logo
She lost her home, cats and prosthetic leg in the Western Bay fire. But she's determined to go back

She lost her home, cats and prosthetic leg in the Western Bay fire. But she's determined to go back

CBC4 hours ago
Elsa Fitzgerald took the phone from her husband Monday evening when the emotions became too much for him to handle. On the other end, a provincial government employee repeated to Elsa what she'd told Stephen moments earlier.
Your house is gone. There are mental health supports available to you.
The rest of the call is still a blur.
"There's nothing going to replace your home," Elsa said through tears on Tuesday morning at the evacuation centre in Carbonear. "And we didn't have insurance, so our home is gone and we don't even know if we can rebuild."
The call to evacuate came late in the night on Aug. 4, as the Kingston wildfire jumped from community to community on the north shore of Conception Bay.
WATCH | 'It's all gone': This woman lost her home and her prosthetic leg in the fire, and doesn't know what to do next
'It's all gone': This woman lost her home and her prosthetic leg in the fire, and doesn't know what to do next
14 minutes ago
Elsa Fitzgerald couldn't hold back the tears as she described how overwhelmed she felt upon learning her Western Bay home was gone. She said when she and her husband fled, they didn't think they'd be gone for more than a couple of days. The CBC's Ryan Cooke has their story.
The Fitzgeralds made quick decisions as they scrambled to leave, banking on the assumption they'd be home again in a few days, just like the last time a fire ripped through a neighbouring town.
They left out food and water for their two cats. Elsa left behind her prosthetic leg, which had been giving her trouble in recent days.
"I never even thought to bring my leg. I said, well, that will give it a couple days' rest and it will be healed up when I go home. But now my leg is gone."
Elsa also left behind the leg and foot rests for her wheelchair, not thinking to grab them in the rush to get out the door.
"That's it. It's all gone," she said.
Stephen and Elsa met at trade school. They got married 15 years ago, and moved into Stephen's family home in Western Bay. He spent his entire life in the home, from the time he was born in 1971 until the frantic night they fled the encroaching wildfire.
"It leaves me stranded," he said. "There's a lot of destruction in Western Bay. A lot of stuff that was valuable to me, and my wife. I just lost everything."
Western Bay — an unincorporated town — was hit the hardest by the fire that first broke out seven kilometres away in Kingston on Aug. 3.
Premier John Hogan gave an update Tuesday morning, confirming 203 structures were lost so far, including 86 in Western Bay alone. Longtime residents say that's almost every structure in Western Bay.
But not all of them.
Joe O'Leary was told on Monday night that his home is one of the few left standing. The 84-year-old built the house 57 years ago.
"Sad thoughts. A lot of my friends have their homes gone," he said. "My wife's sister lost her house and 10 of her sheep. The post office right across the road from me is gone. Most of the guys I know, their houses, most of them are gone."
O'Leary said his home is in good shape on the outside, but he's not sure about smoke damage to the interior. If he can go back, he will. But it will always be accompanied by a solemn feeling.
"Loneliness," he said. "I mean, the post office was right across the road from me. And Cull's Store. That's all gone. I lived with that. That was there, every day, every morning, you wake up and it's there ... and now it's all gone."
For Elsa, the devastation is met with a resilient urge. Nothing can stop her from going home again.
"Oh I'm definitely going back, supposing I do have to pitch a tent," she said. "I've got a winterized tent I can borrow and I've got a wood stove that can go into it. And if I got to do that, then that's what I'm going to do. I've got to go back. That's home."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'We need spaces like this': Local Palestinians finding peace by creating community quilt
'We need spaces like this': Local Palestinians finding peace by creating community quilt

CBC

timean hour ago

  • CBC

'We need spaces like this': Local Palestinians finding peace by creating community quilt

Social Sharing If you spent some time in Waterloo Park this summer, you may have seen a group of people sitting together and embroidering a quilt. They are part of Tatreez Studio, a local Palestinian community arts organization. They spent five nights throughout the summer meeting in the park to work on The Tatreez Quilt Project, which entailed creating a community quilt using a special embroidery technique called tatreez. Tatreez is an important part of Palestinian identity. The symbols used in the patterns can instantly signal where the textile is from or where the artist who has done the embroidery is from. The theme for this year's quilt translates to: Killing the flowers does not delay spring. Part of gathering together for these workshops is to mourn the lives lost during the Israel-Hamas war. Since the war started in October 2023, more than 61,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israel's military campaign in Gaza, according to local health officials there. Tatreez techniques are usually passed down from mother to daughter says Ala' Al-Thibeh, an artist and founder of Tatreez Studio. "[Tatreez] does get passed down within families so it has been an amazing experience," she said. Using natural materials is a way to connect to the land and to her ancestors, Al-Thibeh said. She said the theme reminded her of the poppy flower. "The poppy blooms every spring, it is a symbol of resistance because no matter what is going to happen, Palestinians will continue to thrive," Al-Thibeh told CBC News during one of the workshops in Waterloo Park. Nimra Bandukwala, a community artist and co-facilitator, dyed the patches with different materials found in the Middle East. The ingredients include: cochineals, rust, sumac berries, onion skins, pomegranate, coffee and more. Bandukwala said now more than ever people mostly receive the news of the war alone on their phones and it is a challenge to be a person with compassion, empathy and openness given the updates. "So to come to a space like this … moving between laughter and heaviness, nothing really compares. We need spaces like this." The group planned to finish the tatreez quilt by late summer but the timeline is flexible. Bandukwala said the quilt will be finished when it is finished. "It will take the time it takes." Al-Thibeh looks at the collaborative exercise not just as a community-building practice or act of resistance but also a form of cultural preservation. Being a tatreez artist, she said, "has connected me in a way I never thought I'd be connected to others, especially through social media." Al-Thibeh said she has taught and learned from people around the world. The group hopes the quilt will be part of a traveling exhibit.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store