Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Fire evacuees get Thanksgivi­ng respite

- KATHLEEN RONAYNE

CHICO, Calif. — Hannah Crenshaw hosts a Thanksgivi­ng dinner each year, cooking turkey, stuffing and mashed potatoes — her favorite — for up to 15 guests at her home in Magalia.

That’s not an option this year. Her house burned down in the wildfire that tore through the town of Paradise and surroundin­g communitie­s, destroying more than 13,000 homes. The death toll rose by one Thursday to 84.

Instead, Crenshaw, 26, will be spending Thanksgivi­ng with her husband’s family in nearby Durham. She’s trying to see the best in the heartbreak­ing situation.

“It doesn’t really feel like Thanksgivi­ng,” she said. “But Thanksgivi­ng’s my favorite holiday. I guess I have a lot to be thankful for this year with everything going on.”

The Camp Fire has displaced tens of thousands of people, with hundreds still unaccounte­d for. The blaze was 90 percent contained Thursday, two weeks after it began.

It won’t be a normal Thanksgivi­ng for any of those families, but businesses and hundreds of volunteers have stepped up to ensure turkey, potatoes and pie are available as a small slice of comfort for anyone who wants a plate.

The Washington nonprofit World Central Kitchen was cooking 15,000 Thanksgivi­ng meals, teaming up with Chico’s Sierra Nevada Brewing Co., a university and the town of Paradise to serve them Thursday. Volunteers prepared food and set up huge tables Wednesday.

“It will be a respite from the frantic activity of trying to put our lives back together and our town back together,” Paradise Mayor Jody Jones said.

Scores of volunteers also were opening their houses to strangers to provide a more intimate Thanksgivi­ng.

Rachael Anderson is hosting a displaced mom and daughter at her home in Redding, about an hour and a half from Paradise. Anderson knows what it’s like to live in a community devastated by flames — a wildfire swept through Redding last summer.

She didn’t lose her home, and she now wants to share it with others in need. She’ll be joined by Athenia Dunham and her 15-year-old daughter, Natalie.

“They’ve lost their home, their traditions, whatever it is that they do. I just want to give them a little piece of home,” Anderson said. “That’s what Thanksgivi­ng’s about; it’s not just about your blood family — it’s about giving thanks and helping each other.”

Joann Barr was to be at one of the community dinners hosted by the brewery and World Central Kitchen, held on the campus of California State University, Chico. Normally she’d cook at home — deviled eggs are her Thanksgivi­ng specialty. She did not lose her house but has been under evacuation orders for days.

“It’s sad, but there’s plenty of things to be thankful for,” she said outside a disaster assistance center at a Chico mall. “I’m thankful for the shelter I was able to go to, now the motel that I’m in — everything I have, basically.”

Some people didn’t even realize Thanksgivi­ng had arrived in the chaotic and emotionall­y draining rush of the past two weeks.

“Is that today?” Amy Sheppard asked Wednesday, rushing to pack her belongings in a black trash bag as rain fell over a Walmart parking lot where she and many others had camped for days.

Sheppard would normally spend Thanksgivi­ng with three dozen family members and friends at a home in Magalia. That home — a family friend’s — and her own burned down. This year, she’s likely to spend the holiday in a hotel room with her sister and 1-year-old niece.

Sheppard began to cry as she explained her son was staying with other family members after the fire and that they would likely spend the holiday apart.

People like Faun and Danny O’Neel hope they can provide some relief, even for a few hours, for those who have lost everything. The couple who live in the Sacramento-area city of Folsom were hosting three families Thursday.

Faun O’Neel’s parents and grandparen­ts lost their homes in a Calaveras County fire several years ago, so she said opening her home to others was a “no-brainer.”

Thanksgivi­ng at a stranger’s house may not be what her guests originally expected. But she hopes it can provide some calm in a trying time.

“A few hours of normalcy,” O’Neel said. “Where they can laugh and enjoy other people’s company without thinking about what they just lived through and what is in front of them.”

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