One year later: Wynne still recovering from deadly tornados

As Jacob Hess navigated the empty streets in his large truck, he pointed to concrete foundations and rain-soaked memorials where houses once stood. 

The now abandoned streets are lined with warped trees. Tattered blue tarps wave like flags of surrender on what remains of the few, damaged houses in the neighborhood. As Hess made his way through what little remains, he pointed out the places where he recovered four of the bodies of people killed during the March 31, 2023 deadly tornado outbreak. 

Hess, a parishioner of St. Peter Church in Wynne, is a part-time firefighter and a full-time insurance agent. After three years with the fire department, he has learned to listen to intuition. On March 31, 2023, Hess’s intuition had already begun warning him. 

“That morning, as soon as I woke up, and for everyone else too, we all had that bad feeling,” Hess said. “It did not go away. It just got worse and worse progressively as the day went by.”

When Hess saw footage of the tornado in Little Rock, the fire station activated their storm spotter protocol, spreading out across the city with equipment, and eyes on the skies. 

At 4 p.m., the tornado warning was activated in Woodruff County. 

“We saw the whole thing. We saw the lowering of the cloud, the base, the funnel, and the tornado,” Hess said. “It became rain-wrapped, so you could only see it for about 30 seconds, and then you couldn’t see anything. … We started our search and rescue efforts.”

As Hess showed Arkansas Catholic the areas most affected, he stopped in front of a house with blue and white tarping on it. 

A house belonging to the mother of Jacob Hess, a parishioner of St. Peter Church in Wynne, is covered by a blue tarp, awaiting repairs after the March 31, 2023 deadly EF3 tornado that killed four Wynne residents. (Katie Zakrzewski)

“This is my mother’s home, here on the corner,” Hess said. “It’s waiting to be repaired. It’s been sitting there like that ever since.”

Hess’s sister was in high school at the time. The Wynne High School was hit particularly hard. Pieces of football turf were found as far away as Memphis, Tenn.. What remains of the Methodist church beside the high school is surrounded by fencing to deter tresspassers.

Jacob Hess, a full-time insurance claims adjuster and part-time firefighter with the Wynne Fire Department, takes Arkansas Catholic on a tour of the tornado’s path on April 11. Hess had been one of the first responders on scene in charge of body recovery when the tornado hit March 31, 2023. (Katie Zakrzewski)

As Hess retraced the path of the tornado, he pointed out the FEMA trailers that sat quietly in the rain. 

“This area of town was for a lot of low income families that were renting and did not have any kind of insurance, so that’s why you see a lot of the empty foundations,” Hess said. “A lot of people had no choice except to go somewhere else.”

Caseworkers continue to navigate hurdles

Cathy Garcia is a regional program manager for the Disaster Services Corporation in the Society of St. Vincent de Paul USA. Terah Redman is the disaster case manager (DCM) for Cross County and has an office at the Wynne Tornado Distribution Center. 

“The DCMs have been working on opening cases and walking with the survivors, and knowing what their disaster related unmet need it,” Garcia said. “Terah takes care of Cross County, and she has 62 cases open. The normal caseload for a DCM is 35. … It is also based on tier levels — what the DCM feels it’s going to take for the survivors to reach recovery.”

When asked what the biggest challenge facing Wynne on the path to recovery is, Redman answered, “Funding and housing.” 

“We have a lot of clients that are still homeless, that are living in FEMA trailers. They didn’t have insurance, they don’t have the funds, they were lower income to begin with and now trying to find them housing is the hardest part, because there’s no housing available in Wynne,” Redman said. “They’re at capacity.”

“FEMA allows (Wynne residents living in FEMA trailers) a certain period of time (before moving out). That time is ticking,” Garcia added. “Some of them may have less than five months to stay in that trailer, either to purchase it or to move out of it. Some may have another month, some may have another five months, but time is ticking on those.”

Redman discovered that FEMA is allowing some residents to purchase trailers for $6,600. 

“It doesn’t sound like a lot of money, but it is to people who don’t have any money. But our quote so far, just for everything from plumbing and electrical and moving, is around $8,800 additional on top of that $6,600. That’s just the numbers we’ve gotten in the last week. … We’re having to look at other means. It feels like you’re battling uphill whenever you’re coming to funding and housing. … You can’t add more clients because your caseload is full, but you can’t work with these clients because there’s nothing for them to do.”

