By Catholic News Service
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (CNS) — What Chicago Cardinal Blase J. Cupich learned in visiting and talking to the people of Puerto Rico Dec. 3-6 is that "there’s a lot of work to do, a lot of people suffering" nearly three months after Hurricane Maria devastated the island.
In a pastoral visit made on behalf of Pope Francis, the cardinal traveled throughout Puerto Rico, meeting with its bishops, priests and laypeople
The pope had sent the cardinal to the hurricane-battered island to make a visit before Christmas to express his deep concern for the people and reach out in solidarity on his behalf to those who are suffering.
Cardinal Cupich, who also is chancellor of Catholic Extension, tapped the Chicago-based papal society to assist with his trip.
Making over a dozen stops, the group visited a variety of people and places, including the motherhouse of missionary sisters, an orphanage, and numerous parishes and chapels. They met with the bishops, with scores of pastors, lay leaders and deacons serving the poor.
Catholic Extension has a long history of working with the six dioceses of Puerto Rico, providing about $1 million annually to support church construction and ministry. Since its first assistance to the island in 1908, Catholic Extension’s most notable contribution to Puerto Rico has been its support for the construction and repair of 1,400 church buildings.
This year, Catholic Extension provided an additional $400,000 in immediate support following the hurricanes and is currently fundraising to further help the Puerto Rican church with its post-hurricane rebuilding efforts.
As the group traveled throughout the island, the pain and misery caused by Hurricane Maria were still on full display.
Once-bustling town centers and business districts were shuttered in cities large and small, signaling a massive loss of income and livelihood. Collapsed buildings, flooded homes, and roofless structures abounded. There were barely any stoplights in operation, forcing drivers to engage in a white-knuckle game of "chicken" at nearly every intersection, which snarled traffic.
Throughout the island, many power lines were still down, usually tangled like spaghetti next to thick wood, and concrete poles that were snapped like twigs in Maria’s ferocious winds.
More than anything, the group noticed the darkness after sunset. With so many still without electricity, some of the only lights piercing the darkness were from households that could afford the large expense of running a power generator at night.
The group visited St. Martin de Porres Chapel, located on top of a mountain near Cidra. This is a thriving faith community, but the hurricane ripped open the roof of their building space like it was a piece of foil, flooding the parish hall and chapel, and rendering the structure useless.
Out front on the gate was a sign advertising Mass times at nearby parishes, and at the bottom of the sign someone had written, "With God, Puerto Rico rises." The note was a religious adaptation of the rallying cry for the island, "Puerto Rico Rises," which is ubiquitously displayed on marquees, banners and billboards across the island.
Down the mountain, the delegation visited Our Lady of Perpetual Help Chapel in a poor neighborhood of Caguas.
Randy Tejada, a 21-year-old man with an infectious smile, is the lay coordinator who takes care of this mission. He and a band of volunteers cut down all the trees and debris that buffeted this small, inner-city chapel, which was built with funds from Catholic Extension.
They have yet to remove the giant palm tree that fell on the adjacent parish hall, also built with Extension funds. The tree crushed the side of the building, destroying the place they stored food and clothing for the poor and where they offered religious education. It is now infested with iguanas and rats.
Yet, Tejada is not giving up. He said that he and his volunteer team would keep plugging along with cleanup; they also have already begun fundraising to help get their beloved church community back on its feet.
Cardinal Cupich said that many people have the capacity to be resilient, but that in a special way the Puerto Rican Catholic community is "resilient with joy and happiness, and that is something that I am witnessing on this trip."
"These are fellow Americans," Cardinal Cupich said. "Let’s not forget that, these are countrymen and we need as a nation to rally around the people who are suffering."