NASSAU, the Bahamas — The roof had blown clean off. Outside, the ocean
surged, swallowing the land. Brent Lowe knew he had to escape — and
take his 24-year-old son, who has cerebral palsy and can’t walk, with
him.

But Mr. Lowe had another problem. He’s blind.

So he put his grown son on his shoulders, then stepped off his porch,
he said. The swirling current outside came up to his chin.

“It was scary, so scary,” said Mr. Lowe, 49.

Clutching neighbors, he said he felt his way to the closest home still
standing. It was five minutes — an eternity — away.

Stories of unlikely survival have slowly emerged in the days since
Hurricane Dorian hit the Bahamas, pummeling the islands of Grand
Bahama and Abaco for days before moving toward the Atlantic Seaboard.
While the damage has been visible from above, the full human toll is
still far from certain, with 30 deaths confirmed so far and the
authorities warning that the real number may be much higher.

The death count “could be staggering,” said Dr. Duane Sands, the
minister of health, who updated the toll late Thursday.
Some neighborhoods have been reduced to rubble, almost entirely
flattened by the storm. In others, 95 percent of homes have been
damaged or destroyed.
Thousands of people are now homeless, taking refuge in gymnasiums or
churches, and the authorities are bracing for an influx of bodies as
the extent of the destruction becomes clear.

[See Hurricane Dorian in Pictures]

“We are embalming bodies so that we have more capacity as new bodies
are brought in,” Dr. Sands said. “We need to get coolers into Abaco
and Grand Bahama, because we believe that we may not have the capacity
to store the bodies.”

Sandra Cooke, a resident of Nassau, the capital, said her
sister-in-law had been trapped under a collapsed roof in the Abaco
Islands.

At first, her brother couldn’t find his wife — then the family dog
detected her in the rubble. When there was a break in the storm,
neighbors helped free her.

“She was trapped under the roof for 17 hours,” said Ms. Cooke. She
hired a private helicopter service to bring the rescued woman to
Nassau, she said.

When Hurricane Dorian first made landfall on Sunday, Mr. Lowe
recalled, all of its fury seemed to bear down on him.

The storm raging outside was one of the most powerful ever to sweep
through the Atlantic. Its eye was approaching and the group of eight
people inside Mr. Lowe’s cement house was particularly vulnerable.
In addition to Mr. Lowe and his disabled son, neighbors whose homes
had already been destroyed were also sheltering there. Among them were
two children.
As the storm howled around them, Mr. Lowe said, the roof began to lift
off, then slap back down. Abaco withstood sustained winds of up to 185
miles per hour that day, with gusts that reached 220 miles per hour.
The group sought safety in the bathroom, where they huddled together
and prayed, hoping for relief. Mr. Lowe’s son was nestled inside the
bathtub, he said.

That’s when the roof flew away.

Exposed to the elements, each person had to step out into the storm.
They clung to each other and set out to find refuge.

“I’ve never experienced anything like that in my life,” said Mr. Lowe,
who is no stranger to hurricanes but said he could never have imagined
the terror of that day.

The group reached a neighbor’s home. Mr. Lowe and his son hunkered
down there for a day until a rescue bus was able to pick them up on
Monday and take them to a shelter.

On Tuesday night, he was evacuated to Nassau, where Mr. Lowe can get
the dialysis treatment he needs three times a week. His son had to
stay in Abaco, in the care of Mr. Lowe’s sister-in-law, he said.

“I came here with the clothes that I had on from Saturday,” he said.

Although Mr. Lowe and his son are now safe, his ordeal is, in some
ways, only beginning.

He didn’t know if his eldest daughter made it through the storm, he
said. The phone lines have been down for days and communication with
Abaco is very difficult.

“Right before we had the wind, I spoke with her,” he said. “I wish I
could have been able to call and ask somebody, you know, because I
really was worried about them. I was worried about everybody.”
So many people have been pushed from their homes by the hurricane that
in Marsh Harbour, the main town on Abaco, as many as 2,000 people were
seeking shelter in a clinic and a government complex. Officials warned
that tent cities might have to be set up to accommodate the many
survivors.

There are also environmental concerns. The Norwegian energy company
Equinor said an oil storage terminal on the island of Grand Bahama had
been damaged. The terminal was leaking, the company said, though it
was too early to tell how much oil had spilled.

From the air, the storage tanks appeared to have no lids. The domed
tops of five of tanks were “gone,” a company spokesman said.

Bahamian officials urged their citizens to be unified.

“There are no words to convey the grief we feel for our fellow
Bahamians in the Abacos and Grand Bahama,” Dionisio D’Aguilar, the
tourism and aviation minister, said in a statement. “Now is the time
to come together for our brothers and sisters in need, and help our
country get back on its feet.”

Like many of his neighbors, Mr. Lowe is now homeless. After a lifetime
on the outskirts of Marsh Harbour — where he raised a family and
worked as a butcher in a fish house until he lost his eyesight to
diabetes — his home, his community and everything he built has been
obliterated.

Still, Mr. Lowe wants to return to Abaco.

“I have to go,” he said. “That’s where my family is. My kids are
there, my brothers, my sisters, they’re all there.”

But he is unsure of its future. The damage is catastrophic.

In the area where he lived, “90 percent of the houses are
compromised,” he said. “I’m talking about roofs gone, houses totally
collapsed everywhere.”

He added, “I’m just wondering where we’re going to live when I go back
home, what I’m going to do.”

Frances Robles contributed reporting from Miami.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/05/world/americas/hurricane-dorian-survival-story.html

-- 
Avinash Shahi
(Assistant) – Human Resource Management Department
Reserve Bank of India Lucknow



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