Picking up the pieces

This struggle with insurance and housing is something that St. Peter Church parishioner Therese Yarnold knows all too well. 

Just one year later, the town of Wynne is still recovering from the deadly tornados that took four lives and shook the town to its core. As of April 11, many neighborhoods hit by the tornado are still in a state of disrepair. (Katie Zakrzewski)

Yarnold’s house, located behind Wynne High School, was a total loss. Since then, every house on her street has been demolished. 

“I knew it would take a while to recover, but I didn’t think it’d take a year,” Yarnold said. “I’m blessed that I was not at home, because if I was, I’d have probably been killed.”

As Yarnold came home from work, she had to park in front of roadblocks and walk to reach her house. When she did, she found that an oak tree had fallen through her house, and bleachers from the high school were lodged in her doors and windows. 

Yarnold says she was underinsured, a common problem with many natural disasters. While her insurance quickly sent her a check for her dwelling, the contents inside proved to be more troublesome. 

“It took me six months to write down everything because they wanted to know what it was, how many you had, where you bought it, when you bought it, how much it cost,” Yarnold said. 

Yarnold said she submitted a list of her household contents in November and was told by her insurance company that it would take 45 days to verify and calculate the value. 

When Yarnold didn’t hear anything after 60 days, her insurance company explained they had verified everything, but they were going out of business, and the state would take over procedures. Further issues arose with tracking down compensation sent in the mail, as the post office often struggled to sort mail correctly for individuals in impacted areas. 

Because Yarnold had home insurance, she didn’t qualify for any assistance from FEMA, except for the $700 given to all people impacted by the tornado. 

FEMA did, however, put Yarnold in contact with the Small Business Administration (SBA), which provides low-interest disaster loans to help homeowners and business owners recover from natural disasters. Yarnold was able to secure a low-interest loan, but even this came with challenges. 

“I’ve been through three case managers with SBA,” Yarnold said. “We were supposed to close last week on (my new) house. On March 17, the loan agency said, ‘Hey, you’re approved, you’re going to need to talk to your case manager.’ So I called my case manager. She never did answer me. I emailed her. She never did answer me. I called … and they told me she no longer works there. So they got me a new case manager, and at first, they didn’t know how long that would take.”

After a year, Yarnold finally closed on her new house April 11. She said from talking with other individuals who have lost their homes to disasters that the normal recovery time is 18 months. Shortly after the tornado hit, construction costs rose significantly as materials took longer to acquire and were more expensive. Yarnold had originally planned to build a house, but that quickly became impossible. A year later, Yarnold is just happy to finally have a home. 

“You’re so overwhelmed when it happens. Everybody is trying to help you, and you don’t know what you need yet. I still don’t know everything that was salvaged,” Yarnold said. “After the last year, I’m finally at where I can take a deep breath.”

Beth Bockman, another parishioner at St. Peter Church, also remembers March 31, 2023 vividly. A retired school administrator, Bockman is used to tornado watches and warnings.

“I was under the impression — like most people in Wynne — that it never hits the center of town,” Bockman said. “We’ve had warnings in the north or the southern part of the city, but nothing strictly hitting the town.”

Like Hess, Bockman remembered the day felt different. 

“There was a different atmosphere in the air,” Bockman said. 

Bockman watched footage of the tornado hitting Little Rock with her husband and saw the trajectory of the storm. She began to call her neighbors to ask if they’d like to come over. 

Bockman’s daughter, a pharmacist, had recently renovated a building downtown next to the Wynne Methodist Church and started a business called Wynne Apothecary. The pharmacy now had a large vault, and Bockman gathered up friends and neighbors, bringing them to her daughter’s business. Soon, 21 people were inside the vault, bracing for the storm. 

“The tornado hit a block from the pharmacy,” Bockman said, wiping her eyes. “We had the whole family there. Our son-in-law came in and said ‘I’ve seen it, it’s going to hit us.’ … You’re in disbelief that it’s really going to happen. Afterward, we stepped outside of the pharmacy and looked a block away, and one of the first things one of the girls said was, ‘The Methodist Church steeple is gone.’ Then we started getting calls about the school and my neighbors’ houses. That’s when it became real.”

