or suffered irreparable damage.
K. Vadivel, 55, the first man Flamm encountered on his mission,
put a face to the tragedy.
In a written description, Flamm said he found Vadivel sitting
listlessly next to piles of broken cement and shattered roof tiles
where his family’s home once stood.
Vadivel lost his wife in the tsunami. He and his three children
live in a temporary shelter a few kilometers from their former
property.
Flamm, whose duty was to photograph structural damage and report
back to Habitat to Humanity directors, said he couldn’t be a passive
observer.
Using contacts within his organization, he arranged for Vadivel’s
daughter, 19-year-old Manimala, to work in an office helping city
residents apply for new housing.
More than 300 people came to the Habitat’s Batticaloa office last
week to apply for a new Habitat home, Flamm said.
Flamm informed Manimala and her family that they were eligible to
live in a future Habitat for Humanity planned community, which is
under construction.
As Flamm wrote, “Manimala sat next to me and said, ‘I am very
happy today ... My family will like it here.’”
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