Imperial Valley Press

Caribbean families separate to rebuild lives after Hurricane Irma

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SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — The shrieks of children playing volleyball and the occasional barking of dogs echoed inside Puerto Rico’s largest convention center, transforme­d into a shelter for hurricane victims from other Caribbean islands as hundreds of families devastated by the Category 5 storm transition toward new lives. For many, that included tearful goodbyes as they leave behind children with friends or family on the U.S. mainland, where they can go to school while their parents return to jobs on the islands and try to rebuild their lives.

Puerto Rico has received more than 2,000 U. S. citizens who were living or vacationin­g in islands battered by Hurricane Irma last week, including more than 500 who arrived via cruise ship on Thursday.

Many live in the U. S. and British Virgin Islands and were heading from San Juan to the U.S. mainland to leave their children with relatives and then go back home to resume work so they can keep providing for their loved ones.

“I’m going to miss you, and you’re going to miss me too, but this is what it’s going to be for now,” Josette Cooper, a 43-yearold school teacher, recalled telling her young son after they arrived in Puerto Rico.

She explained that he would live with his aunt in Orlando, and that she didn’t know yet when they would be reunited because it’s unclear how long reconstruc­tion efforts would take.

“They don’t know what to say,” Cooper said of government officials in the British Virgin Islands. “They don’t want to give us false hope.”

Raquel Oloye, a 41-yearold nurse who lives on Tortola, the largest island in the British chain, also was planning to leave her three young children in Orlando with her mother and return to work soon. Like Cooper, she and the children were staying at the convention center and sleeping on cots because they could not afford a hotel. She said she left the British territory because basic supplies were running low.

“I was worried that the children weren’t eating,” she said, tears streaming her face as she spoke of having to separate from them.

Volunteers at the convention center played with her children and others, trying to maintain a sense of normalcy during the transition. On Wednesday night, the children gathered around a screen that was playing “Peppa Pig,” an animated British TV show.

“It was the first time they smiled,” Oloye said of her children, who are 9, 6 and 4.

Throughout the morning, evacuees continued to stream out of the cruise ship docked alongside the historic part of Puerto Rico’s capital, anxious to reconnect with family and friends. Sinead Burkett, a 26- year- old property manager who lives in Atlanta, wiped away tears as she waited for her two brothers and a sister to arrive from St. John. She flew to Puerto Rico to welcome them and said they would be staying with her, her husband and their two children in Atlanta until life returned to normal in the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Their mother, Maria Chiappero, a 49-year-old housekeepe­r at a villa in St. John, would also be staying with them temporaril­y and then go home if she could find a job.

“They plan to rebuild,” Chiappero said of government officials’ recovery plans for the island. “They say that, but I don’t know.”

Other families made similar plans.

Alexandra Carmona, 34, has lived in St. Thomas for the past 15 years with her family and children but planned to send them to Boston for now.

 ??  ?? Sinead Burkett pulls the luggage of her siblings who arrived in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on Thursday via a cruise ship packed with families evacuated from Caribbean islands devastated by Hurricane Irma. AP PHOTO/RICARDO ARDUENGO
Sinead Burkett pulls the luggage of her siblings who arrived in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on Thursday via a cruise ship packed with families evacuated from Caribbean islands devastated by Hurricane Irma. AP PHOTO/RICARDO ARDUENGO

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