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Montreal

'We need to help': Montrealers collect supplies for hurricane-ravaged Barbuda

Members of the Antigua and Barbuda Association of Montreal are working to fill a shipping container with packaged food, toiletries and building materials to send to the Caribbean island. They're accepting goods at various locations until 2 p.m. Saturday

Antigua and Barbuda Association collecting packaged food, goods, building materials, until 2 p.m. Saturday

Juleen Barrington, right, president of the Antigua and Barbuda Association of Montreal, with her mother Kathleen James. Barrington wants to fill a shipping container with packaged food, toiletries and building materials to send to hurricane-ravaged Barbuda. (Navneet Pall/CBC)

As another hurricane rips through the Caribbean, some Montrealers are trying to help residents of one island that was "reduced to rubble" by Hurricane Irma earlier this month.

Days after Irma passed through, Gaston Browne, theprime minister of Antigua and Barbuda, said Barbuda"endured winds of up to 230 miles per hour [370 km/h], and that in itself created an unprecedentedamount of damage."

Browne said 90 per cent of the properties were damaged or demolished, and hundreds have beenleft homeless.

Members of the Antigua and Barbuda Association of Montreal are working to send packaged food, toiletriesand building materials to the ravaged nation.

"Think about it:you have no house, you have no school, you have no hospital, you have no church, you have no livestock, animals have been destroyed. So right now, we need to help those people," said Juleen Barrington, the association's president.

They had a shipping container parked in the Sami Fruits parking lot on Lafleur Avenue in LaSalle and were accepting supplies until Thursday at 1 p.m.
This photo, taken on Sept. 7, 2017, show some of the damage wreaked by Hurricane Irma in Barbuda. (Anika E. Kentish/Associated Press)

They are now accepting goods at Gordon's Tire, at the corner of Cavendish Boulevard and St-Jacques Street, from3 p.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Friday and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday.

Accepting donations through the weekend

Erene Anthony, a board member of the association, said she was speaking with the country's consulate general in Toronto to ensure that any donations are well used.

"Everybody's hearts went out to Barbuda, because we realized the devastation that they'd been through."
The association will be accepting donations from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday and from 7 a.m. to noon on Thursday. (Navneet Pall/CBC)

Rebuilding Barbuda will be more challengingbecause, unlike Caribbean islands such as Saint Martin,which is shared by the French and the Dutch, it's not a territory of a richer country that it can rely on for aid.

But many believe Barbudans will rebuild the island, one donation at a time.

The Antiguan andBarbudan community is small in Montreal, but Barrington said other the associations of other island nationsare pitching in.

The association is arranging pick-ups for people who can't get to the drop-off points. Anyone interested can callAnthony at 514-233-3589 to set something up.

With files from Navneet Pall, Laura Marchand and Shari Okeke