JAN 2:
A little boy stuck in
a treetop seeing his mother die before his eyes. A weeks-old
baby found floating on a mattress in her family’s restaurant. An
80-year-old Indian veteran of Britain’s colonial army leading
his family to safety on a 10-mile trek through a dense mountain
forest. Survivors of Asia’s killer waves faced heart-rending
choices, terror and grief. Their miraculous survival provides
hope amid the carnage. Here are some tales of resilience:
NAGAPPATTINAM, India - Fisherman G.M. Veerappan and
three of his children survived the tsunami by clinging to the
remnants of his demolished home: a pole stuck in the ground.
“My eldest
daughter climbed on my back. I took the younger two in my arms
and climbed onto the lone pole that remained after our house was
destroyed,” he said.
As the water
roared around him, Veerappan clung on desperately. But the
fierce waves pounded against him, pummeling him with debris.
“There was no
proper grip and I was slipping. After one hour, I lost all
strength and dropped the two younger kids. I cried and cried,
thinking I had killed my children,” he said, shuddering at the
memory.
After a few
hours, rescuers reached Veerappan, and pulled the father and his
6-year-old daughter to safety as the waters began to recede.
When Veerappan
came ashore, rescuers told him they had also found his two
younger sons, ages 4 and 2. Unconscious and barely breathing,
they had been discovered at the water’s edge, half buried under
sludge.
The family,
now reunited, is staying at a makeshift shelter at a marriage
hall. His wife and two other children were safe at a relative’s
home.
“Nobody can
explain how my children survived,” he said. “I am still
wondering why God chose to save my children when he chose to let
so many other children die.”
*****
PORT
BLAIR, India - At 80 and with a career in the British
colonial army and India’s military behind him, Sheetla Prasad
thought he was through with marches.
Then on
Sunday, as Prasad was having tea with his wife, his tea cup
began shaking - and the Asian tsunami sent him on a backbreaking
trek for survival in India’s remote Campbell Bay islands.
“It was like
the old days, in the army - but my body was not the same. I
thought I would die,” said Prasad, a frail man with thick white
stubble.
When he saw
the sea roaring toward him, he shouted at his wife, two
daughters-in-law, and three grandchildren to run uphill. He
grabbed a machete and a few precious possessions and followed
them up.
Within
minutes, the waves had flattened his home, and he faced a stark
choice: Die there with his family, or lead them through
mountains covered in thick, dark foliage.
“I used my
machete. I started hacking the bushes. I didn’t even look back
to see if my house was there or gone,” he said at a relief camp
in Port Blair, the territory’s capital, his family at his side.
For two
nights, the family took shelter in the huts of farm workers. On
the third day, they dragged themselves through the forest,
walking more than 10 miles with blistered feet.
They stopped
only to have fruit plucked from trees, coconuts and water from
natural sources.
On the third
evening, they reached the docking site of a relief ship.
*****
BANDA
ACEH, Indonesia - After the waves swept him up,
10-year-old Ardiyansah found himself on top of a tree.
His tale of
survival is also one of heartbreak.
“The last
thing I saw was my mother drowning while crying out my name, and
I didn’t even see my little sister,” said the boy, who had
bruises on his knees but was otherwise uninjured.
Ardiyansah
spent two hours in the tree waiting for water to recede. A man
arrived and helped him down.
The boy then
started searching for his father, staying at the houses of
strangers. After three days, they found each other.
The father
said the boy had a vision of his mother after her death and
couldn’t sleep until a Quran was put under his pillow.
Ardiyansah
comes from Lampu Daya village, the most populated housing area
in Banda Aceh. Only about 20 percent of the people in the
neighborhood survived. Of the boy’s 60 schoolmates, only four
are still alive.
*****
PENANG,
Malaysia - When the waves hit, the baby girl’s parents
were flushed out of the restaurant they owned on the beach of
this northwest Malaysian resort.
S. Tulasi, not
yet a month old, had been taking a nap when the calamity struck.
She was found hours later floating on a mattress inside the
restaurant.
“We know this
was a real miracle, thanks to God,” said her mother, Annal Mary.
“So many other children who died, but our baby was OK. She could
have been swept out to the sea.”
Mary and her
husband found Tulasi when they swam back into the wrecked
restaurant.
