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Flood!
27 september 2008
Hi! Well, now we are unfortunately at an Internet cafe, because of the flood that has hit our city of Longzhou, and especially our college! (for the first time since the 80's!) It has rained for a few days non-stop because of the typhoon that was in the area, and yesterday all of a sudden Tomas saw a lot of activity in town. Turns out the market in town was totally flooded. Then we went to the river area, and we saw that the river has risen 8 meters, suddenly! (The river flows from Vietnam, and apparently the water was coming from there especially). Then late in the evening the school's soccer field flooded, and then this morning (we were supposed to have had class) we woke up and looked out, to a lake growing right in front of us! The water was apparently rising 40 cm/hour. So, within a few hours, half the campus was totally flooded. Our building is still okay, because it is up on a high plateau of cement. We were supposed to have class, as I said, but before we knew the whole situation, Tomas called our dean to ask if we would have class or not. He said, "No, you know, the students are trapped in their dorms..." Then we went out and watched as firemen came to rescue students. First, they had to cut away the bars in front of the windows, and then they had to help them down with tall ladders, because the flood waters had filled the stairways. I was just hoping nothing would catch fire as they slowly worked to free the students... Also, flooding in China is especially dangerous, because most people here are afraid of the water and do not swim. This afternoon we watched a girl walking in deep water from her dorm, and we watched as she lost her footing and fell backwards, in panic. Tomas almost jumped in the water to help her, but she righted herself. Now at night, they have put up tape around the worst areas so people do not unwittingly walk into them at night and drown. We have been without electricity now for about 24 hours, so it is getting hot in our apartment and it REEKS from the sewage that is probably backing up in the city. But, we have a third-floor apartment so we are lucky. People on the first floor are not so lucky, as their places are now flooded. Also, some students told us that they are frightened, especially since most people cannot sleep in their dorms, so they will sleep in their classrooms. One student asked Tomas, "Do you believe in ghosts?" Chinese people are often quite superstitious, so not only are the students afraid of the flood itself, they are afraid to sleep in the dark in the classrooms due to other, unseen, dangers! People have been hauling things around on homemade boats (two tires and a bamboo ladder has needed to suffice in most cases), men (in thigh-deep water) have been carrying their wives through their water, and others haven't been quite so lucky--like the dead roosters we have seen and the piles of cockroaches floating by in the water. This evening we watched people paddle a boat across the lake that was the soccer field. This coming week is China's national day, and so we have a week with no classes. We had planned to go to Vietnam, but people are very nervous about the condition of the roads here, so we have decided to go north within our own province instead. We will make it to Nanning first, hopefully, and then take it from there! Although people's apartments and property are under water, and people on our campus are tired from running around saving material things, at least they are safe. Once again, that is always the most important thing! We just wanted to report on the situation...no need to worry about us! Except for starting to long for a shower and a cool fan, we are fine. Take care! love Rachel & Tomas
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