Brewers Step Up For Venezuela In A Way Fans Will Love

Communities across Milwaukee unite with the Brewers to answer the urgent call for aid after devastating Venezuelan earthquakes.

Milwaukee’s response to the devastation in Venezuela has turned into a steady, citywide outpouring, with the Brewers helping lead a donation drive that brought cars, trucks and volunteers to Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church on Monday.

The “United for Venezuela” emergency relief effort, organized through a partnership between the Brewers, Forward Latino, Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church and Our Lady Queen of Peace Parish, began June 29 at the church at 3100 S. 41st St. By the afternoon, the scene was busy enough that people were carrying donations into the basement while vehicles kept lining up outside.

Darryl Morin, the national president of Forward Latino, said the response has gone far beyond Milwaukee.

“Cars and trucks are coming in from all over the state,” Morin said. “We accepted a couple of trucks earlier from Illinois, as well.”

Several Brewers players joined the effort as volunteers, including catcher William Contreras, outfielder Jackson Chourio and assistant coach Nestor Corredor. All three are Venezuelans, and they stood at the front of a 1 p.m. news conference alongside other Brewers teammates.

“Thank you to everyone who showed up today,” Corredor said. “You don't have any idea what this means for our country.

A lot of people believe in us. A lot of people think that we can help.

But we can't do it without you guys.”

Contreras spoke in Spanish and thanked the volunteers and donors.

“It hasn't been easy for us, the Venezuelans. Thank you for the support,” Contreras said in Spanish.

“It's difficult to play this way, knowing that we care for and wish we were in Venezuela in this moment to help those that need it. But in this other way, we have to help Venezuela.”

The relief effort comes after two major earthquakes hit Venezuela on June 24, just 39 seconds apart. The first measured 7.2 on the Richter scale, and the second was a 7.5. Their epicenters were three miles apart.

By June 29, authorities said at least 1,450 people had been killed, while tens of thousands were still unaccounted for. Thousands more were injured or left without homes.

Morin said rescuers are still working through the wreckage.

“Every hour, rescuers continue searching through collapsed buildings, hoping to be the one to find a survivor, while thousands of families are desperately waiting for news with regards to their loved ones,” Morin said. “Behind each one of these numbers is a human story: a mother searching for a child, a father whose lost everything, a family sleeping outdoors, a young child wandering the streets.”

Even with the scale of the disaster, volunteers said the drive has shown how quickly a community can rally, including people with no direct connection to Venezuela.

“It’s been beautiful how the community - not only Venezuelans, but we’ve seen Americans, from Dominican Republic, from Argentina ... it’s impressive, all the work and everyone helping us,” said volunteer Ana Gilmond, who lives in Milwaukee area but is from Venezuela.

Gilmond said volunteers packed 200 boxes Saturday, June 27, and that donations had likely already exceeded that amount within four hours.

Jessie Plahmer, another volunteer from Washington County, said the atmosphere around the collection has been encouraging.

“It has been overwhelmingly positive, and we just hope that it can bring a little bit of hope to anybody who needs it right now,” Plahmer said.

Milwaukee Mayor Cavalier Johnson also stopped by and thanked the players and volunteers.

“It was difficult getting in here, and I think that’s a good sign,” he said. “That means that people from across this city have shown up because they care, because they want to give back.”

The effort has spread through parishes, Forward Latino, Voces de la Frontera and word of mouth. Students in summer school through the Center for Urban Teaching, a Christian nonprofit in Milwaukee, are also helping collect donations.

“As part of this effort, our students are helping collect items as well, and we'll be also working during the collection hours to collect goods from the community as they're bringing them in,” said Krysta DeBour, executive director of the Center for Urban Teaching. “Our students will be, very directly, the hands and feet of this work.”

The donated items will go to the American Red Cross and Catholic Relief Services, Gilmond said. Drop-off runs daily through Friday, July 3, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Requested items include non-perishable food, cases of bottled water, new sleeping bags and blankets, new backpacks and suitcases, new tents, new work gloves, new work boots and new work shovels. A full list is available at forwardlatino.org.

“I’m so proud of how everybody is showing up and caring so much,” Plahmer said. “It is devastating - and also uplifting to see all the support.”

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