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God Turns Things Out for OurBetter

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MDS responding to Carstairs tornado

WINNIPEG, Man. — Elisa Humphreys was sitting on her couch in her home in Carstairs, Alberta when she got the emergency alert about the tornado.

It was July 1 and Humphreys, 63, who manages Clothing for a Cause—a ministry that recycles clothing and household textiles to provide financial assistance to non-profit partners in Canada and in the developing world—was enjoying the Canada Day holiday.

After getting the alert, she looked out the window. “I could see it coming,” she said.

With no time to spare, she grabbed her dog and one of her three cats—she didn’t know where the other two were—and headed for her car.

Sadly, she had no time to spare to get her three horses and lead them to safety. “I was unable to rescue them,” she said. “The tornado was big, and I didn’t know how fast it was coming. I didn’t want to put my life in danger.”

After the tornado passed by, she drove back to check on her house and other buildings, including a house owned by her son and his wife also on the property.

“Everything was gone. Vanished. All there was was a debris field,” she said. “Even the fence posts were sucked right out of the ground.”

It was, she learned later, one of the strongest tornadoes the province had seen in over 35 years, with wind speeds up to 275 kilometres/170 miles per hour.

Her horses survived, but they were all injured. “I don’t know if they were hit by flying debris or were picked up and thrown by the tornado,” she said, adding one was so badly hurt it had to be put down. Her other two cats were found later, also dead.

Fortunately, the community rallied to help her with the clean up. Hundreds of people came out to clean up her property.

“It was a mass mobilization, the most amazing thing,” Humphreys said of the church groups, 4-H groups and others who lent a hand. “They didn’t rest until ever speck of debris was cleaned up.”

The next step was rebuilding, and that posed a challenge.

Since her mobile home was on wood blocks, she was unable to get insurance. And her son and his family had recently sold their house; it was ready to be moved by the purchaser. It wasn’t insured, either.

Humphreys thought about buying another mobile home, but there was nothing affordable in good condition. Her son and his family also worried about where they might find a place to live.

Humphreys may have not known what to do, but someone in the community did—they contacted MDS. After sending an investigation team, the MDS Alberta Unit quickly decided to help.

“It wasn’t a hard decision,” said Harold Friesen, a member of the Alberta Unit. “Elisa is a very selfless woman, always giving back to the community and concerned about others.”

They agreed to a house plan for them all—her son and family living on the ground floor and a living space for Humphreys in a walkout basement. They hope to break ground and start building this fall. Meantime, they are all living in rented accommodations.

“I like the plan,” she said of the new house, adding the investigation team was very sensitive and respectful. “I appreciated how they interacted with us. I never felt like we were receiving charity.”

She especially liked how they invited her to provide input into the design of the house, right down to the paint colours. “I felt like we were more important to them than the house they were building,” she said.

Although sad about the loss of her horse and cats, and acknowledging the trauma from the disaster, Humphreys still feels blessed.

“I gained more than I lost,” she said of all the help she has received. “God turns all things out for our better.”

MDS is responding through its Alberta Unit. The Unit needs $120,000 for materials to build a new house for Humphreys and her family. People can make a donation at https://mds.org/donate-canada or send a cheque to MDS Canada, 200-600 Shaftesbury Blvd., Winnipeg, MB, R3P 2J1.

Image description: Elisa Humphreys with Harold Friesen of the MDS Alberta Unit and Sky and Jared Wesly with their children Jack and Olivia

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