Community comes together for Chile

Photo by Adrian Lema The Jackson Heights bar and restaurant D’Antigua, a haven for local Latin rock bands, held a fundraiser for efforts of the Chilean Red Cross on Sunday, March 7.Photo by Adrian Lema
The Jackson Heights bar and restaurant D’Antigua, a haven for local Latin rock bands, held a fundraiser for efforts of the Chilean Red Cross on Sunday, March 7.

From thousand of miles away close to $900 will be deposited to this Chilean Red Cross from a fundraiser held at D’Antigua, a bar and restaurant and haven for the local Latin rock scene.

“We did this because a lot of the bands have members who are Chilean,” said Elias “Zack” Valladarez, the sound engineer at the Jackson Heights venue located on 84th Street and Northern Boulevard where 15 bands performed and raised a total of $888. “This is the second fundraiser we [did]. We did one for Haiti too.”

This event and several others held around the New York City metropolitan area in recent days aimed to show solidarity with Chile, two weeks after the 8.8 magnitude earthquake rocked millions out of bed and the tsunami swept boats onto and homes off of the very same land.

According to the Chilean Ministry of the Interior, as of Monday, March 8, a total of 486 have been confirmed dead – a dramatic decrease in number from the previous high figure of 805 announced on March 2. The director of the National Emergency Office within the Ministry of the Interior (ONEMI) said that some municipalities had incorrectly included the number of people missing not confirmed dead.

“We haven’t wanted to make a projection [of the number of missing],” Interior Minister Edmundo Perez Yoma said on Chilean radio. “There are a lot of people that are not missing, they just haven’t been found.”

Still, according ONEMI, 1.5 million Chileans have been displaced and now shelter has become an issue.

“We are finding shelter. We have sent a significant amount of tents, almost 5,000 tents for six and eight people, that in total will house 30,000,” Perez Yoma said. “Even then, a few weeks will pass until we are able to meet all of the major necessities.”

With these necessities in mind and more than 172 aftershocks since February 27, the people and government of Chile have shifted their focus towards rebuilding the devastated areas.

At first the President of Chile, Michelle Bachelet – whose term ends at midnight on March 10 – told her contemporaries on the international stage not to send help. However, after damage to the telecommunication and infrastructure situation became apparent, Bachelet requested the help. ONEMI declared that the United States provided 25 satellite telephones, while neighboring countries like Argentina and Peru provided medical and engineering assistance.

“Money is not scarce,” said Perez Yoma. “What is scarce is the amount of necessary machinery, for example. We’ve gotten a lot of machinery in the north, and we’ve gotten machinery in other parts, so we’ll be able to overcome this issue.”

The government has dispatched mobile hospitals, portable water trucks, gas tanks, and at least 10,000 members of the armed forces as well as aerial support to the disaster zones. The grim task of identifying bodies in the coastal areas hit by the post earthquake tsunami fell to forensic officials who identified 76 in Constitucion and 68 in Concepcion, close to the offshore epicenter.

For those who plan to donate money, most relief efforts have been coordinated through the Chilean Red Cross, which set up an account at Banco Estado under the name of Cruz Roja Chilena account number 362883, routing number 70-512-100-1.

Locally, the Consul of Chile in New York also recommends donating to the Chile Earthquake Relief Fund at the Bank of America account 226000255231, routing number 026-009-593.

Another of the organizers of the D’Antigua Chile fundraiser, Adrian Lema, explained that they had only a few days to plan the Solidaridad con Chile – an “instant initiative” – that at the end of the day proved something else.

“Will power is the greater than we think,” he said. “We only had four days to plan something, but we did it.”

Photo Courtesy of the International Federation of the Red Cross

After the earthquake in Chile, the Red Cross made an aerial assessment on Talca and Concepcion, two of the worst hit cities in Chile.