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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

The Rush To Offer Help

Mary Beth Sheridan Los Angel

Safak Izgi was distributing food in Kosovo when his cellular phone rang with an urgent request: Could the veteran Turkish aid worker fly to his homeland to help earthquake victims? Within hours, Izgi was on a plane - not even taking a change of clothes.

“I came like this. I have no suitcase,” Izgi said Tuesday, gesturing to a blue tank top and jeans he had been wearing since he arrived three days earlier from Yugoslavia.

“I was in Kosovo helping refugees. Now I’m a refugee myself.”

In the wake of the Aug. 17 quake, thousands of relief and rescue workers dashed to Turkey, abandoning families, jobs and clean socks. Some are members of well-paid government teams; others are idealistic amateurs such as the tiny Mexican known simply as “The Flea,” a hero of the 1985 earthquake in his country.

In Turkey, a country with an undeveloped civil-defense system, these volunteers have been the backbone of humanitarian efforts. Their stories offer the few bright spots in this grim panorama of shattered lives.

Izgi is running a tent city for 15,000 at the edge of Adapazari, about 80 miles east of Istanbul. While he has worked for 12 years with the Red Crescent - the Islamic version of the Red Cross - he acknowledges that this is a seat-of-the-pants operation.

“I have nothing, just this notebook. My laptop is there,” he said, gesturing in the vague direction of Eastern Europe. “I plan in my head.”

When the Red Crescent called Izgi to help earthquake victims, he raced to the airport, not even returning to his temporary home at a refugee camp in Macedonia for a suitcase. His clothes were sent to him Monday, but they were dirty. So on Tuesday, he was wearing black plastic bags for socks.

“We have a saying: People who work in the Red Crescent have no money and their wives are widows. I accept this,” he laughed. “I am 43 years old but I can’t get married. There are so many problems in the world.”

Izgi has no idea when he’ll get home to Ankara, the capital, which he left in June. Nor does he spend much time thinking about it.

“This is what I do,” he said simply.

What Harry Oakes does is find the missing. The American rescue expert normally charges $150 an hour to recover missing people and pets. He has saved everyone from airplane-crash victims to Jimmy Durante’s cat.

But he flew to Turkey at his own expense to participate in the rescue operation.

“I just took the money out of my savings. I figure I can’t take it with me,” said the rescuer, dressed in a red jumpsuit, as he fed scraps of bacon to his small black sniffer dog, Valerie, at an Istanbul hotel on Monday.

Oakes was proud to have helped in the rescue of two people since arriving Saturday. But he worried that the Turkish government had been urging an end to search operations since the weekend. Authorities were planning to start bulldozing wreckage and removing dead bodies.

“We know people are still alive,” he complained.

Turkish government rescue workers were nearly absent, he said. But he was impressed by ordinary Turks who desperately tried to unearth survivors.

Professional rescue teams from as far away as South Korea and Malaysia helped search for survivors of the quake in recent days, many using sophisticated cameras and instruments.

At the other extreme was the Mexican peasant known as La Pulga - The Flea.

Marcos Efren Zarinana was a street peddler and Adventist minister who gained fame in 1985 after helping rescue over two dozen people in the Mexico City earthquake.

The 5-foot, 105-pound volunteer arrived Saturday on a courtesy ticket from British Airways, equipped with only a tool-laden backpack and an uncanny ability to shimmy into small spaces.