The Spectrum & Daily News

Community aids bridge collapse victims

Baltimore residents raise thousands for families, offer food and comfort

- N’dea Yancey-Bragg Contributi­ng: Dwight Weingarten, Salisbury Daily Times

BALTIMORE − Ako Walker was barely awake when he first heard the news that the Francis Scott Key Bridge was struck by a cargo ship early Tuesday and collapsed into the Patapsco River.

In the short time since, Walker, pastor of Sacred Heart of Jesus and Saint Patrick church, has been called into action to support the family members of the eight constructi­on workers who were on the bridge when it plunged into the cold water, two of whom were rescued.

Though he’s still shaken, Walker has been tasked with accompanyi­ng them as they began the public grieving process, trying to find the delicate balance between providing comfort and knowing when to give them space while also fielding interview requests from scores of media outlets that have descended upon the city.

He’s not alone. Spiritual leaders across Baltimore have stepped up to offer their support and open their sanctuarie­s, while residents have donated thousands of dollars in what Walker described as an outpouring of empathy, sadness and solidarity with the impacted families.

“These families need a lot, a lot of support on all levels, spiritual, physical and emotional,” he said. “The community here will try its best to be of assistance, the best way we can.”

‘We stand ready to help’

Jesus Campos, an employee of contractor Brawner Builders, told the Baltimore Banner on Tuesday the men who went missing lived in the Dundalk and Highlandto­wn areas of Baltimore with their spouses and children.

Walker’s church has been in Highlandto­wn for more than 150 years, he said. The pastor estimates his congregati­on is 98% Hispanic, from a wide array of countries including Honduras, Mexico and Guatemala, where some of the workers now presumed dead are from.

He’d never met the families before the collapse on Tuesday, but some members of his congregati­on had. Others, he said, had worked on the bridge, too. Walker said he’s been searching for ways to help both the families and his community since the tragedy began to unfold.

“One of the things you unfortunat­ely have to think about when the bodies are recovered are the funerals,” he said. “We stand ready to help.”

For now, Walker said he is planning to hold a prayer service in Spanish for people in the Hispanic community who have been impacted, directly or indirectly, by the tragedy.

Church supports first responders

Meanwhile in Dundalk, Rashad Singletary, pastor at Mount Olive Baptist Church of Turner Station, is also trying to juggle a voicemail inbox full of interview requests with helping his community and the first responders dealing with the bridge’s collapse. The church is just a 10-minute walk from where dozens of members of the media assembled Tuesday in sight of the destructio­n.

Singletary said some in his predominan­tly African American congregati­on felt the tremor of the collision late Tuesday. Many, himself included, used the bridge to get to the church or work and have had to alter their commutes.

“What people need to realize is the bridge is not only part of the port, the bridge is also a connector for communitie­s,” he said. “So it really changes up the dynamic – not only the traffic flow, but just normality for this area.”

Singletary worked quickly to open his sanctuary for a prayer vigil Tuesday night attended by city leaders, including Mayor Brandon Scott, and several first responders. Like Walker, Singletary has been working to offer more than just prayer.

“I think it was powerful, but I also think that the vigil was just the first step of what support needs to look like for this situation going forward,” he said.

Singletary said some of his congregati­on work at the port, and he hopes to partner with the Maryland Food Bank to help provide supplies to those in the Turner Station area, which he described as a food desert struggling with poverty and frequent flooding. The church has been accepting donations for first responders, he said, and is working to direct those wanting to donate to the affected families to the appropriat­e places.

“We have made it very clear to the county executive and also to the mayor that the church can be utilized for those individual­s who might need an opportunit­y to step away, eat something, take a nap, use the sanctuary to sleep,” he said.

Despite the challenges, Singletary said he believes the incident will give the entire community the opportunit­y to highlight its resilient spirit.

Donations pour into area

Just a few miles from Singletary’s church lies Jimmy’s Famous Seafood, which donated some of its famed menu items like crab cakes, shore fries and wraps to the families of bridge collapse victims Tuesday, according to general manager Amber Kraus.

Kraus said the restaurant holds fundraiser­s for first responders and those impacted by local disasters “because the community has always supported us and we like to return the favor.”

“It’s just really sad to hear, and unfortunat­ely, there was casualties and that’s personal with the whole town because we’re close-knit,” Kraus said.

On Wednesday, the Latino Racial Justice Circle set a goal of raising $18,000 in donations to support the families of the victims of the bridge collapse, organizer Katherine Jakuta said on the fundraiser’s website. Within nine hours, the nonprofit had raised more than $98,000.

The fundraiser brought in so much money, the volunteer-run organizati­on decided to close the campaign and direct those still wanting to donate to a fundraiser establishe­d by the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs.

“The community response was truly amazing, and this is why we love Baltimore,” Jakuta said in a post on GoFundMe.

 ?? ANNA MONEYMAKER/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Mayor Brandon Scott, center, is surrounded by city officials during a prayer at a vigil Tuesday for victims of the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse, at the Mount Olive Baptist Church in Baltimore.
ANNA MONEYMAKER/ GETTY IMAGES Mayor Brandon Scott, center, is surrounded by city officials during a prayer at a vigil Tuesday for victims of the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse, at the Mount Olive Baptist Church in Baltimore.

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