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The E.Newspaper By Dr. Howdy, Ph.D. A.P.E., N.U.T.
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Wednesday
Tsunami Relief - Amazing Survival Stories
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“Don’t let go of me, Mummy!” cried five-year-old Lachie Searle. He was lounging pool side at a resort in Phuket, Thailand, with his mom, Jillian, and little brother when the tsunami hit. With the water surging around her, Jillian could not hold both her boys and faced a heartbreaking choice usually reserved for hypo- thetical situations described in high school ethics classes. She decided to release Lachie, striving to save at least one of her children and hoping that the older boy had a better chance of survival. Tossed along by the current, Lachie grabbed a still-standing lobby door. Two hours later, he was dis- covered by a security guard who carried him to safety. Reunited with his parents and brother, Lachie became one of countless amazing stories of survival amidst the death and devastation caused by the tsunami that hit South Asia on the day after Christmas.
Another story is about 3-year-old Diew Silao who survived alone in a mangrove tree for three days. Swept from his mother’s arms and propelled to a forest, the boy climbed to the highest tree branch and waited. Three days later, a police officer grimly gathering up corpses entangled in the trees looked up and found the child. Diew was not the only re- markable survivor in the family. His father, a fisher- man, was at sea fishing when the maelstrom hit. His boat capsized but he was able to swim for five hours, finally reaching shore. Today, a woman who thought she lost her son and husband has had her family returned to her whole.
Anthony Praveen, an 8-year-old from Velankanni, in southern India, also had a remarkable experience. As gravediggers prepared to bury a mountain of corpses, the boy sat up from the midst of the bodies, opened his eyes, and was saved from being buried alive.
British vacationer Martin Hambrook was floating in the warm waters off the Sri Lankan coast waiting for the perfect wave when the largest one he ever saw began to approach. With the surfboard tied to his ankle, Hambrook had no choice but to ride the biggest wave of his life. Using all his skill as a surfer, he pointed his board towards his beach- front hotel, found his family, and carried them to higher ground before the second more powerful wave hit the beach.
As I flew to Dallas last week, I sat next to a pilot making her way back home. Of course, we dis- cussed the tsunami and its relationship to God. Although she believed in God, she wanted to know if God cared or even knew who lived or who died. “Wasn’t it all random?” she asked.
No, I answered, not a sparrow falls without God’s knowledge or concern. He grants life as He sees fit and takes it in his time. That is why despite the 150,000 dead, millions sur- vived, and most through amazing circumstances. This is what God told the Israelites through Moses in Deut 32:39: “See now that I, I am He, and there is no god besides Me; It is I who put to death and give life…. And there is no one who can deliver from My hand.” And that is why Moses asked God in Psalm 90:12 to “teach us to number our days.”
Life can seem so random. Some, like little Lachie Searle or Diew Silao survive in what appear to be impossible circumstances, while others do not.
I don’t presume to understand God or why He chooses as He does. But if we didn’t trust in the sovereign power of a good and kind God, we just might become paralyzed with fear, not wishing to step into the street, or drive to the store, or fly on a plane, or even let our children outside to play. But God alone is the One who gives life or takes it, and we can trust Him to protect us until He calls us home. And we need to live so we are ready for that possibility every day. Michael Rydelnik