Love comes Tumbling down

“This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you.” John 15:12

A 24 story building collapsed in our neighborhood this week.

It happened on May 1st, the Labor Day holiday. I heard the helicopters flying around our neighborhood all night. These machines are bad omens here in this city. Their presence means that there is a riot or some large scale tragedy. I looked out the window and saw them hovering over a certain spot not far from our home. I knew something bad had happened. It was only in the morning I realized that a building had collapsed.

We got dressed and went to the location. I don’t know why but it just felt like we needed to be there. Obviously, all roads were closed to traffic. The building used to be a government office but has been abandoned for the past twelve years. More recently, it has been home for 150 families from one of the poorest sectors of society. They invaded the building in hopes of getting the attention of the government to help them find affordable housing. There are about 100 abandoned buildings occupied by the homeless poor in the center where we live. These people are not the same as the homeless to whom we minister in the streets. Most of these people have jobs but they cannot pay rent with what they earn. The best option is being squatters in abandoned buildings in the center. Unfortunately, everyone in authority ignores their presences until a tragedy occurs.

As we walked to the site, we passed a famous restaurant along the way. There was a long line of people waiting to eat there. They were talking and laughing away. It was quite surreal. They seemed oblivious to a great tragedy had happened just around the corner. The tragic event was in the news, even the President went to the area. It is hard to ignore such a thing. However, it didn’t concern these people. It has very little to do with their world. It is not our world as well. However, we were slowly making our way there. I am still not sure why.

There were quite a lot of people at the site. They were not mere curious spectators. Many were from the poorer social sector. They were just like us who were drawn to this place. There was almost a melancholic silence that penetrated the souls of everyone there. The press was there with their cameras. The firemen were busy trying to put out the smoldering flames. The city which is usually noisy and unruly could not ignore the silence that permeated the place. The people who lost their homes sat and mourned their loss. No words could console their souls at this moment. Hope was ripped away. There was a sense of total abandonment. Any attempt to comfort them would sound like conventional wisdom. Perhaps silence was the best answer. Some people brought clothes and food. I saw a man going through the clothes and then he walked away without taking a single piece. He realized that he needed something more than clothes and food. He wasn’t sure what. Perhaps, it is hope.

We did absolutely nothing except stand there in silence. We did not feel like we wasted our time. We heard someone calling out our names. It was Sandro. He was the only one of our youths that was present there. It is strange that not more of them were present being close to where they live. In fact, I once went to this very building looking for the mother of one of our boys.

Sandro said that it was the noise of the helicopters that brought him here.

He was a little pensive today. He said that the people made the mistake of living in such a precarious building. It is a comment he heard from some in the streets. It is strange that victims are always the first to be blamed. I told him that the building was built in 1966 and shouldn’t be in such a fragile state. Besides, there is a housing problem in this city. The government has done nothing with this building for the past 12 years but somehow, the victims are being blamed.

Sandro was just trying to understand what happened. He wasn’t passing judgment. I told him that the people were desperate for a home and they took what was available to them. Just I said this, we saw another familiar face. It was Glaucia. She came up and hugged all of us. I knew her since she was 18 and now she is 41. She used to live in the streets just like Sandro. She has had a tough life. She lived in abandoned buildings like these people for many years. She raised her children in these circumstances. We know her sons and they are excellent young men. She heard about the building and came immediately. She knew some people who lived there. However, she also had some good news to share. She was getting a place of her own. She has been living in a slum built on abandoned land and the government decided to remove the people there to make way for some construction. As a result, she was awarded an apartment. It is not free but affordable. It was something that she wanted all her life. After all these years of being homeless, she finally has a permanent address.

After Glaucia went on her way, Sandro asked if it is possible for someone like him to have a permanent address. He had heard people say that everything is possible with hard work and determination. This is another piece of conventional wisdom. The people who stood there watching the building they called home go up in flames were hardworking and determined. I told him that there are no guarantees in life. Today was not a day for easy and quick answers. I told him that many people with material success in life were the first cast the stones at the victims today; calling them lazy and scroungers, etc. I am not sure if we can consider them to be successful people. I know that Jesus would not. Can we, as Christians, consider hateful and indifferent people to be successful? Glaucia is a successful person but not because she has an apartment now. She was homeless most of her life and yet she was still able to love people and care for them. She made a special two-hour trip just to stand in silence with these people who lost everything. No fire can still steal what she has from her.