Christians, let us love one another

While insurance and housing shortages made recovery difficult, parishioners at St. Peter Church say community made the biggest difference in the recovery process. In the hours and days — and even minutes — after the storm, Arkansans were rushing to Wynne to help. 

Within minutes of the tornado passing through, a man approached Hess and explained he was a firefighter from Clinton, and wanted to know how he could help. Hundreds of firefighters from as far away as Jonesboro and West Memphis were close behind, eager to help.

“For anybody that reads this, I will say, if you were one of the firemen that came to help us, you have no idea how much we truly appreciate it,” Hess said. “We had over 240 firemen in our station that night. … We stopped counting at 240.”

Other faith denominations began reaching out to help one another and fill in the gaps that federal agencies and services couldn’t close. 

“The next morning … the Church of Christ members swarmed our yard,” Bockman said. “Community people we do business with, asking ‘What can I do to help?’ And it wasn’t just mine. It was happening all over the city, and it was just a blessing that God bestowed. You see his work.”

Jill Hamrick, the administrative assistant at St. Peter in Wynne, remembers the help the community offered. 

“Where we live, we can see Falls Boulevard somewhat,” Hamrick said, which is the main street that runs through the middle of Wynne. “And to see all of these people coming in with excavators and backhoes, it just took our breath away, and it was sudden. People came just suddenly.”

“We had a fish fry here,” Hamrick said. “We pulled people together and put the word out that if you need food, or even if you’re out helping, we’ll feed you, we’ll bring it to you. … The next weekend we did a breakfast and another fish fry. A lot of people called wanting to know what they could send.”

St. Peter helped with the coordination and distribution of recovery goods. 

Henry Boeckmann, the office assistant at St. Peter, said the tornados provided the opportunity for Catholics in Wynne to “break bread together” with others they might not have before. 

“We had a couple of meals immediately after the tornado for first responders and anyone in the neighborhood who was in need, and it was a very simple thing,” Boeckmann said. “We couldn’t build new houses or build businesses back for people, but at least we could share food and a little bit of fellowship. 

“The tornado was overwhelming for everybody, even those who didn’t suffer a direct hit or direct personal losses, but just being in the midst of all that. But it was good that we could share with people and come together as a community. … That’s reassuring, in that it’s a small start in healing after such disaster.”

Father John Wakube, the pastor of St. Peter Church in Wynne, said St. Peter has offered their church buildings for the Methodist Church of Wynne to use while they navigate constructing their church and daycare facilities. 

The First United Methodist Church of Wynne was badly damaged during the March 31, 2023, tornado. St. Peter Church is renting its facilities to Wynne’s Methodist congregation for worship and a daycare. (Katie Zakrzewski)

“The Methodist Church was destroyed, and they are using our parish hall for their daycare, and they’re using our building for the Knights of Columbus for their church. They pray there,” Father Wakube said. 

Even though the contract for the Methodist Church to use St. Peter’s facilities was for a year, recovery and construction challenges have delayed progress.

“We just renewed (the contract) for a year, because they haven’t really raised enough money to renovate and repair their church,” Father Wakube said. “But it’s underway.”

Father Wakube said parishioners at St. Peter have been eager to support the community however they can. 

“It’s a community that really feels for others, and I got that from even the Methodists. They said, ‘Father, we were worried. We thought that you were not going to renew the contract.’ And I said, ‘Why? We are brothers and sisters in Christ. It happened to you, and it can happen to us also. So who knows, maybe we can run to your place as well,’” Father Wakube said with a laugh. “We are all in this together.”

As Wynne continues to recover from the March 31, 2023 tornados, several members of the community have had a chance to see the goodness of others in a difficult time, and in turn, grow in their faith. 

Yarnold said she always considered herself a non-practicing Catholic growing up, but the help of the community around her improved her growing faith following the tornado. 

“In 2019, we started going back to church, and we haven’t missed a Sunday since,” Yarnold said. “(The tornado) made my faith stronger. Every time I’ve really needed something, God has provided for me, even before all this happened. He’s always put me on a path where I can achieve it myself. I’ve had a lot of roadblocks with this. I’d come and pray, and I had the answer the next day, and it was always in my favor.”

Hess said his faith has grown, too, whether he’s fighting fires or processing an insurance claim.

“While I wouldn’t say that I have been angry at God, I have certainly had moments of questioning why such a devastating event had to occur. In times of crisis, it’s only natural to seek meaning and understanding,” Hess said, explaining that Joshua 1:9 has provided great comfort to him in the last year. 

