Albertans step up to help loved ones who survived massive earthquake in Turkey and Syria - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 10:46 AM | Calgary | -16.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Edmonton

Albertans step up to help loved ones who survived massive earthquake in Turkey and Syria

Albertans with friends and family in southeastern Turkey and northern Syria have been anxiously trying to confirm if their loved ones are safe after a 7.8-magnitude earthquake Monday morning.

Turkish Canadian Society of Edmonton plans to send supplies to Vancouver

Two rescue workers stand with their backs to the camera on top of a pile of rubble, their arms around each other.
Emergency team members pause for a moment as they search for people in a destroyed building in Adana, Turkey, on Monday. (Khalil Hamra/The Associated Press)

Albertans with friends and family members in southeastern Turkey and northern Syria scrambled to find out if their loved ones were safeafter a 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck the region on Monday morning.

Many buildings in both countries collapsed during the disaster, killingthousands of people.

Ercan Kaya's cousin, who lived in Gaziantep, Turkey, was among them.

Kaya, a chef who runs a home-based Turkish dessert business on Edmonton's north side, said he has been watching television reports and texting with family members constantly since first hearing about the earthquake from a friend Sunday night.

He said his cousin had been in one of the buildings thatcollapsed his body hasbeen recovered and he is still waiting to hear if one of his brothers has survived. His brother lives in Adiyaman, another Turkish city affected by the earthquake.

Kaya said the 10-hour time difference and internet connectivity problems in Turkey have made communicating with people there difficult. Some people are encouraging him to text instead of call because they are having trouble charging their phones.

"The distance is so far and we can't do anything," he said.

"The only thing is to be patient and pray to God to help them."

Fethi Ozbak, who moved to Canada in 2010 to go to school and settled in Edmonton, said the destruction in his hometown of Gaziantep has been devastating to watch from afar.

Ozbak said his mother's voice sounded shaky when she called him during the disaster.

His parents and sister left their apartment buildings and made their way to a crowded government shelter, he said.

His mother described their surroundings as "the end of the world."

Ozbak said he had trouble sleeping through the night, waking up several times to check the death toll online.

He started a GoFundMe campaign on Monday morning to collect donations for people in Turkey. He hopes to raise $50,000 for local and national relief organizations.

Adel Ghannam, who lives in Calgary, said about 20 of his extended family membersdied after the earthquake struck the Syrian city of Aleppo. He learned about the deaths through social mediaand his sister, who lives in Turkey.

"Lots of people, they arestill under the houses," he said.

A man stands in front of a Canadian flag.
Adel Ghannam, who lives in Calgary, said he lost more than a dozen extended family members in Syria to the earthquake. (Submitted by Adel Ghannam)

Ghannam said he hopes theCanadian federal government helps people in northern Syria dealing with the disaster.

Eyup Ozturk, director of Nebula Academy, a private Islamic school in Edmonton, said some of his colleagues' family members in Turkey have lost their homes and are staying in cars while they wait for shelter.

Teachers are telling students, many of whom have connections to Turkey and Syria, to "stay strong" and pray for people, he said.

The Turkish Canadian Society of Edmonton is starting to organize relief campaigns.

President Sim Senol said the society plans to post a list of needed supplies on social media and is arranging transportation with the Turkish Consulate General in Vancouver and Turkish Airlines.

Sim Senol is the president of the Turkish Canadian Society of Edmonton. (Manuel Carrillos/CBC)

Senol said the society will collect cash donations on Friday at itshall at 15450 105th Ave., but she is waiting to see if the federal government will announce donation matching before directing people where to donate.

Other cultural associations have been contacting the society to offerhelp.

"We're grateful for all the support we're getting from all the communities," she said.

With files from Brendan Coulter and Reham Al Azem