Sandro looked hungry. Most of the restaurants in the center were closed for the holiday and food is scarce for the homeless on days like this. I asked him if he wanted to get a snack with us. He smiled and we took it as a “yes”. We went to a fast food joint. He ordered only one item. We encouraged him to get something else but he said that he did not want us to spend all our money. We insisted and he ordered something else. He was happy to share the table with us. He asked the same question again. What does it take to be successful? I told him maybe we should strive to be good people. This is something that will always belong to us.

Sandro hugged us and said that he will look for us the next couple of days.

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14 thoughts on “Love comes Tumbling down

  1. My sense is: Your presence and silence offered hope…when words were inadequate…
    Thank you for sharing the gift of God’s LOVE by being present, available in time of need beyond my imagining. Blessings in God’s peace…Emily Mumma in FL…still in recovery mode from hurricane IRMA…yet NOTHING compared to the experience you shared!

    • Thank you for your comments. I think that it was important for us to be there. I am not sure if we did anything for those around us, I doubt it, but it was meaningful for us personally.

  2. You have described a terrible event for all those in the entire Center area, and we read about it feeling sad and overwhelmed, but we cannot even begin to comprehend the devastation, not only of the collapsed building, but also of the lives being lived in such poverty, loneliness, and hopelessness.Our hearts ache to be able to change these difficult scenarios, but we are incapable of any effective action other then fervent prayer. And so we petition our Lord for mercy, hope and justice for all people afflicted in this way throughout the world. Let each of us ask, “Lord, what would you have me do?”

    • Thank you for your comment. The things that you described are exactly what we saw and felt. However, sometimes having another human being next to you is better than listening to conventional wisdom being proffered by insensitive people. I am not sure if we did anything to comfort those who suffered but we felt that God was in this place.

  3. when I heard about it my heart sunk. I looked for more details in the news. And I also thought about the people living at the São Vito, that other large building near Central Market. I was devastated by the news and I also thought of you. I saw a video of a homeless man – a good man – explaining why he would not take the milk that was placed there for free: He wanted the children to have it; they need it more than he does. That was a good soul also affected by the circumstances. I continue praying.

    • Thank you for your comment. There were many people in the building that just want a decent place to stay. They have a strong sense of communal living because they won’t be able to survive if they were individualistic. God bless.

  4. When I saw the pictures on the news I was praying that was not the steeple of the church where you meet outside your children. Sorry to hear about that there were more victims that reported on the news here. We pray for you , the victims and your city.
    Peace be with you

    • The steeple belongs to another church. It is the oldest Lutheran Church in the city. We used to worship there for a year before we found an Anglican church. Initially we wanted to worship in a church in the center where we lived. It was destroyed by the fire as well. The pastor of the church ministered to the people who lived in the abandoned building.

  5. I had not heard of this terrible event until I read your post. Then I searched for it on the internet and was horrified by the photos and video of the building collapsing . It is so heartbreaking to learn about the lack of caring by the Brazilian government and the impact it has on folks that are struggling. Stephen, you and Mary made the right decision to go to the crowd. You had an impact on Glaucia and Sandro and who knows if there were others that felt your presence or heard any comforting words. We here in The Villages cannot fully comprehend what it is like to have so little, and then in a blink of an eye have NOTHING. In the weeks to come, it will be interesting to read about the children/teens reaction to this event.

    • Our children have been talking about it all week long. We went back to the site several times this week with the children. Tensions are high. People are living in tents in the streets and waiting for something more permanent.

  6. When I read about this tragic event in my newspaper, my immediate thoughts were of you and Mary and the children. And of the lives of those living in the building. Were all of you safe? Had any been injured or worse? I agree with the postings of others, your presence alone was all that was necessary. You were there to hear Glaucia’s good news, which I am sure gives hope to others like Sandro. News that you can share with the children. Sometimes hope is enough to keep you going. But all we really need is Love. God bless you and Mary and the children. God bless the less fortunate in our society with the hope of a future that includes a permanent address for everyone.

    • Thank you for your comments, Kathy. God in His mercy gives us the people the strength to move on. There are several people were burned. None of our children are involved in it. We live in the neighborhood but far enough to be safe from the effects but close enough to sense the tension.

  7. The motto of the Order of the Daughters of the King:For His Sake…..I am but one, but I am one, I cannot do everything , but I can do something. What I can do, I ought to do. What I ought to do, by the grace of God I will do. Lord, what will you have me do? Father Steve and Mary, what a sad, sad broken world we live in! Poverty and a dictator government the country you reside in is deplorable! Yet, sometimes I want to scream how unfair it all is! My heart goes out to all who suffered from this trauma! My first thought when I heard of this tragedy was both of you. So glad you were not affected in a physical way.I will continue to pray always. FHS, edy

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