Vancouver's Turkish community unites to collect donations for quake survivors - Action News
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Vancouver's Turkish community unites to collect donations for quake survivors

Donations are pouring into aVancouverwarehouse for those affected by Monday's devastating earthquake inTurkey, but a volunteer organizer saysthe country could most benefit from professional search and rescue teams.

Volunteers box up goods to be shipped to Istanbul every 2 days

Volunteers stand around a table piled with donations of baby supplies.
Volunteers in Vancouver help package donations for earthquake relief in Turkey and Syria on Feb. 7, 2023. (CBC News)

Donations are pouring into aVancouverwarehouse for those affected by Monday's devastating earthquake inTurkey, but a volunteer organizer saysthe country could most benefit from professional search and rescue teams.

"The next 72 hours is crucial,'' said Cansoy Gurocak, who was one of dozens of volunteers dealing with donations of food, clothing, tents, sleeping bags, diapers and other goods in a fundraising event that was quickly co-ordinated by the Canadian Turkish Educational and Cultural Foundation.

BothTurkeyand Syria were rocked Monday by the massive quake, setting off international aid efforts that now include a $10-million commitment from the Canadian government and search and rescue teams being flown in from the United States.

Gurocak, who's been in Canada for 13 years, said he first heard the news in a call from his mother inTurkeyjust after the quake.

"She told me this is one of the strongest ones that she has ever experienced in her life,'' he said. "I called my uncle. He said that his house is destroyed. I called my aunt, same situation.''

He said he's barely slept in the days since the quake.

Gurocak and other members ofVancouver's Turkish community flocked to the warehouse in the industrial area ofVancouveron Tuesday collecting donations for those affected by the 7.8-magnitude earthquake that's left more than 7,500 dead and cities and towns in ruins.

He said he was grateful to hear the Canadian government has committed to providing $10 million for relief efforts, but professional search and rescue personnel on the ground would make a more immediate impact.

But, he said, after search and rescue efforts, the next crucial step is building shelter for those displaced by the quake, then distributing donations of food and clothing, and only after that will monetary donations start to make a difference.

WATCH | Vancouver woman's family members trapped under rubble after earthquake in Turkey:

Vancouver woman's family members trapped under rubble after earthquake in Turkey

2 years ago
Duration 1:06
Nural Smbltepe says five family members, including her eldest brother and nephew's one-year-old baby are trapped under rubble in skenderun, a city near the border with Syria.

To rebuild in the most hard-hit areas like the towns of Islahiye and Pazarcik, Gurocak said, "it will take years, not days, not weeks, not months.''

But rescue efforts in smaller villages, Gurocak said, are all the more difficult with road infrastructure damaged or destroyed in the quake, while cold weather makes life more miserable for survivors. "Time is our enemy at the moment,'' he said. "Even if someone survived from the earthquake, he or she will die from the cold.''

At theVancouverwarehouse Tuesday, Gurocak and other volunteers boxed up donated goods to be shipped via a direct Turkish Airlines flight fromVancouverto Istanbul scheduled every two days.

While Gurocak was physically inVancouverduring the quake and its aftermath, his thoughts remain with his friends and relatives back inTurkey.

"If they have nowhere to go or if they have family members under the collapsed building, they have to stay because they have hope that they can survive and rescue the people,'' he said.