Nurhayati is a 52-year-old woman from the village of Rima Jeunue in Indonesia. Five years ago, when the Indian Ocean tsunami hit, she survived but lost her children, grandchildren, and most of her neighbors. Mercy Corps provided her and other survivors with shelter, supplies, and jobs cleaning debris to help them rebuild their homes and return to their village. Over the following years, Mercy Corps continued to support the village by helping organize a women's group, providing access to loans, and offering agricultural advice. Today, the houses and businesses have been rebuilt in Rima Jeunue thanks to five years of support from Mercy Corps working alongside the villagers.
1 of 2
Download to read offline
More Related Content
Five years of hard work
1. Five Years of Hard Work, Together
Country: Indonesia
Topics: Agriculture, Displacement, Emergencies, Rural
Nurhayati in her rice field near the village of Rima Jeunue, Indonesia Photo: Thatcher Cook for Mercy Corps
My name is Nurhayati. I'm 52 years old, and I live in the village of Rima Jeunue, Indonesia.
Five years ago, my life changed forever.
Five years ago, Mercy Corps helped me begin to reclaim what I'd lost.
When the Indian Ocean Tsunami struck this area, I was gathering firewood in the hills above my
village. Because of that, I survived — but I lost my children, my son-in-law, my grandchildren,
and most of my neighbors.
The seawater stood over the ruins of my village for five days. I stayed up in the hills, taking
shelter with other survivors however we could, until the water subsided. Only then were we able
to come down off the hills, but nothing was left in our village, only the foundations of our
houses.
We all found our way to displacement camps that had been set up for tsunami survivors. This
was the first time I came into contact with Mercy Corps. An emergency response team gave me
shelter materials, bedding and cooking supplies in those first few difficult days.
Honestly, I never thought I'd never return to Rima Jeunue after that — after all, there was
nothing left but the pain of so much loss. But, again, Mercy Corps offered help to my neighbors
and me: We got jobs to clean the debris from the streets and begin rebuilding our homes
2. through a cash-for-work program. And so we returned to our village within weeks of the
tsunami.
Over the months and years of hard work that followed, Mercy Corps was there every step of the
way: helping us reorganize a women's group, working with local banks to give us easier access
to loans that helped us rebuild, and frequently visiting our village to make sure everything was
going well.
Today, our houses are standing again. Business has returned to Rima Jeunue. And Mercy Corps
is still helping us by offering technical advice on how we can double our rice harvest to gain
more income and better feed our families.
I lost just about everything and everyone I had to the tsunami. But, every day since then, Mercy
Corps has stayed and worked alongside us – and in doing so they became like our family. We've
shared many joys and sorrows since that tragic day.
And today, we're sharing in the success of rebuilt villages. New businesses. Reclaimed lives.
Thank you for being there for us — and with us.