關於保羅獲加和ROWW在菲律賓參與的親身救援行動
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分类: 保羅獲加‧PaulWalker |
5-12-2013
dailymail.co.uk
From Tinseltown to tsunami-zone: Moving never-before-seen
images of Paul Walker's inspirational charity work across the globe
(VIDEO)
Honour: Universal chairman Donna Langley said: ' With the
passing of Paul, the world has lost a man who spent a great deal of
his life in service to others'
Tragic: Paul Walker set up the charity Reach Out Worldwide to
help those affected by natural disasters. He's pictured in Chile in
February 2010 tending to children affected by the earthquake
Charity: Paul Walker - pictured in Chile in 2010 - set up
Reach Out Worldwide. Today Paramount Pictures said they were
donating part of the proceeds from the DVD sales of "Fast &
Furious 6" to the actor's nonprofit charity
Far from Hollywood, the fast cars and his sex symbol status,
these poignant images show how Paul Walker dedicated himself to
helping those blighted by natural disasters across the world.
The Fast & Furious star can be seen in fields as far flung
as Haiti and Chile working for the charity he set up, Reach Out
Worldwide, most recently secretly plowing money into the
tornado-struck Philippines.
JD Dorfman,
who is the charity's operations manager, worked closely alongside
the 40-year-old star and speaking for the first time since his
death, told MailOnline: 'We
lost one of the good ones, but he’s left a lasting
legacy.’
And tonight, Paul's griefstricken dad Paul Walker Snr added:
'If there's one good thing to come from any of this, it's that we
can raise the charity's profile - that's what Paul would have
wanted.'
Scroll down for
videos
Over the last three years, Paul was on the ground in destroyed
villages of Haiti, Chile and Alabama and set up makeshift hospitals
to areas ravaged by tsunamis and tornadoes, much to the amazement
of local people - and unbeknown to many of his fans.
Speaking about the side of the
star which many barely knew, ROWW Operations Manager JD
said: 'Paul
started the organization in 2010. It didn’t ever have a goal to be
this big great organization. It was an organic start of just him
trying to do as much as he could for other people around the world
hit by disasters.
‘Paul saw what was happening in some poorer countries and
wasn’t content to donate to the Red Cross, but got ROW started. He
would literally get on the phone and kick down the doors to get
doctors, nurses, specialists, and put together a team to get out to
disasters. Haiti was the first one.’
After the earthquake hit Haiti in January 2010, Paul and a
team went straight out there to help save lives.
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‘He knew there was a need for personnel there, as people in
some areas weren’t getting the treatment they needed, they were
being ignored. So Paul got this team together – all volunteers, all
people he begged to come and they dropped everything in their lives
to help. It was pretty much fly by the seats of our pants stuff,’
explains JD.
Showing off unseen pictures of Paul, which sit proudly in
frames in the offices of ROW in Burbank, Los Angeles, JD added: ‘He
used his connections to get a helicopter to meet the team at
Haiti’s capital Port-au-Prince to get them to a remote harder hit
area, and set up a clinic. It took 34 hours to get
there.
'As you’ll see in one of the pictures, the only place that was
still standing in the town was the orphanage, so we used it as a
makeshift hospital and used doors as beds for the patients. Paul
was helping in every way from looking after kids with broken legs
to helping with check ups and more major operations.’
After Haiti, Paul knew he could never see another natural
disaster without doing something about it, according to JD.
He adds: ‘Doing what he did in Haiti, treating people and
seeing every horrific image, well, you don’t leave that experience
without taking something away. Paul had the
connections to open doors, and to use them for good, but he never,
ever wanted publicity for it.
Father figure: Dad-of-one Paul Walker takes the blood pressure
of a young girl in Chile in February 2010
Doting: ROW Operations Manager JD Dorfman said of Paul Walker:
'There are too many different ways to tell you how amazing he
was'
‘The next time was Chile two months later when it hit all the
poor towns on the beaches. He made connections, used his influence
to set up a hospital on the beach. We’ve got a picture in the
office of just an empty shell of buildings on the beach to remind
us what devastation that caused and the impact we made on the
locals.
‘We were the only team to come to this tiny village and the
locals were amazed, they couldn’t believe that people would care
about them, but Paul did. He’d be helping in the clinic checking
blood pressure and doing basic medical checks. He worked as hard,
if not harder, than anyone. We were presented with a flag to show
their appreciation.’
After Chile, Paul wanted the organization to grow in stature
and moved from a tiny one-room office to bigger
premises.
