The Washington Post - 05.09.2019

(Axel Boer) #1

C2 EZ RE THE WASHINGTON POST.THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 , 2019


BY TIM CARMAN

Nearly two years ago, José An-
drés and World Central Kitchen
found themselves battling bu-
reaucracy and the battered infra-
structure of P uerto Rico after Hur-
ricane Maria deli vered a Category
4 wallop to the island. Neither the
celebrity chef nor the small non-
profit organization would ever be
the s ame again.
More evidence of their lifestyle
change came over the Labor Day
weekend as Hurricane Dorian
hovered over the Bahamas and
slowly dismantled the island na-
tion, leaving at least seven people
dead, with fears of many more,
and countless buildings de-
stroyed. The storm first hit the
Abaco Islands in the northern Ba-
hamas on Sunday, bringing Cat-
egory 5 winds and slashing rains.
It was the largest storm on record
in the Bahamas.
Andrés and World Central
Kitchen landed in Nassau, the na-
tion’s capital, ahead of the storm
and began staging the relief ef-


forts as Dorian churned closer to
the islands. Andrés himself deliv-
ered a report from the island,
reminding viewers that he was
nowhere n ear the eye of the s torm,
which at that time was centered
above the Abaco Islands. The chef
had t o scream above the pounding
rains, which lashed his face and
drenched his c lothes.
“This is going to be one of the
biggest ever,” he says to the cam-
era. “Let’s pray for everybody in
Abaco.”
If the chef and his nonprofit
rewrote the textbook in 2017 on
how to respond to natural disas-
ters — feed the people hot or
homemade meals, not MREs; rely
on available resources, not just
those shipped from far away; al-
low the people to help feed them-
selves, not rely on outsiders —
they had to learn t hese lessons the
hard way in Puerto Rico: by on-
the-job training and improvisa-
tion. They activated any space
with electricity and water:
churches, restaurants, food
trucks, even the Coliseo de Puerto
Rico in San Juan. Andrés fre-
quently had to fight f or his p lace at
the table with the Federal Emer-
gency Management Agency and
other relief officials.
Two years later, those hassles
seemed like ancient history as the
2019 hurricane season saw its
worst storm yet, Hurricane
Dorian, batter the Bahamas over
the weekend before turning north
to start its trudge along the East
Coast of the United States. Ac-
cording to a map that Andrés
tweeted out, World Central Kitch-
en had more than a dozen poten-
tial sites on Abaco and Grand
Bahama islands to start feeding
people.
“If kitchens are destroyed, we
build one and cook in big paella
pans!” World Central Kitchen vol-
unteers did exactly that — cooked
in outdoor paella pans — after
Hurricane Michael flattened
much of the Florida Panhandle in
October.
On Tuesday afternoon, Andrés
tweeted a video from a pilot who
surveyed the damage on Abaco.
You can hear one person say that
several sites are “gone,” or buried
underwater. The chef added his
own commentary in the tweet, “I
am hoping to land there this after-
noon with sandwiches and fruit,
and @WCKitchen will try to es-
tablish relief kitchen[s] immedi-
ately.”
In s ome ways, Andrés a nd WCK
employees have become as much
reporters on the scene as first
responders, given their access to
disaster areas. They not only talk
about what food they’re prepar-
ing, and for whom, but about the
current conditions and the avail-
ability o f resources.

Andrés was not immediately
available for comment Tuesday,
but Tim Kilcoyne, director of chef
operations for World Central
Kitchen, sent around a video on
Twitter. He said volunteers on
Monday had prepared and deliv-
ered more than 1,000 ham-and-
cheese sandwiches t o those affect-
ed on Abaco.
“A lot of places were closed
yesterday, a lot o f stores,” Kilcoyne
said, while standing at a Bahamas
Food Services warehouse in Nas-
sau. The BFS facility “reopened
today, getting a ton of product. We
got apples and oranges.... We got
bread for o ur sandwiches, l ettuce.”
Volunteers were preparing
tuna sandwiches on Tuesday and
delivering them to the hungry on
Abaco via helicopter, Kilcoyne
said.
“We’ll be here,” Kilcoyne added.
“We have more teams coming
from Florida.... We will have lots
to report on and more images and
everything coming soon.”
In the two years since Maria hit
Puerto Rico, Andrés and World
Central Kitchen have embraced
their role a s first responders work-
ing to feed victims of natural dis-
asters. They have responded to
disasters of every stripe: They de-
ployed to the Venezuelan-Colom-
bian border during the power
struggle in Venezuela. They trav-
eled to California after the devas-
tating wildfires. They s et u p kitch-
ens in Indonesia after the earth-
quake and tsunami. They even
opened a relief kitchen in down-
town Washington to feed federal
workers during the partial gov-
ernment shutdown this year.
Andrés, World Central Kitchen
employees and volunteers have
prepared and served millions of
meals around the w orld.
In the process, World Central
Kitchen has grown from a small
organization, with total assets of
$119,000 i n 2016, to one with total
assets of $16.3 million in 2018,
according to World Central Kitch-
en’s financials. Andrés is up for a
Nobel Peace Prize, which will be
announced O ct. 11 in Oslo.
Not that the chef seems to be
paying much attention to honors.
He a nd t he World Central Kitchen
team have their hands full in the
Bahamas, while also tracking
Dorian to see if they need to set up
operations elsewhere in the
storm’s p ath.
[email protected]

Andrés’s nonprofit follows its Puerto Rico blueprint to feed Dorian victims


The
Reliable
Source

Helena Andrews-Dyer and Emily Heil
are away. Their column will resume
when they return.

JOSE JIMENEZ/GETTY IMAGES
Chef José Andrés sets up operations in Nassau Bahamas, as he plans to feed people on the Abaco
Islands, which were slammed by Hurricane Dorian, the largest storm on record to hit the Bahamas.

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