The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Smell of smoke hung in the air, it was horrendous

Volunteer Elaine looks back on her experience helping Red Cross to assist survivors in aftermath of tragedy that killed 72 people

- Cheryl Peebles

Horrors of the Grenfell Tower disaster have been recalled by a Fife woman who went to the aid of survivors.

Elainemeak­in,57,wasamongth­earmy ofvoluntee­rswhohelpe­dformerres­idents of the tower who lost loved-ones, their homesandpo­ssessionsw­henthehigh-rise was engulfed by flames a year ago.

She helped the British Red Cross set up in Westway Sports Centre in the aftermath of the tragedy, which claimed the lives of 72 people.

It was three weeks after the catastroph­ic blaze that Elaine, who lives in Dalgety Bay with husband Jeremy, arrived in the capital but still the smell of smoke hung in the air.

As soon as she got off the train she was confronted by the grim sight of the still smoulderin­g building.

She told The Courier: “It was really horrendous. I’d seen it on the television, but to see it for real, I just couldn’t believe that something like that could have happened.

“Everywhere you went, it loomed over you.”

At every turn, she said, were posters for missing people who clearly would never be found alive.

She said: “There were messages and there were things that belonged to missing people, I saw someone’s shoes and messages about them.

“There was a poster of a little girl who had gone missing and her nursery friends had written on it ‘please come back, we miss you’.

“You knew they weren’t going to find these people and you realised that this has affected everyone in that place, old people, young people, children.

“There were messages of hope and there were angry messages. It was heartbreak­ing.”

At the centre, Elaine helped those looking for advice, food, essentials, financial or housing assistance or who just wanted a shoulder to cry on.

She said: “There was one young woman who came in who was very angry. She wanted to get things off her chest and suddenly she stopped and said ‘you’re Scottish aren’t you?’ and a big smile came over her face and she said ‘I love your accent!’

“It was the smallest thing but it made such a difference to her, just

You realised how much good there was in people, the community was so strong

to be listened to.”

There was also a man who had gone back into the burning tower six times to save others yet was reluctant to accept help for himself.

Families brought young children who had lost their homes to play at the rest centre and Elaine said the centre was full of hope and human kindness.

She said: “You realised how much good there was in people, so many people were there to offer help and the community was so strong; it pulled together and that’s what really struck me.”

Elaine, who has worked in the voluntary sector for more than 13 years, had joined the British Red Cross only weeks before the fire and stepped up when the charity issued an appeal for help.

She said: “I felt I needed to do something, whatever it was.”

Thoughts of Grenfell Tower, its victims and survivors are always with Elaine, but today in particular will be a day of reflection for her.

She said: “Hearing people talking about it makes me feel very emotional. “I’m so glad it’s not being forgotten.” cpeebles@thecourier.co.uk

 ?? Picture: Steven Brown ?? Elaine Meakin arrived in London three weeks after the disaster to help at The Red Cross’s support centre.
Picture: Steven Brown Elaine Meakin arrived in London three weeks after the disaster to help at The Red Cross’s support centre.

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