“From a firefighter’s perspective, my faith has guided me to remain steadfast in my duty to serve and protect others, even in the most challenging and dangerous situations,” Hess said. “It has given me the courage to face the chaos, knowing that I am not alone. From an insurance agent’s perspective, it has helped me approach each situation and treat people with kindness and empathy as they navigate the difficult process of rebuilding their lives.”

Bockman said despite the negativity you might see in the news and in politics, Wynne’s ongoing recovery process reminded her there is still good in the world. 

“With all of the negativity we have in our country, and all of the division, we saw the goodness of mankind,” Bockman said. “People came. Neighbors, community members across the state, out of state, into the Wynne community, and started helping us salvage and move out what needed to be moved out. … I can’t say enough good things about them.” 




Caseworkers continue state’s long-term tornado recovery

March 31 will be the one-year anniversary of the tornadoes that ripped through Pulaski, Lonoke and Cross counties. 

In response, Catholic Charities of Arkansas has partnered with the Disaster Services Corporation (DSC) of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul – USA. Cathy Garcia, regional program manager overseeing disaster case management services in Arkansas, said, “There are still a lot of unmet needs, particularly with survivors needing their homes rebuilt or repaired.”

Yasmin Basilio is the DSC case manager for Pulaski and Lonoke counties. Her office is in The McDonald Center at St. John Center in Little Rock. Terah Redman is the disaster case manager for Cross County, with her office at the Wynne Tornado Distribution Center.

Basilio said they know there are tornado survivors who have yet to ask for help. She and Redman encourage anyone with unmet needs from that specific storm to contact them at Pulaski-CrossARTornado@svdpdisaster.org or by calling the disaster services hotline at (800) 668-0683. 

The disaster case managers said survivors can expect to be interviewed and asked to complete an intake form. The information they obtain and verify is shared confidentially at monthly long-term recovery care meetings in Little Rock and Wynne. Various nonprofits and churches, including Catholic Charities of Arkansas, collaborate at these meetings to respond to the unmet needs.

According to Basilio, “Each survivor has a recovery plan created for them that includes goals based on what they identify as their unmet needs.” 




2023 Year in Review: Community, teamwork prove pivotal

Father Patrick Friend, chaplain and spiritual guidance counselor of Little Rock Catholic High School for Boys in Arkansas, helps to salvage belongings from a friend's home in the aftermath of a tornado April 1, 2023. Powerful storms swept through a large swath of the nation the evening of March 31 into April 1, unleashing deadly tornadoes and carving a path of destruction that killed at least 24 people in the South, Midwest and Mid-Atlantic.
Father Patrick Friend, chaplain and spiritual guidance counselor of Little Rock Catholic High School for Boys in Arkansas, helps to salvage belongings from a friend's home in the aftermath of a tornado April 1, 2023. Powerful storms swept through a large swath of the nation the evening of March 31 into April 1, unleashing deadly tornadoes and carving a path of destruction that killed at least 24 people in the South, Midwest and Mid-Atlantic. OSV News Photo/Cheney Orr, Reuters.
Father Patrick Friend, chaplain and spiritual guidance counselor of Little Rock Catholic High School for Boys in Arkansas, helps to salvage belongings from a friend's home in the aftermath of a tornado April 1, 2023. Powerful storms swept through a large swath of the nation the evening of March 31 into April 1, unleashing deadly tornadoes and carving a path of destruction that killed at least 24 people in the South, Midwest and Mid-Atlantic. OSV News Photo/Cheney Orr, Reuters.
The Cursillo movement in Arkansas relaunched June 15-18 with a Hispanic retreat for 34 men at St. John Center in Little Rock. The last Cursillo retreats in Spanish were in 2017. Malea Hargett.
The Cursillo movement in Arkansas relaunched June 15-18 with a Hispanic retreat for 34 men at St. John Center in Little Rock. The last Cursillo retreats in Spanish were in 2017. Malea Hargett.
Students and instructors introduce themselves during the first evening of class for the School of Spiritual Direction Sept. 15. The 12 students come from across the state, with both English-speaking and Spanish-speaking students. Katie Zakrzewski.
Students and instructors introduce themselves during the first evening of class for the School of Spiritual Direction Sept. 15. The 12 students come from across the state, with both English-speaking and Spanish-speaking students. Katie Zakrzewski.
Students at St. Joseph School in Fayetteville use their chromebooks to work on class projects in September. Erica Erck Photography.
Students at St. Joseph School in Fayetteville use their chromebooks to work on class projects in September. Erica Erck Photography.

