Home News Seafarers Center Offers Respite for Sailors
Seafarers Center Offers Respite for Sailors PDF Print E-mail
Sunday, 08 January 2012 09:48
By Dom Yanchunas

(Reprinted with permission of Professional Mariner September 2011, www.professionalmariner.com)

On a spring afternoon, the dry bulk carrier Macondo took on a load of rice at the Lake Charles, La., docks. While the ship was at berth, Capt. Gustavo Torres and some of his crew relaxed by playing air hockey and phoning their families back in Colombia.
  
The men were able to catch a break ashore as a result of the work of the port's  Stella Maris Lake Charles Seafarers' Center. The center, a project of the
local Roman Catholic diocese, provides visiting mariners with a much-needed respite from their regular grind.
  
The facility offers a recreation room, computers, phone cards and van rides to buy grub. The experience allows the weary seafarers to feel grass under their feet, relieve boredom, have some fun and contact their loved ones.
  
"Sailors around the world are very, very grateful for the services of Stella Maris," Torres said. "You're like a prisoner when you're inside a ship. If you come from five days on the sea and you have no facilities and nothing to do and you have to wait inside the ship and then go back to sea for another five days, it's not so good for a person's mind."
  
Stella Maris is Latin for "star of the sea." The Lake Charles center serves in the tradition of the papal Apostleship of the Sea (AOS), the official international Catholic ministry to people on the water. About 60 port ministries in North America operate as Stella Maris or as AOS centers, which are not formally connected to a diocese.
  
The Lake Charles organization operates with the help of diocesan funding and revenue from the sale of phone cards. The facility is in the Lake Charles port area, but is outside the security perimeter. The director, Deacon Patrick Lapoint, holds a Transportation Worker Identification Credential. He enters the port and picks up the mariners in the center's van. Foreign seafarers need a D-l visa to go ashore.
  
mass_web_.jpgOnce at the Stella Maris center, the ship crews can play air hockey, table tennis and billiards. There is a library with books and magazines. Coffee and cookies are served. A priest celebrates Catholic Mass every Thursday.
  
For seafarers who lack the necessary visa to go ashore, Lapoint boards the ship to
visit them and provide friendly conversation or, if requested, spiritual support.
  
While the games and snacks are popular, Lapoint said, mariners are most grateful
for the ability to phone or e-mail loved ones. Phone and computer banks are set up to facilitate that.
  
"It's contact with family that is most important," Lapoint said. "They will spend their last $5 on a phone card just to call their family, and the free Wi-Fi makes it so much easier."
  
The Stella Maris centers are the Catholics' contribution to the long tradition of ecclesiastical mission work on the waterfront. Anglican and Scandinavian Lutheran churches were the first to provide aid and worship opportunities directly to visiting seafarers as early as the 1820s. At that time, the religious organizations and the community were eager to provide seamen with an alternative to brothels and saloons.
  
Today church-related groups operate about 200 seafarer centers and port chaplaincies in the United States and Canada, according to the North American Maritime Ministry Association (NAMMA).
 
No two centers are exactly alike, said NAMMA's executive secretary, Chaplain Lloyd Burghart. Most of the organizations are operated by Catholic, Episcopal, Lutheran, Presbyterian or Southern Baptist clergy and volunteers. In addition
to providing port chaplains, some assist with advocacy and mariner training.
   
Seamen's Church Institute of New York and New Jersey, which is closely tied to the Episcopal Church, has major operations in Port Newark, N.J., and Oakland, Calif., among others, and runs an inland-navigation simulation center in Paducah, Ky. The Seamen's Church Institute of Philadelphia and South Jersey is totally separate and multidenominational. The Houston International Seafarers' Center and United Port Ministries of Seattle are other examples of multi-denominational organizations.
  
Two maritime ministries run hotels - Seafarers & International House, a Lutheran institution in New York, and Mariners House in Boston. AOS of the United States
of America organizes a corps of Catholic priests who serve aboard cruise ships.
  
While maritime labor practices and technology have changed, the port chaplains still fill a critical role in providing humanitarian aid to ship crews who sometimes face loneliness, cruelty and exploitation, Burghart said.
  
"Seafarers are the neglected people of this world," Burghart said. "Most Americans don't realize that 90 percent of what they use and wear is delivered by ship. They think it's all delivered by truck."
  
stella_maris_web.jpgAt Stella Maris in Lake Charles, the guest book is full of thank-you messages left by mariners hailing from all over the world. "Always love to be here," said one crewman from Liberia. "Muy bueno, very good!" wrote another from Colombia. "Very good - God bless" was the greeting from a Filipino.
  
The center's rooms are decorated with gifts from the visitors. They include wood carvings, souvenirs from ships and paper currency from their homelands that is faithfully collected on Lapoint's "Money Wall."
  
Domestic mariners use the Seafarers' Center too. Oceangoing tugboats frequently stop at Lake Charles, for example. The recreation room wall is decorated with old life rings from the U.S.-flagged cargo ships Maersk Texas, Maersk Tennessee and Maersk Constellation.
 
Back on the 389-foot Macondo, while machines slowly loaded 7,350 metric tons  of rice destined for Haiti, officers prepared to welcome Lapoint aboard. Several crew gathered in the galley, where they greeted Lapoint and picked out phone cards. The captain said some terminals intentionally make it difficult for his crew to disembark, or they overcharge the mariners for escorted rides to the facility exit.
   
"If you don't know where to go for a phone or how to get a taxi, it's difficult for us. Sometimes you have a sick person at home, and you need to know
how they are. It's very important. Stella Maris gives us one of the best facilities for that," said Capt. Torres. "Normally when we come in from the sea, it's necessary to have some recreation. The ship is very small and you have no place to play any games."
  
Although the Catholic diocese funds it, the Lake Charles center also works with a Baptist minister who offers a worship service in the building. The International Transport Workers' Federation awarded the center a grant, which helped to pay for the recreation room. "We're also advocates if a ship is having a problem, like the crew not being paid," Lapoint said.
  
Since 2001, his center has successfully assisted 17 ship crews who hadn't been paid.    Those recovered wages totaled about $700,000.
  
For the crew of the Colombia-flagged Macondo, it's enough just to hang out and
play some games.
  
"You can go there to clear your mind," Torres said.
 
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