On Wednesday, 24th June 2026, at 6:04pm, Venezuela changed forever in less than a minute. Two earthquakes, magnitude 7.1 and 7.5, separated by just 39 seconds, struck the north-central part of the country. The epicenter was located near Morón, in the State of Carabobo, but the most devastating impact was felt in La Guaira, Caracas and the surrounding areas, where many houses and buildings collapsed. The toll of casualties, missing and injured continues to rise as rescue operations proceed. Specialized teams from many countries are arriving to join the search for survivors, bringing humanitarian aid and essential supplies, as part of an international response that is growing by the hour.
The aftershocks have given no respite; there have already been over 100. Some are barely noticeable while others force us to flee our homes repeatedly. We are living in a constant state of alert. We sleep little. Fatigue weighs heavily on us, as does fear. Added to this are the difficulties of a city trying to continue functioning: the telephone signal and internet connection work intermittently, electricity supplies fluctuate constantly and, in many buildings, the supply of gas has been suspended as a precaution. Even the simplest decisions require enormous effort: organizing ourselves, carrying out practical tasks, coordinating teams, or simply contacting loved ones to know if they are safe. Everything becomes more difficult when the earth keeps reminding us that it has not yet stopped shaking.


Venezuela is dealing with this earthquake from a condition of vulnerability. Many buildings were built without the earthquake-resistant standards that are now the norm in other regions and some have suffered from years of wear and insufficient maintenance. This emergency is unfolding with an already challenging socio-economic reality, which makes the response process even more complex.
However, in the midst of this fragile reality, we are also discovering an immense strength that comes from communion.
As the Focolare Movement, we have opened our homes – the Focolare centres that, fortunately, have not suffered any structural damage – to welcome those who have had to abandon their homes. Some families can no longer return home, because their buildings are at risk of collapsing; others have lost everything. We have offered accommodation, food, clothing and whatever else that can alleviate the most urgent and immediate needs.
Sadly the tragedy has also touched our family very closely. A volunteer from the Movement lost several family members due to the collapse of the buildings in which they lived. Only one granddaughter survived and has already been treated in the hospital. Like them, many families wait anxiously among the ruins for news; others mourn their loved ones and many continue to cling to the hope of finding those still missing alive.
Solidarity is part of our identity and these days it becomes tangible. From the very first hours after the earthquake, journeys between Caracas and La Guaira multiplies: private cars, volunteers, parishes, organizations and neighbors bringing water, food, medicines, clothes and tools. Entire communities from other regions of the country that experienced the earthquake very lightly, have spontaneously organized collection centers, sorted donations and prepared the aid that continues to reach the worst affected areas through the Church. Every small initiative, every phone call, every package prepared with care, every person who offers their time, weaves a network of fraternity that supports those who need it most today.


We are also deeply moved by the number of people, both within and outside Venezuela, who wish to help. We haven’t been able to respond to all the messages we have received. Family, friends, members of the Movement and people who simply want to know how we are or ask how they can contribute. We are activating every possible channel so that this enormous generosity can find concrete expression and reach where it is most needed.
We would like to express our sincere thanks to all of them. Thank you for the prayers, for the messages of closeness and for the concrete gestures of solidarity that are already being put into practice. In moments like this, we experience vividly what Chiara Lubich has left us as a guiding horizon: “Be a family”.
Perhaps the biggest challenge is to live in the present moment. Not to anticipate the fear of the next tremor or to remain paralyzed by the magnitude of the suffering. Remaining in the present is, now more than ever, the way to discover what Love asks of us in each moment.
Living the charism of unity, in this context, means giving a concrete response: being bridges where there is isolation, offering fraternity where fear created division and sowing hope where uncertainty seems to prevail.
There’s still a long road ahead. The emergency is not over and reconstruction will take time. Yet amid so much loss, we are also witnessing a humanity that refuses to give up, that organizes itself, that shares the little or much that it has and that reminds us once again that, even when the earth trembles, love can remain the firmest ground on which to rebuild hope.
The Focolare community of Caracas
Photos: © fotospublicas.com
To make a donation: Earthquake emergency in Venezuela




0 Comments