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“Carry each other’s burdens, and in this way you will fulfill the law of Christ.” (Galatians 6:2)

 

Many Catholics will remember 2023 as a year of rebuilding. Whether it was recovering from tornadoes that tore across the state in March, or the return to parochial schools following a decrease during COVID-19, Catholics in Arkansas worked together to rebuild and pave the way for the future.

Locally, many parishes saw renovations and growth, demolishing small and outdated buildings to replace with newer, larger parishes. A hunger for a deeper sense of faith grew across the state as Catholics joined the seminary and diaconate. Lay Catholics were eager to join every spiritual education opportunity offered by the Diocese of Little Rock. 

Internationally, all eyes turned to Rome in October as clergy and lay Catholics from across the world discussed the future of the Catholic Church. Catholics in Arkansas went to Portugal for World Youth Day and went on pilgrimages around the world. 

There were plenty of hardships, too. But whether they faced war, tornados or hurricanes, Catholics this year made sure to offer their neighbors a helping hand while deepening their own faith. 

Here are our top five stories that summarize an eventful 2023.

 

Pope Francis remembers Pope Benedict XVI

Thousands gathered in St. Peter Square at the Vatican Jan. 5 to celebrate the life of Pope Benedict XVI. It was the first time in 200 years that a pope celebrated the funeral of the pope who came before him. Pope Benedict XVI died Dec. 31, 2022, at 95. He retired in 2013 and requested a small and simple funeral. Many were moved by the pope’s humility.

More than 1,000 media personnel attended the funeral, as well as more than 50,000 people from around the world, bearing their native country’s flag and sharing their devotion to the faith and Pope Benedict XVI. The Mass was concelebrated by more than 120 cardinals, 400 bishops and 3,700 priests.

"Benedict, faithful friend of the Bridegroom, may your joy be complete as you hear his voice, now and forever!" Pope Francis said to conclude Pope Benedict’s funeral.

Read the full story here.

 

Catholics unite, aid one another in tornado aftermath

More than 50 tornadoes tore across the south and midwest March 31 and April 1, killing more than 32 people and destroying thousands of homes and businesses. More than 25 Catholic families in Arkansas lost their homes during the series of storms, and tens of thousands of others were left without power. Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders declared a state of emergency following the severe weather event. 

Parishes in cities and towns impacted by the tornadoes immediately began to rally around their surrounding communities. Many parishes canceled their Lenten devotions for Friday on March 31, instead helping friends and neighbors salvage belongings and find shelter. Catholics in Wynne fed survivors. The diocese’s statewide Catholic Youth Convention was delayed, but only for a day. Catholics and Knights of Columbus in North Little Rock cleared fallen trees and removed debris. Many Catholics lost their homes, but they did not lose their faith

Read the full story here. 

 

Cursillo movement relaunches

Catholics across the state hungered for a deeper faith in 2023. The Cursillo movement relaunched on June 15 with a Hispanic retreat for 34 men at St. John Center in Little Rock. The relaunch was the first Cursillo retreat in Spanish since 2017. 

Spiritual director Deacon Jose Fabio Cruz announced that a retreat for Spanish-speaking women would also be held a month later. Cruz also shared that the movement plans to have at least two Spanish retreats for men and two for women in 2024. Retreat in English will resume in January. 

Read the full story here.

 

Diocese relaunches its School of Spiritual Direction

The Diocese of Little Rock resumed the School of Spiritual Direction for lay Catholics eager to grow in their faith and help others do the same. The relaunch came after a seven-year hiatus. The School of Spiritual Direction is a three-year program designed to help people, “grow their relationship with God so that they can be companions for people who want to deepen their life of prayer,” according to the school’s director, Father Daniel Velasco, pastor of Our Lady of the Holy Souls Church in Little Rock. 

The bilingual program welcomed a class of 12 students and five instructors, who attend Mass together, participate in small group sharing, silent prayer and spiritual direction practice. The graduates will go on to serve Catholics in their local communities and help them grow in their faith. Each year, a new cohort is added to the program. The first cohort is expected to graduate in 2026. 

