For most, it is usually someone else鱿鱼视频app tragedy, but there comes a time when the tentacles of disaster envelope almost everyone. At these times first responders are critically put to the test. Likewise, faith communities are tested as they care for spiritual and emotional wounds.
There was the Humboldt Broncos鈥 bus crash on a northern Saskatchewan road last month that claimed 16 lives, mostly young men who were in pursuit of hockey dreams. And the 2017 shooting at the Quebec City mosque where six worshippers were gunned down and 19 others injured when a gunman opened fire during evening prayers.
And now the carnage wreaked April 23 on a Toronto street, when a van was deliberately driven onto the sidewalk and used to mow down pedestrians, killing 10 and injuring 16 others.
Even the hardest souls are touched by such horrific events that seem beyond reality. They touch home. What athlete has not sat with teammates on a bus? Who hasn鈥檛 prayerfully gathered with others of like faith in worship? And, most common of all, who hasn鈥檛 walked down a busy thoroughfare like Yonge Street, separated from traffic by just a few inches of curb?
And in less than a second, all is changed.
Fr. Pat O鈥橠ea believes you can never be fully ready for such a situation.
鈥淵ou can鈥檛 prepare for it, everyone鱿鱼视频app in shock,鈥 said the pastor of St. Edward the Confessor Parish, mere steps from where the pedestrians were struck down along Yonge Street. 鈥淚t just comes at you.鈥
Parish priests are used to dealing with death. Parishioners die and the Church community is there for them. In its own way, the Church is like a first responder called to an accident scene to care for spiritual pain.
鈥淲e鈥檙e almost always ready, (we鈥檙e) prepared for whatever,鈥 said O鈥橠ea.
O鈥橠ea was driving on Yonge Street when all hell broke loose. He was heading southbound, several blocks from the crime scenes, on his way to a meeting downtown when he saw fire trucks and police cars, sirens wailing, heading the other way.
鈥淚 just have a bad feeling about this,鈥 he recalls thinking.
His fears were confirmed when the news broke that one person had been killed. When his meeting concluded, the reports had nine dead. O鈥橠ea hurried back to St. Edward鱿鱼视频app, where the healing would just be starting. And it extended far beyond the church.
鈥淥ur faith community says you don鈥檛 have to do this on your own, you can get help 鈥 through the beautiful rituals of our liturgy, and you can get help through our walk-in services,鈥 said Dennis Costello, executive director of .
CFS is prepared for an onslaught of grief at all times. Its counsellors are daily in contact with people going through crisis in their lives. Staff are prepared immediately for when a large crisis hits.
鈥淎ll the CFS agencies and walk-in clinics, this is what they are designed for,鈥 said Costello. 鈥淭hey work perfectly in this kind of situation.鈥
Like O鈥橠ea, Costello said CFS has to be prepared. 鈥淭he plan is to expect the unexpected,鈥 he said.
In the aftermath, Costello said he saw an upswing in the need for . It has an office a short distance from the crime scene, and as the week went on walk-in traffic increased. He only expects that to continue, particularly as details slowly emerged about the crime and the apparent motive behind it. Reports have suggested alleged van driver Alek Minassian, 25, might have been motivated by an anger he bears towards women. Costello believes those reports could be a trigger for women who were in past abusive relations.
鈥淚t will re-traumatize people who have been in bad situations,鈥 he said.
The release of the names of victims also triggered new feelings as the connection became more real. The first named victim was Anne Marie D鈥橝mico, a parishioner at St. Clare鱿鱼视频app Parish in midtown Toronto. Her connection to the church community was immense.
Just days before the van attack, O鈥橠ea had been in contact with Ms. D鈥橝mico鱿鱼视频app sister, Frances, a Grade 7 teacher at St. Edward the Confessor Catholic School. They were discussing Confirmation preparation for the school鱿鱼视频app students. And her parents are strong supporters of CFS, said Costello, as well as marriage preparation instructors in the archdiocese.
鈥淲hen it becomes personal, then it will hit people,鈥 said Costello.
At Sunnybrook Hospital, the trauma centre where most of the injured were transported, the chaplaincy team had to muster all of its training to deal with not only the victims and their families, but the doctors and nurses who, while trained for such a horrific scene, experienced something very traumatic.
鈥淵ou don鈥檛 ever think that kind of catastrophic event is going to happen to you and your city,鈥 said Christine O鈥橞rien, a chaplain at the hospital.
For O鈥橞rien, preparing for tragedy means dipping into her well of faith.
鈥淵ou prepare by being connected, and for me that鱿鱼视频app being connected with my faith and that gives meaning to the work I do,鈥 she said.
As a major trauma centre, Sunnybrook sees its share of critical cases. Still the feeling this time was different, said O鈥橞rien, a Catholic who received her theological training at Toronto鱿鱼视频app University of St. Michael鱿鱼视频app College and the Toronto School of Theology.
鈥淚t had a different edge to it. It felt different. It was different.鈥
But the chaplaincy team was ready for the Code Orange situation 鈥 the code to alert staff of a mass casualty event.
鈥淭he leadership team has gone through lengthy preparations and that filters down in terms of what we do,鈥 she said.
In the aftermath, O鈥橞rien reflected on the efforts of the whole hospital team, from doctors and nurses to the chaplains and hospital administrators.
鈥淲e couldn鈥檛 avoid tragedy for people. All we could do was serve them and be present to them and be willing to share their pain and walk with them for this little part of a terrible and difficult journey.鈥