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San Antonio and the Dolls
by Nan Cobbey
12/8/2005

“I am the president of the Bank of America and we are going to send you $100,000,” said the man on the other end of the phone line.

India Chumney, director of Communities in Schools in San Antonio, had just been on the radio talking about the work of the Diocese of West Texas, Episcopal Relief and Development and her own organization. She had described the needs of the children displaced by the hurricanes and was now ready to get back to school.

The phone call came in response to her mention of school uniforms, books and supplies that the organizations were trying to provide.

At the request of India’s mother, Betty Chumney, ERD director Mark Spina had sent an emergency grant for $10,000 for uniforms and supplies. It was a big help. But with 2,400 students, it wasn’t going to be enough. That’s what the bank president heard before he picked up the phone.

“So that seed money that we got from ERD really has raised the money that has funded this whole program,” said Betty Chumney, bishop’s deputy for World Mission in the Diocese of West Texas.

Her enthusiasm doesn’t stop there. She has other projects at work in those shelters in San Antonio. Her favorite is the dolls, the rag dolls that Mary Page Jones of Wyoming has women all over the world making for children in war zones and other places of disaster.

The women of St. Barnabas in Fredericksburg, Texas, had made 80 dolls. Chumney had them and wanted to get them to the children at the Kelly USA shelter.

Chumney called her daughter to have one of the counselors from Communities in Schools – working daily in the shelters -- deliver them. The next morning, says Betty, India got a call from that counselor.

“That was the best tool we had last night,” she quotes him saying. “We had so many children who had been through the horror of Katrina, a lot of them separated from their families. They were alone in a new place that was big and scary. I spent all night being Santa Claus, giving those children the dolls.”

The response was remarkable.

“They were agitated and crying but when they were given a doll they would get in their beds and go to sleep…  Is there any possibility we could get more of the dolls?”

That’s all it took and Betty Chumney was on the phone with Mary Page Jones in Wyoming.

“You know,” said Jones, “I’ve been praying to find out how in the world we can plug these dolls into this horrible disaster.”

Jones sent another 500, made by women from all over the United States.


 





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