The parents,
who have lived by the sea their entire lives, said they have no
plans to move.
*****
PHUKET,
Thailand - When the raging waters subsided, 7-year-old
Karl Nilsson thought he had been transported to another city.
And when he looked around, the parents and two brothers who had
been with him moments before had vanished.
Now Kalle, as
everyone calls him, is being cared for by another Swedish
family. His parents and two brothers were among the more than
1,500 people killed when the tsunami lashed this resort.
“All night,
when he heard the noise of a truck or car, Kalle woke up and
asked me, ‘Is it another wave coming?”’ said Marie Guldstrand, a
Swedish doctor who has been taking care of Kalle since she and
her family found him in a Buddhist temple where survivors had
sought shelter.
Kalle, wearing
only underwear, was suffering from a broken collar bone, bruises
and cuts. He screamed as a medical worker stitched cuts on his
feet without an anesthetic.
When the
tsunami struck, Kalle was in a hotel room with his two brothers
- Olof, 5, and Vilgot, 3. His parents, Thomas and Asa, were
outdoors.
Suddenly a
torrent of water surged into the room.
“He told me,
‘I was under the water but somehow I could breathe. I was just
closing my eyes and moving with the waves. Then, suddenly the
flood ended and I was in another city,”’ Guldstrand said.
He wandered
around by himself and was eventually helped by some Thais and a
Swedish couple who took him to the temple.
*****
COLOMBO, Sri Lanka - Fisherman Sini Mohammed Sarfudeen
clung to his capsized boat for three days after the tsunami
struck. He was rescued when the crew of a Sri Lankan air force
helicopter spotted him at sea.
The aircraft
had been on a mission to drop food to 300 people cut off by
floodwaters when its crew noticed him hanging onto his boat off
Kalmunai, 140 miles east of the capital, Colombo.
“He told us
that since Sunday he had been floating in the sea,” Group Capt.
Ajantha De Silva said. “His condition was bad.”
Sarfudeen was
taken to the hospital in Kalmunai, where many people flocked to
the beach to watch the rescue.
“It was good
to see that the man had the will to live, and this is what saved
him,” said Dr. Fazlul Rahman.
*****
MALE,
Maldives - Mike Rigg, a construction worker from the
Liverpool area in Britain, was surfing off the resort island of
Lohifushi in the Maldives when the tsunami hit.
“Suddenly
there was a 2-meter-high surge in the waves and a very powerful
current started rushing along the island,” said Rigg, 33. “I was
dragged along with it but I managed to stay out of the middle of
the current. I thought the main thing was fighting to stay out
of the middle.”
Rigg was
carried along for about 160 feet before he found the water had
become shallow enough for him to stand, and he battled his way
to shore.
He said the
incident happened too quickly for him to be frightened.
“In a
situation like that you just concentrate on doing what you have
to do to get out of it,” he said.
*****
AUROVILLE, India - A premonition about floods led an
Israeli couple living in an international community in southern
India to build their house on stilts - a move that saved them
from the fury of the tsunami that tore through the region this
week.
Yuval Skoles
and his wife, Hannah, moved from Israel 20 years ago to live in
Auroville, a spiritual retreat community, near the former French
colony of Pondicherry on India’s eastern coast.
When Skoles
began building his beachside compound, his wife had dreams about
floods, so he built the main house on stilts 5 meters (16 feet)
above the ground.
In a part of
India where ocean surges and tsunamis were unheard of before
last Sunday, it was, frankly, a bit odd.
“It’s the only
house of its kind on the coast,” Yuval Skoles said.
When the
tsunami struck, the couple was in the main house. Their
daughter, her husband and son were staying in a guesthouse - at
ground level. The tsunami swamped the guesthouse.
His wife urged
him to jump into the raging torrents to rescue their daughter
and grandson; she even threatened to jump in herself. But they
were nowhere to be seen.
“For 45
minutes I thought I had lost my daughter,” Yuval Skoles said.
But his
daughter and her family had sought refuge inside a hilltop Hindu
temple. They later walked back to the A-frame house on
whitewashed concrete stilts.
They lost most
of their possessions, and they have a lot of rebuilding to do.
But Yuval
Skoles said he was happy. After fearing his family had died and
then learning they had lived, he said nothing can get him down.
“Everything is
great,” he said.
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