MEXICO CITY: One month after the earthquake that jolted Mexico on September 19, flattening dozens of buildings across Mexico City and leaving 369 dead, many people are only just starting to pick up the pieces. Here is a look at the recovery effort in four snapshots. How do you keep going to work if your only clothes are the ones you were wearing when your home collapsed? In Roma, a trendy neighborhood devastated by the quake, a group of friends came up with an original idea to help people in that situation. They transformed an art gallery into a “boutique with a cause” that gives away crisp business clothes to those who lost everything but their jobs. “My building was condemned,” said Eduardo Dominguez, 31, an employee at a bookstore that specializes in medical texts. “It’s a very awkward, hopeless situation,” he said with a pained look as he tried on jackets, barely able to talk about his ordeal. The boutique receives about 20 “customers” a day. “They’re usually reluctant to come, but they’re always smiling when they leave,” said a volunteer at the shop, Jeni Tapia. In Condesa, the bohemian neighborhood next door, another association has set up a library with 2,000 books rescued from the rubble. The library is located in an old colonial house that the association set up as a refuge for exiled writers and journalists from around the world. The books “were out in the rain for days, under the rubble. They have bad mold. They’re very damaged,” said Marlene Fautsch, who is working on the project for Mexico City’s culture ministry. “We diagnose them, heal them, and now we want to return them to their owners if possible,” she told AFP. Books awaiting treatment are stored in a room once inhabited by British writer Salman Rushdie. Nearby, technicians in white lab coats, gloves and face masks are meticulously cleaning texts. The books come from a 21-unit building that collapsed in the quake. It was home to numerous artists and intellectuals. Many of the residents died or are hospitalized. Intimate remnants of victims’ lives can be found within the books’ pages: love letters, pictures, recipes, children’s drawings and even Egyptian parchments. “It’s like an archaeological study of the lives lived there,” said Fautsch. In Xochimilco, a far-flung neighborhood on the capital’s south side, Jaime Tirso Perez stands watch day and night outside what is left of the Atlapulco Cultural House, a private museum housing his personal collection of pre-Colombian artefacts, historic photographs and documents, and thousands of books. The museum, located in a house that was more than 200 years old, collapsed in the quake, leaving the priceless collection exposed to the rain, grime and looters. Published in Daily Times, October 20th 2017.