Sept. 27, 2017 | Midwestern State University | thewichitan.com | Your Campus. Your News. | Vol. 82 No. 5
PHOTOS CONTRIBUTED BY DOMINIQUE NEWTON, NURSING SOPHOMORE
The aftermath due to Hurricane Maria in the Caribbean.
Hurricane Maria reeks havoc in Caribbean JUDELLE TYSON REPORTER
A
s Hurricane Maria churned through the Caribbean last Monday its first stop was a direct hit to the island of Dominica. According to the country’s Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit via a live broadcast from Antigua on Thursday, Hurricane Maria left the country in a complete disarray and it would take a very long time to get the country back to what it once was. “Every village, every street, every cranny, every person in Dominica was impacted by the hurricane. We have no running water, no electricity, very limited telecommunication services by Whatsapp mainly” Skerrit said. Skerrit went on to say that they island has never seen such destruction and it would take a long time for them to “bounce back.” Skerrit said that residents who didn’t evacuate to shelters had tried to ride out the storm in their homes, but Maria had different plans for them leading them to resort to unconventional ways to survive, himself included. “People were just exposed to the elements of the hurricane, nowhere to run, nowhere to hide. People were hiding in their cupboards....cramping themselves in their
kitchen cupboards to survive. Blanchard further expressed her concern In my case for example, I had to for her family and her put a mattress over my head with community of Point Michel two police officers to prevent the which was severely affected falling roof from coming onto by the storm and though the us,” Skerrit said. community can be rebuilt, While Hurricane Maria made it is nothing compared to it rounds students here at MSU the 18 lives lost. still had no idea if their family “My main concern is had survived the catastrophic their water and supply. storm and the longer it took for There is no running water them to hear from their loved and the roads have been ones, the more worry and fear compromised by debris so gnawed at them. going to the city to get food Radiologic technology BEYANDRA BLANCHARD and water is tasking. I’m sophomore Beyandra Blanchard RADIOLOGIC TECHNOLOGY also concerned about their said that she was finally able to SOPHOMORE safety-people are becoming connect with her family today agigated and violent,” after waiting a whole two days and this has been the most emotional she has felt in a Blanchard said. “Point Michel was one of the most severely affected communities. My while. “I spoke to family today. I finally heard family members all lost their roof and most from them a whole Two and a half days after of their possessions. The community is nearly the storm. Two and a half days had never felt unrecognizable from the footage I’ve seen. so long. This is the most emotional I’ve been The structural damage isn’t extensive and can in a long time. It’s hard to be fully focused be rebuilt. The same cannot be said for the 18 on anything while you’re wondering if your lives claimed.” All is not lost for the Dominica and family is nourished and clean,” Blanchard although the island has literally been said.
“I spoke to
family today. I finally heard from them a whole Two and a half days after the storm.”
knocked to its knee, their Caribbean brothers and sisters have already started to assist in the form of food supplies, money, clothing, and essential items. “There are NGO’s in Trinidad, Antigua, Barbados etc who have started sending aid in the form of supplies,” Blanchard said. Like Blanchard, nursing sophomore Dominique Newton was completely oblivious to the state his family was in and was finally able to communicate with his family last Friday. “I was not able to get into contact with my parents or my family up until Friday, my mom had initially went to the radio station nearby in the capital and had asked them to send out a broadcast to let her kids in the US know she was okay. My friends heard it up here and told me what she said and though I had not heard from her directly I knew that she was okay because of that broadcast, but I had not spoken to her directly and because I knew about what was going on back home I still wanted to hear from her directly,” Newton said. “I finally got to hear from her on Sunday morning and it was a huge relief, I felt like the conversation we had set my mind and my
see HURRICANE MARIA pg. 3