The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

‘I feel like Job’: Hurricane lays waste to homes in Bahamas

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FREEPORT, Bahamas — The ground crunched under Greg Alem’s feet on Wednesday as he walked over the ruins of his home, laid waste by Hurricane Dorian. He touched a splintered beam of wood and pointed to the fallen trees, overcome by memories.

“We planted those trees ourselves. Everything has a memory, you know,” he said. “It’s so, so sad. … In the Bible there is a person called Job, and I feel like Job right now. He’s lost everything, but his faith kept him strong.”

The devastatio­n wrought by Dorian — and the terror it inflicted during its dayandahal­f mauling of the Bahamas — came into focus Wednesday as the passing of the storm revealed a muddy, debrisstre­wn landscape of smashed and floodedout homes on Abaco and Grand Bahama islands. The official death toll from the strongest hurricane on record ever to hit the country jumped to 20, and there was little doubt it would climb higher.

With a nowdistant Dorian pushing its way up the Southeaste­rn U.S. coast, menacing Georgia and the Carolinas, many people living in the Bahamas were in shock as they slowly came out of shelters and checked on their homes.

In one community, George Bolter stood in the bright sunshine and surveyed the ruins of what was once his home. He picked at the debris, trying to find something, anything, salvageabl­e. A couple of walls were the only thing left.

“I have lost everything,” he said. “I have lost all my baby’s clothes, my son’s clothes. We have nowhere to stay, nowhere to live. Everything is gone.”

The Bahamian government sent hundreds of police officers and marines into the stricken islands, along with doctors, nurses and other health care workers, in an effort to reach drenched and stunned victims and take the full measure of the disaster.

“Right now there are just a lot of unknowns,” Parliament member Iram Lewis said. “We need help.”

The U.S. Coast Guard, Britain’s Royal Navy and relief organizati­ons including the United Nations and the Red Cross joined the burgeoning effort to rush food and medicine to survivors and lift the most desperate people to safety by helicopter. The U.S. government also dispatched urban searchandr­escue teams.

Londa Sawyer stepped off a helicopter in Nassau, the capital, with her two children and two dogs after being rescued from Marsh Harbor in the Abaco islands.

“I’m just thankful I’m alive,” she said. “The Lord saved me.”

Sawyer said that her home was completely flooded and that she and her family fled to a friend’s home, where the water came up to the second floor and carried them up to within a few feet of the roof. She said she and her children and the dogs were floating on a mattress for about half an hour until the water began receding.

Sandra Cooke, who lives in Nassau, said her sisterinla­w was trapped under her roof for 17 hours in the Abaco islands and wrapped herself in a shower curtain as she waited.

“The dog laid on top of her to keep her warm until the neighbors could come to help,” she said. “All of my family lives in Marsh Harbor, and everybody lost everything. Not one of them have a home to live anymore.”

The storm pounded the Bahamas with Category 5 winds up to 185 mph and torrential rains, swamping neighborho­ods in brown floodwater­s and destroying or severely damaging, by one estimate, nearly half the homes in Abaco and Grand Bahama, which have 70,000 residents and are known for their marinas, golf courses and allinclusi­ve resorts.

Bahamian Health Minister Duane Sands said 17 of the dead were from the Abaco islands and three from Grand Bahama. He said he could not release further details because the government still had to contact family members.

Some people in the Abaco islands complained that they had not seen any aid except for medical supplies for the main hospital, where hundreds of people were temporaril­y living as they awaited help.

By Wednesday, Dorian was pushing northward a relatively safe distance off the Florida coastline with reduced but stilldange­rous 110 mph (175 kph) winds. An estimated 3 million people in Florida, Georgia and North and South Carolina were warned to clear out, and highways leading inland were turned into oneway evacuation routes.

At 8 p.m. Dorian was centered about 130 miles south of Charleston, South Carolina, moving northwest at 8 mph. Hurricanef­orce winds extended up to 70 miles from its center.

Dorian was expected to pass dangerousl­y close to Georgia and scrape the Carolinas on Thursday and Friday.

 ?? Scott Olson / Getty Images ?? An aerial view of damage caused by Hurricane Dorian is seen on Great Abaco Island on Wednesday in Great Abaco, Bahamas. The official death toll reached 20.
Scott Olson / Getty Images An aerial view of damage caused by Hurricane Dorian is seen on Great Abaco Island on Wednesday in Great Abaco, Bahamas. The official death toll reached 20.

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