Storm Maria pitches Puerto Rico barrio
into sunken 'Venice'
Send a link to a friend
[September 22, 2017]
By Dave Graham and Robin Respaut
CATANO, Puerto Rico (Reuters) - Wading
through highways swamped by turbid waters that sloshed over scattered,
sunken belongings, residents of this Puerto Rican barrio flooded by
Hurricane Maria have begun emerging from their shattered homes.
Lying southwest of the capital San Juan, the Juana Matos neighborhood in
Catano municipality took a huge hit from Maria after the storm slammed
winds of up to 155 mph (249 kmh) into Puerto Rico early on Wednesday,
destroying or damaging an estimated 80 percent of housing in the
working-class barrio.
The storm, the second Category 5 hurricane to batter the Caribbean this
month, claimed at least 32 lives across the region, including 15 in
Puerto Rico, and shut down power and communications across the island of
3.4 million people.
By Thursday, Maria's floodwaters had turned the heart of the
predominantly wood-built Juana Matos barrio into a series of waterways
more suited to boats than walking.
"It's like we're in Venice," said 69-year-old steel worker Joaquin
Rebollo, looking out across a broad channel that is normally teeming
with cars. "It was a really bad experience, really bad. I almost died of
fright."
Pitching the roof off his home and dozens of others in the area, Maria
began to work through the wiring around the house as darkness descended
across the island.
"It was like (Maria) was chewing the cables," he said, vividly making as
if to bite through power lines with his teeth.
Opposite him, residents trudged up to their knees in waters covering
what was the main highway connecting Catano with the municipality of
Bayamon further south.
Rebollo and many neighbors left their homes in the hope the flooding
that rose to four feet in some areas would recede.
Houses locked for the storm were stripped of roofs or walls. Stranded
cars stood half-sunk in driveways and satellite dishes tilted towards
the sky to receive signals that had gone.
"I peeked my head out during the storm and felt the wind - and saw the
wood, the roof, and the windows in the air," said Domingo Avilez, 47,
who took cover inside a small cement stock room beneath his mother's
house when Maria struck.
[to top of second column] |
A woman wades through a flooded street after the area was hit by
Hurricane Maria in Salinas, Puerto Rico, September 21, 2017.
REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins
By the end, the stock room was the only room left.
Local officials estimate upwards of 2,000 people live in Juana
Matos, and many too old or unwilling to evacuate watched from upper
floors as the floodwaters turned streets into stagnant canals that
seeped through their homes.
"Well, we're alive," said 75-year-old grandfather Angel Santos from
the debris-strewn second floor of his wooden home.
"These are the works of God, so there's nothing you can do," Santos
said, reflecting the faith evident among many Puerto Ricans hit by
Maria just days after Hurricane Irma left.
Even those on the edge of the flood-prone barrio in homes high
enough to avoid shipping huge quantities of water suffered brutal
incursions.
Magdalena Oliveras, a 52-year-old housewife, showed the twisted
metal blinds of her two-meter high washroom window she said had been
mangled by a deluge from a nearby building.
Lidia Espinal, 57, a longtime Juana Matos resident from the
Dominican Republic, suffered a double blow on Wednesday morning
before phone lines went down with a call from her homeland to say
her younger brother had suffered a fatal heart attack.
But Maria's presence meant she could not travel back.
"I lost everything in my house, the good things, the roof, the
windows. The stove is full of water," she said. "But the death of my
brother taught me that we can't hold on to material things. Because
life does not come back."
(Editing by Michael Perry)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |