Making homes more than just luck
Deirdre Newman
Mayela Razo was born on Tuesday the 13th in Mexico, a day whose luck
is equivalent to Friday the 13th here, she said. The divorced mother
of four said she has felt unlucky most of the time.
But her luck changed when representatives of Habitat for Humanity
came to her mobile home in Santa Ana last year and told her that her
family had been accepted for a Habitat house. The Christian based,
nonprofit organization builds homes for low-income families, usually
requiring the recipients to put in a little sweat-equity and help
with the construction.
“When the [representatives] came to my house, I said, ‘can I hug
you?’” Razo said. “It’s very important to have faith.”
Saturday, construction started on Razo’s house at a property on
Pomona Street that will eventually contain six homes.
And Razo was there, hammering away on the house’s frame, along
with other volunteers.
Groundbreaking on the Pomona Street property started in January.
Habitat for Humanity staff and volunteers originally intended to
renovate the existing houses on the property, but they turned out to
be so infested with termites that it was more cost-effective to tear
them down and start from scratch, said volunteer Jerome Blackman.
Construction on the new houses started in March. The first house
to be completed, in the back of the property, was sponsored by the
Home Depot and has been finished already.
Razo’s house started taking shape today and, in the next few
weeks, construction on the other homes will begin as well, Blackman
said.
Another home recipient, Walter Bernard, was also helping to raise
the walls on Razo’s home. Bernard lives with his wife and
four-year-old son in a one-bedroom apartment.
“It’s really great to see the cooperation of everyone working
together,” Bernard said.
In addition to the home recipients, volunteers from all parts of
Orange County came to lend a helping hand, like Nisreen Malhis, a
member of the Palestinian Women’s Organization, based in Irvine.
“This is my first day,” Malhis said. “I’m so happy. I enjoy the
diversity of this organization.”
Volunteer Brooke Tyson urged anyone with an interest in helping
others to come out and join the construction effort.
“If everybody came out for one day, we can change the world by
putting people in their own house,” she said.
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