Read the full story here.

 

Schools see most students in five years

Following the end of the COVID-19 pandemic and the implementation of Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders’s LEARNS Act, Catholic schools in Arkansas saw the highest student enrollment numbers in five years at 6,599 students. Theresa Hall, superintendent of Catholic schools, said student enrollment increased 2.29 percent in the 2023-2024 school year, and 2.88 percent in the 2022-2023 school year. 

Enrollment increased for students going into kindergarten, first grade, third grade, fourth grade, sixth grade, seventh grade, ninth grade, 11th grade and 12th grade across the state. Hall added that growth was even more prevalent in central Arkansas, as families prepared to send formerly public school children to parochial secondary schools, and in the northwest corner of the state, where economic opportunity and growth have drawn more families to the area.

Read the full story here.  




Tornado relief continues in three counties

Meeting with the Pulaski County Long Term Recovery group in North Little Rock Oct. 25 are (from left) Megan Moore of Catholic Charities of Arkansas and Shelli Dominick, Mary Jo Dumboski, and Martha Dingler of the Sts. Anne & Joachim Conference of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul.

It’s been more than seven months since a widespread tornado hit Arkansas with damage to Pulaski, Lonoke and Cross counties. Catholic Charities of Arkansas immediately began contacting Catholic parishes in communities with tornado damage to identify and contact households that were impacted.

Sarah Alvarez, tornado recovery caseworker for Catholic Charities, led the efforts until a long-term recovery group could be formed. A new group of disaster case managers will be trained and supervised by Cathy Garcia, regional program manager of the Disaster Services Corporation of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul USA.

“Disaster case management is a newer field,” Garcia said, “and specific training will be provided.” 

Garcia will train the case managers for Arkansas who will be contracted for one year. Their focus will be to address the tornado survivors’ complex disaster recovery needs.

“Homeowners are still reaching out,” Garcia said. 

Repairs to habitable homes are a top priority along with tree removal and replacing damaged vehicles. There are also the emotional issues that come with a natural disaster.

“This situation is causing residents to go into debt,” Garcia said, “especially if you live paycheck to paycheck.”

Garcia said she is also concerned about Spanish-speaking residents not being found. If residents do not come forward, they will not receive the help they need, she said. Garcia said there is a need for Spanish-speaking volunteers who can assist in finding those who are afraid to ask for assistance. 

DSC provides free person-to person recovery services to all families impacted by disasters, regardless of their immigration status. They will advocate on their behalf with FEMA, insurance companies and the Small Business Administration, connect them with other community resources and help with navigating the complex systems and services for receiving support.

Arkansas survivors of the March 31 tornado can obtain more information or schedule an appointment by contacting St. Vincent de Paul Disaster Services at (800) 668-0683, by emailing Pulaski–CrossARTornado@svdpdisaster.org, or by visiting www.svdpdisaster.org.




Faithful turn to prayer as tornadoes tear across state

Father Patrick Friend, chaplain and spiritual guidance counselor of Little Rock Catholic High School for Boys in Arkansas, helps to salvage belongings from a friend's home in the aftermath of a tornado April 1, 2023. Powerful storms swept through a large swath of the nation the evening of March 31 into April 1, unleashing deadly tornadoes and carving a path of destruction that killed at least 24 people in the South, Midwest and Mid-Atlantic.

Catholic churches and schools in Arkansas rallied March 31 as a tornado tore through Pulaski and Cross counties.

The faithful turned to prayer as tornadoes carved a deadly path through the center of the United States March 31, killing at least 32, injuring dozens and devastating thousands of homes and businesses.

More than 50 preliminary tornado reports have been received in at least seven states: Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois, Iowa, Mississippi, Tennessee and Wisconsin. At least 32 people were killed, including one in North Little Rock and four in Wynne.

By the afternoon of April 1, powerful winds had knocked out the power in more than 850,000 homes and businesses in 14 states, according to PowerOutage.us.

Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders declared a state of emergency after multiple devastating tornadoes struck the state, including Little Rock, the state capital. She promised to "spare no resource to assist with response and recovery efforts."

