Las Vegas Review-Journal

Year later, Puerto Rico remembers

Island trying to recover from Hurricane Maria

- By Danica Coto The Associated Press

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Clapping and raising their hands to the sky, hundreds of people clad in white gathered at an 18th-century fort in the Puerto Rican capital Thursday to remember those who died in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria as the U.S. territory struggles to recover one year after the Category 4 storm hit.

Religious leaders and government officials recalled how Puerto Rico was ravaged by the storm that killed an estimated 2,975 people and caused more than an estimated $100 billion in damage.

Tens of thousands remain without adequate shelter or reliable electrical power, a sad fact that Gov. Ricardo Rossello noted Thursday.

“After that catastroph­ic experience, we acknowledg­e how complex and difficult it is to prepare for a hurricane of that magnitude and fury,” Rosello said. “The best tribute we can give these people, these brothers that we’ve lost, is to build a better Puerto Rico for their sons, their grandsons and their families.”

While the U.S. government has invested billions of dollars to help clean up and repair the U.S. territory, much work remains.

Major power outages are still being reported, tens of thousands of insurance claims are still pending and nearly 60,000 homes still have temporary roofs unable to withstand a Category 1 hurricane.

Across the island, people marked the first anniversar­y with gatherings large and small, solemn and anger-tinged — and at times even hopeful.

In the coastal fishing and farming village of Yabucoa, the strains of one of Puerto Rico’s most beloved songs filled the air at 6:15 a.m., the exact moment the storm made landfall there one year ago.

Tarps still covered many homes that have yet to be rebuilt in the town of 37,000, even as the nostalgic strains of “Amanecer Borincano” — “Puerto Rican Dawn” — resonated at the spot where Maria first unleashed its fury.

In San Juan, the crowd of worshipper­s gathered at the 230-year-old San Cristobal fort sang and prayed along with pastors and musicians onstage, with music echoing through the fort’s heavy walls as the sun slowly sank into the sea behind them.

Pastor Elder Gonzalez said he and other volunteers who flew to Puerto Rico after the hurricane to help were shocked at what they saw from up high.

“To see the island of enchantmen­t was a deep and painful experience,” he said. “No one on the plane said a word.”

 ?? Carlos Giusti ?? The Associated Press Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rossello sits with his wife Beatriz and children Pedro Javier and Claudia during a remembranc­e ceremony Thursday at the San Cristobal Castle in San Juan on the anniversar­y of Hurricane Maria.
Carlos Giusti The Associated Press Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rossello sits with his wife Beatriz and children Pedro Javier and Claudia during a remembranc­e ceremony Thursday at the San Cristobal Castle in San Juan on the anniversar­y of Hurricane Maria.

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