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Services, Burials Scheduled for Young Victims of Flash Floods

Church groups are helping the surviving families. America's Greek Orthodox archbishop is asking parishes for donations.

California

January 01, 2004|Janet Wilson and Larry B. Stammer, Times Staff Writers

Eight young victims of the Christmas Day flash floods will be remembered this Saturday at a funeral service in San Bernardino, and will be buried in a cemetery in the shadow of the mountains where they lost their lives.

As services are arranged for all 16 victims, grieving relatives are receiving help from church and community groups.


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The Greek Orthodox Archbishop of America issued an urgent appeal Wednesday to parishes across the United States for contributions to an emergency fund for families of the victims.

"We were deeply saddened by the tragedy in San Bernardino," Archbishop Demetrios, primate of the Greek Orthodox Church in America, said from his headquarters in New York. "The unexpected and harsh death of so many people, on Christmas Day, is a shocking reality that is not easily confronted."

In a letter to be read at all 520 Greek Orthodox parishes in the U.S. on Sunday, Demetrios will ask the church's 1.5 million members to contribute to a fund for the families of victims, his office staff said.

The Unforgettables Foundation, an Inland Empire nonprofit organization that helps poor families with burial costs and grief counseling, held a memorial walk Wednesday afternoon for children who died in San Bernardino and Riverside counties this year, including the young flood victims.

"Both parents died in some cases, and one parent in others, so there is no question these families are going to be financially challenged," said Tim Evans, a Seventh-day Adventist pastor who founded the group.

He said the families' pastor had asked for help earlier in the week. The foundation, which had already received $3,000 for the families, will provide $500 per child to defray burial costs.

The tragedy left at least 15 dead, including two victims from a KOA campground in Devore, and at least 13 at the St. Sophia Greek Orthodox Camp in Waterman Canyon.

Still missing is a 12-year-old boy -- a likely 16th fatality -- who was probably swept away with the other victims at the church camp.

San Bernardino County sheriff's deputies will resume searching for his body in the next several days, said spokesman Chip Patterson.

Memorial services will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday at the Church of God Prophecy in San Bernardino, where 10 of the church camp victims were members. Among them were Jorge Monzon, caretaker of the St. Sophia camp, his wife, Clara, and their three children, Wendy, Raquel and Jeremiah.

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