March 8, 2022 | Dominica | Caribbean Union Staff and Inter-American Division News Staff
The Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA) office in Dominica handed keys to a home for a family of five in the village of Laplaine, during a special ceremony on Jan. 31, 2023. The Hypolate family had been living in a temporary shelter by their property after Hurricane Maria destroyed theirs and hundreds of other homes and buildings in 2017. The category 5 hurricane killed dozens of people, damaged roads, bridges, and left residents with harsh living conditions.
More than 37 families have been assisted with repairs on their homes thanks to an assistance from ADRA partners and the church, said Pricilla Prevost, ADRA Dominica director. “This present project is the first of four homes to be completed with funds from ADRA United Kingdom and the East Caribbean Conference,” she said. The Hypolite family has been a special case, said Prevost. ADRA Dominica was happy to assist the family with 50% of the cost of the existing structure. “The Hypolite family prepared and funded the foundation and the lower structure on which the house stands and provided blocks for the main structure.”
“While significant development has taken place in the country, visible to locals and visitors alike, some people are still grappling with the impact of that major disaster,” said Prevost. “Since the major need, post-Hurricane Maria, was housing, ADRA mounted a rebuild project in three phases. This handing over is part of the third phase, which is rebuild and repairs, funded by ADRA-UK and the East Caribbean Conference.From 2018 to 2019, ADRA-Dominica embarked on a re-roofing and repair program through local funding partnerships with other organizations such as International Organization for Migration (IOM), Red Cross, Rotary, the North-Eastern Conference of Seventh-day Adventists in the USA, and the church’s South Caribbean Conference, the South Leeward Conference, and East Caribbean Conference.
Dr. Alexander Isaacs, the ADRA director for the Caribbean Union Conference, stated, “It has been a very exciting period for ADRA in Dominica, especially when we have been able, through this intervention, to make a significant difference to people’s lives, and to help them strengthen their resilience to natural disasters.”
Moving vulnerable families into better dwellings has given residents security and comfort, and a better way of life, said Pastor Anthony Hall, president of the East Caribbean Conference, which oversees the church in Dominica. “There are still many challenges, and we have a long way to go in our work to reach out to vulnerable and marginalized households, but we are working on it.”Attendees at the special ceremony included dozens of supporters, family, friends, volunteers, local church leaders, the Laplaine Village Council leaders and the architect.
ADRA Dominica is currently overseeing the work on a structure in the village of Portsmouth and another home is scheduled to be built in the village of Marigot, according to Prevost. “The design of the home structures prioritizes sustainability; the homes are built with a resilient, concrete roof, three bedrooms, and related amenities,” she said.
“We are stronger together,” said Hall. “This is more evident than ever as ADRA Dominica, the local Adventist churches and many other supporters and partners have come together to respond to this crisis.”About ADRA
ADRA is the international, humanitarian arm of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, serving in 118 countries. Its work empowers communities and changes lives around the world by providing sustainable community development and disaster relief. ADRA’s purpose is to serve humanity so all may live as God intended.