Hamida
Ammari (left) has been example to many volunteers during and
after the earthquake. The work of the Algerian Red Crescent
has presuaded Mansour Abdel Razak to help others (p4784)
Ahmed
Bouchenafa's best friend, Sara, died under the rubble of her
home in Boumerdes. “I wanted to be a volunteer to keep
alive her memory,” he says. “Bringing joy to someone
sad helps me to have a positive perspective to life.”
(p4786)

Adlan Melkoo (centre), who rescued three children from the rubble,
is still working long hours three weeks after the earthquake.
Here he enjoys the camaraderie of fellow Red Crescent volunteers
(p4785)

Mansour Abdel Razak says a miracle saved his family when their
house collapsed. "Now I want to serve humanity, as I saw
the volunteers doing," he says (p4787)
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Algerian quake brings out spirit
of solidarity
11 June 2003
by Rana Sidani in Dillys; pictures by Christopher Black
Everybody in the Algerian towns
affected by the earthquake three weeks ago knows the name of Hamida
Ammari. The 34-year-old single mother, who comes from a modest home
in Hrawa, never imagined she would one day be so famous. Her success
story is repeated in all the camps for displaced people, with many
people trying to follow in her footsteps.
The earthquake happened on 21 May, killing over 2,200 people, injuring
9,500 and leaving tens of thousands homeless.
Minutes after the 6.7 tremor earthquake struck on 21 May, Hamida organised
rescue operations by calling on 17 of her Algerian Red Crescent (ARCS)
colleagues and deploying them in several locations in Hrawa to search
for survivors.
“The volunteers managed to rescue three people, transported
many injured to hospital and assist in the search for bodies”
Hamida explains. “One week before the quake, our volunteers
had a first aid and rescue course, as if we had an intuition that
this would happen” she adds.
Hamida divided the rest of volunteers into groups. She asked the first
group to go house to house to collect blood donations. The second
was responsible for finding doctors in the area. And she went with
the third group to the nearest hospital in AinTaya to look for medicines.
Early the next morning, she walked from store to store to convince
shopkeepers to donate bread and cake. When she received enough powdered
milk, she prepared many litres of baby milk and, with the volunteers,
delivered breakfast to the homeless. “I didn’t do this
on my own. The population wanted to help but needed someone to organise
their goodwill,” she says, adding, “the solidarity of
the Algerian people is what counts”.
Today Hamida plays a key role in running the Hrawa camp, where 140
families are accommodated in 118 tents put up by the civil protection.
“We are providing people with food, mattresses and non-food
items,” she says.
After taking the initiative to cook for the families, Hamida is trying
to solve the only problem she is facing which is the sanitation of
the camp. “There are only four latrines and two bathrooms. I
am negotiating with the municipal authorities to build more latrines
in order to prevent any outbreak of diseases,” she explains.
Many volunteers, like Adlan Melkoo, are still working long hours.
The 24-year-old is still wearing the shirt he was wearing on the first
day of the earthquake, when he was looking for survivors in Dellys.
The shirt, once white, now has new reddish colour. The shirt has become
the most precious thing he has. It witnessed his happiest moments,
when he succeeded in rescuing three babies. But it was also there
for his saddest experiences - when he carried more than 80 dead bodies
from the rubble and presented them to their love ones.
Adlan keeps repeating the world “normal”. For him, carrying
bodies, or often parts of bodies, seeing orphans looking for their
mothers - all of this has become normal for him.
One image comforts him and allows him to sleep deeply at night - the
look on the faces of the two boys he managed to rescue in Reghaia.
“The mother was holding them in her arms when a wall collapsed
on top of her. She died but her children were protected by her body”
he said. “When I rescue one person, I feel as though I have
rescued all humanity.”
Adlan, who also rescued a seven-year-old girl also from the same building,
is now active in helping people at Dellys camp, where 133 families
are accommodated.
The actions of Algerian Red Crescent volunteers convinced Ahmed Bouchenafa
to join them. His best friend, Sara, who was a fellow student at the
Fine Art School in Boumerdes, died under the rubble of her home in
the town. “I wanted to be a volunteer to keep alive her memory,”
he says. “Helping people, bringing joy to someone sad, playing
with orphans - all of this helps me to have a positive perspective
to life.”
The death of a loved one is not the only motive for becoming a volunteer
– sometimes a miracle, like the one that saved Mansour Abdel
Razak’s family, can provide a reason.
“On 21 May, a miracle saved my family. They came out alive from
under the rubble. To cherish this I want to serve humanity, as I saw
the volunteers doing” Mansour says.
Related links:
Algeria: appeals, updates
and reports
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