 

Churches respond, give thanks

Parishes throughout the affected areas canceled planned Lenten devotions for Friday evening, but Christ the King Church and Our Lady of the Holy Souls Church, both in Little Rock, offered free fish fry dinners hours after the storm to those who needed a meal and a place to charge their phones.

The storm hit Little Rock around 2:20 p.m. as schools were preparing for dismissal. Christ the King principal Kathy House said she told former pastor Bishop Francis I. Malone of Shreveport she was grateful the school invested in building a safe room in 2015 in case of tornadoes.

Christ the King Church, located two miles from the hardest hit area of Little Rock, organized a donation station April 1-3 in its gathering space with tables filled with food, toiletries and clothes. Volunteers prepared a hot lunch and dinner for three days while survivors filled carts with toilet paper, paper towels and diapers. The station moved April 4 to the parish’s Ministries Building for another two weeks to continue to offer the essentials.

On April 1, Catholic High School in Little Rock opened its annual rummage sale, Junktique, up to anyone affected by the storm and needed furniture and other essentials.

The annual Catholic Youth Ministry Convention met March 31-April 2 but had a delayed start to allow people more time to arrive in downtown Little Rock.

 

St. Theresa tells a familiar story

Pulaski County parishes reported 25 families lost their homes or their homes were severely damaged.

Kristy Dunn, principal of St. Theresa School in Little Rock, told OSV News the tornadoes were all too familiar.

"I actually experienced a tornado destroying my house when I was 14," she said. "So it's a part of my experience. It's a little emotional to speak about."

Dunn said one student's home was flattened by the tornado, with "a very generous school family" taking in the child and her family, as Dunn and the school community gathered clothing and other necessities.

The St. Theresa students had been in church when a storm watch  — quickly upgraded to a warning  —  was issued in the 2 p.m. hour, said Dunn. Students and staff relocated to the school to shelter, following emergency guidelines developed in part by her brother, a National Weather Service meteorologist, and a school parent who is an engineer.

"The Lord is abundantly good," said Dunn. "Having those two (experts) in addition to law enforcement helped us to stay safe."

Dunn, who said school faculty did "a tremendous job" in reassuring the children, checked on the classes throughout the warning, saying she "wanted to be with every single class, in every single safe space."

She was especially concerned about the third-grade classes, who had been hard hit by news of the March 27 mass shooting at The Covenant School in Nashville, Tenn., which claimed the lives of six, including three 9-year-old students.

"Our third-grade classes realized they were the same age as the victims," said Dunn. "They had a lot of emotions yesterday already, and then we're telling them to shelter in place for (tornadoes)."

Students turned to prayer, with one kindergarten boy excitedly telling Dunn he and his classmates had "prayed two times."

St. Theresa pastor Father Stephen Gadberry told OSV News that students at other area Catholic schools had done the same, sharing videos from Christ the King Catholic School in Little Rock, where children sang Christian composer Michael W. Smith's song "Our God Is An Awesome God," and from Sacred Heart School in Morrilton, whose students sang the Divine Mercy chaplet to guitar accompaniment.

Father Gadberry said while his parish did not sustain any direct damage, he was "still assessing" the storm's impact on parishioners, who are also organizing to assist cleanup efforts.

 

Wynne church spared amid devastated town

The tornado moved east and hit Cross County. Bishop Anthony B. Taylor celebrated Mass April 4 at St. Peter Church in Wynne to support those who lost their homes, schools and businesses. 

Father Gadberry said his mother and two brothers in Wynne were unhurt, although the town was "obliterated," he said.

"Thank the Lord, (our) house is out in the country on a family farm, so it didn't have any damage," he said. "But they all saw it go south of the house."

The church was spared, said Father Gadberry, who spoke with pastor Father Alfhones Perikala.

"There's no major damage to the church, which is truly a miracle, since right across the road from them, other buildings were obliterated," Father Gadberry said. "But a number of parishioners have completely lost their homes. Having grown up there, it was very surreal to see the news headlines."

Amid the loss of life and property, the storms have helped to reveal God's mysterious plans, he said.

"Any time a natural disaster hits … it brings us to our knees, and not in a cute theological sense," Father Gadberry said. "It levels the playing field and shows we're not the big and strong individuals we think we are. We really do need community. Literally, overnight, enemies are working together in the same yard, getting past their differences. … We're a pilgrim people, and we have to journey on together."

Gina Christian of OSV News and Malea Hargett contributed to this article.