From the BBC:
“La Palma volcano survivors
shaken but determined to rebuild”
Imagine trying to sleep in the
glare of an erupting volcano, rattled by its tremors. Then imagine trying to do
that in a cramped caravan, after your home was surrounded by lava or buried
beneath it. This is the upturned reality for around 20 families, bedding down
for another night in a back street in Los Llanos. They are just outside the
exclusion zone on La Palma, in Spain's Canary Islands. They are the homeless of
the six-week-old eruption, who cannot even dream of going home without being
woken by the volcano's tremors and rumble.
(Dacil Batista - Homeless
survivor of eruption)
Dacil Batista shares her small
caravan with her partner and their two children, along with her mother-in-law
and sister-in-law. "I'm in despair," she tells me, "because I
don't know what's happening to my house." "We spent the first few
nights staring at the volcano, trying to see what it was doing, but now it is
kind of normal to have it there." After all these weeks you'd expect
deeper dismay, even anger. But Dacil is thankful for the food, clothes and toys
from the local town hall and hopes to take her children home one day.
Just across town, El Roque school
has a new class. The children, cut off from their normal lessons, are now being
taught in borrowed space using donated books. Their teacher, Christina Mederos,
managed to grab the computers but not much else before Las Manchas school was
abandoned to the lava. The walls of this temporary classroom have pictures of
the erupting volcano drawn by children across the Canary Islands and sent here
in support. Ten-year-old Rodrigo explains that he's now living with his
grandmother: "I thought it would end quickly but the volcano has destroyed
houses." Classmate Sergio describes the lava and the destruction done to
the trees, landscape and his grandfather's house. He says the eruption "is
beautiful, but it does a lot of damage". The children can't even play
outside, Christina tells me, because the air and school yard are thick with
ash. "It was very emotional to come back [to school], because I really
wanted to see the children. I didn't know how they felt about it all," she
says. Covid rules suggest the windows should be open for ventilation, but volcanic
ash and the risk of toxic gases mean they stay firmly closed. Masks and goggles
are all in place before the children step outside.
(Matt Pankhurst - Canary Islands
volcanologist)
Scientists have come to La Palma,
to monitor the lava, check for gases and analyse the newest rocks on Earth. Dr
Matt Pankhurst of the Canary Islands Volcano Institute shows me the samples
taken by poking a long stick into the lava and dropping it, steaming, into a
bucket of cold water - live geology lessons in Earth's oldest processes. His
main focus is the crystals held within the hardened lava. "In principle,
we can forecast volcanic eruptions like we do the weather," he explains.
"This is the best chance yet to link together the evidence in the rock
with the pre-eruption signals, so we can know what's coming next time in much
more detail." It's the story of Earth's formation retold in a devastating
act of renewal. On these islands life has always been built on the ruins of a
previous eruption.
Tourism also defines the Canary
Islands. La Palma has been marketed as "La isla bonita" - the
beautiful island. But unlike that Madonna song, this is no longer a Spanish
lullaby. "It was a disaster," says Basso Lanzone, who has run tours
here for years. "It changed everything on this side of the island - now
they have nothing. No tourists were arriving because they were afraid of the
volcano." So Basso refocused his tours and brought 100 day-trippers from
Tenerife to see the volcano. It's a rare possibility," says Anastasia, visiting
from Ukraine. "It's amazing, feeling nature, what it can do." Mark
Fordyce from Aberdeen was on holiday in Tenerife when he saw volcano trips
advertised. "I just thought it would be really interesting to come. I saw
that the proceeds from this tour go towards relief for the families
affected." Around the main square of Los Llanos workers constantly sweep
and clean as more volcanic ash falls.
(Henry Garritano Perez -
Architect, La Palma)
Architect Henry Garritano Perez
lost both his home and studio to the lava when his village, Todoque, was
destroyed. "It wasn't a typical neighbourhood," he says, "it was
an extended family." When the pretty little white church where Henry was
married finally collapsed, many lost hope. But not Henry, still smiling through
the dust. "Even though my roots are under 15m of lava, they are in
Todoque. The community has to be reborn." When I ask how anyone could
build on the scorched earth of such a disfigured landscape Henry remains
upbeat. "I saw that on Lanzarote [another of the Canary Islands] there are
houses literally built on lava. That can be repeated here." He's
realistic, however, that it will be a year or more before the lava is cool
enough to start reconstruction.
Too long for Dacil Batista and
the others whose world has shrunk to the size of a caravan - families uprooted
and scattered across the island. Yet even here there is no sense of defeat. "I
could take my kids, my animals and we have a caravan to stay in - we're not on
the streets," she says. There is a determination to adapt, cope and
survive. But every day more people are affected by the impact of this eruption.
^ The people continue to struggle
with no end in sight. ^
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