‘After Chile, he really went for it. We moved offices and it
grew bigger. Small idea with big dreams. We never had full-time,
paid workers, it’s all on a volunteer basis, and Paul always had
people like medics who he could pick up the phone to and say: “Hey,
you’ve got to drop everything and help me.” They just wanted to be
part of something,’ says JD, who began working with Paul during
their work in Alabama, which was hit by a devastating tornado in
May 2011.
He adds: ‘Some of hardest hit were the poorest who were either
trapped in their homes or had their houses completely destroyed.
Paul went with no fanfare and spent thousands on equipment to cut
through the debris.
‘He went to work immediately, he ran the chainsaws to get
through the debris. He was out of pocket, as he had purchased these
Stihl chainsaws, but it was worth it even if it just saved one
person.
‘I’ll always remember Paul cutting through the debris to get
to one person’s house. When she realised who it was, she teared up,
she was overtaken with emotion. She knew his name, and magically he
was on her doorstep, she couldn’t believe it. “But I’m just a poor
woman from Alabama and he’s fighting to get my possessions,’ she
said. She was dumbstruck.
JD Dorfman, right, who is the charity's operations manager,
worked closely alongside the 40-year-old star and speaking for the
first time since his death, told MailOnline: 'We lost one of the
good ones'
Relief: Paul Walker was part of his charity's effort to help
victims of the Haiti earthquake in 2010
Helping out: Paul Walker raised funds for the Philippines
following the recent devastating typhoon
'That’s what Paul did. He was
on the front line and inspired human beings, who were thinking the
world doesn’t give a damn about me. Paul did. It’s beautiful to
watch.’
JD says Paul always foot the bills of these operations with
the cost running into millions - apart from a $50,000 donation from
the chainsaw producer Stihl after they saw what Paul was doing in
Alabama.
‘Stihl wanted to be a part of it. They liked Paul’s no fuss
attitude, but even their generous donation was never going to be
enough to fill in the holes.
‘When the Philippines were hit by a Typhoon last month, we
didn’t have the money to go, we knew it was going to be very
expensive as they needed specialised medical equipment.
‘But every time we saw it in the paper, it was awful to see.
Paul didn’t care, he filled the hole financially and said put the
team together, he’d make it happen. The disaster happened in
mid-November, and two days later, we got a team together,’ says JD,
29.
‘That was the worst thing I’ve ever seen, they had islands
with no power or food, communities that will never recover. We had
1500 pounds of medical gear and we were the only clinic that people
could get help from. On top of that, there was no fuel, so we
couldn’t transport people to hospitals. We were seeing 150 people a
day.
‘Paul has put in millions; we wouldn’t be here otherwise. He
paid for the whole thing. In the Philippines, the locals were
asking us: “Who was funding you? Who’s helping us?” When we said
Paul, they couldn’t believe it, they said: “Why would he do
that?”’
Devastation: Paul Walker faces the devastation of the
Philippines typhoon face on
But the charity works also works on a localized level in the
US. They do a lot for the forgotten people and, before his death,
Paul was making sure that poor children in Los Angeles were getting
a gift on Christmas Day.
‘We’ve been gathering toys and started to do a push of
distributing to them to as many organizations as possible or find
shelters that we know don’t have anything. Such is Paul’s impact
that last year I had too many volunteers and had to turn people
away when we were helping the San Fernando Valley Rescue
Mission.’
‘We also helped when 19 firefighters tragically died in
Arizona in September. It was one of worse tragedies to ever happen
to the services in 100 years and Paul started a letter writing
campaign. He wrote to every one of the families hit by the tragedy
and urged other people to do the same to say how much they
appreciated the firefighters and the work they did.’
Mission: Paul Walker's charity has helped people throughout
the world hit by natural disasters
All of this was done without Paul ever once crowing about the
charity’s work to the media or even acquaintances.
JD says: ‘He didn’t want the organization to be about him. He
wouldn’t do publicity and wanted everyone to forget him being
founder. We lost a brother in the trenches here; we all formed a
bond for life. When you are seeing people lose everything, then
that bond will always hold. He wasn’t just a co-worker, he didn’t
just write the checks, he was on the field.
‘There are too many different ways to tell you how amazing he
was. He would show up at kids’ birthday parties, but he’d never be
the centre of attention, he’d avoid it. It’s weird that today we’re
all talking about him, as that’s the “anti-way” Paul’s always
handled it.’
But JD says that ROWW won’t just die out and they’re going to
carry on with its missions and hope that generous donors come
forward to help fund it.
He adds: ‘We’re hoping to keep moving on. We want to honor his
legacy by keeping this organization going. We are going to make
sure that we’re representing this organization as he’d like. We’re
going to do more and more disasters, more continents and
states
'We lost one of the good ones, but he’s left a lasting
legacy.'
To donate to ROWW: go to www.roww.org/donate
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