Saturday, April 30, 2011

Quiet after the Storm- Tuscaloosa, AL

I usually try to update on a continual basis so those who enjoy my work have the opportunity to check it out on a continual basis, but the past few days have been more than trying and I'll explain why.

Keep Alabama in Your Prayers

If you haven't heard Alabama was hit by a major tornado that ripped through the entirety of the state. As student at The University of Alabama I was a witness to the devastation of the tornado (but thankfully not the brunt of it). The dorm I work in has way too many glass windows on the first floor so we carted the majority of the students onto the second floor hallway.

The alarm system for the university went off notoriously late (about thirty to forty minutes before the actual tornado hit) leaving a majority of students still on campus either stranded or unable to check on friends and loved ones. Thankfully, this was a blessing in disguise, divine intervention, coincidence, pure luck, etc for those who were on campus.

We had major difficulty hauling all of the children in the dorm into one main location. You just have those people who don't take natural disasters as seriously and it's not without merit. Previously, every time a storm or tornado watch was issued for The University nothing happened. I would assume this left most students indifferent to the potential danger coming their way. Whatever the reasoning was, this the tornado of April 27th, 2011 proved to be one of the most devastating natural disasters in the south since Hurricane Katrina.

A few our misfit students hid out at the top floor of the building to get a better glimpse of the entire scene. They had the privilege of being the first students in the dorm to see the tornado first hand when it touched down near Bryant-Denny Stadium.

From here most would have assumed the tornado would have made a B-line for The University and we would have been right in line of its path, but the tornado veered off its supposed course completely leaving The University untouched and its student's safe.



Unfortunately, other parts of Tuscaloosa were not so lucky. The tornado decimated 15th Street and Mcfarland Blvd, the main hubs of Tuscaloosa activity except for Campus and downtown Tuscaloosa. Places kids were use to visiting such as University Mall, Krispy Kreme, Hobby Lobby, and Rite-Aide had been either completely swept off the map or torn apart.

Still, the city of Alberta fared much worse than Tuscaloosa. The entire scenery has been destroyed to the point you could not tell it was ever standing. Adding to this, thousands have been injured or are in need of medical attention. So far the official death toll for Alabama is 86, but that number is steadily rising since they are only counting bodies with confirmed identities. The death toll for the tornado across state lines is much larger pushing past 300+.

Immediately when the storm hit we lost all power on-campus. The lights in the dorm flickered then a few seconds later went pitch black. The feeling was surreal. As you looked outside towards the rest of campus you could only see pitch black save the few flickers of light in distance from Rose Towers, a student based apartment building on the outskirts of campus.

The back-up generators came to life leaving us as the only building on campus with lights. Still, they had never been used for such a large emergency so how long they would last stood as an issue. From the outside we looked like a beacon calling others in. It wasn't long before other students streamed in along with our own residents. One friend of mine, Trey Moe, lost everything but the clothes on his back and his sense of humor. When he made it over to my building he recounted how the tornado flipped his bathroom tub over him. He got buried under a small amount of debris, but he was overall intact. The same couldn't be said for the majority of his belongings.


Other affected students roamed in since we were the only area on that side of campus that at least had lights, but around 3am I had my fill so I opted to hit the sheets.

The next day upon waking up I was urged by fellow students and individuals outside of the problem zone to get out and document as much of the aftermath as possible.

Going out into the rubble of what was left was a site I had seen since the earthquake I lived through when I was a child in Los Angeles. Many spots in Tuscaloosa stood true to their mark, but certain areas had a Mad Max-esque atmosphere. The terrain was the same, but the touch of tornado left everything off place.

For a few miles you could see into the horizon. Hundreds of people (students, Tuscaloosa residents, police, volunteers, etc...) littered the streets. It was equivalent to a deathly tourist attraction. Live wires still hung limp on the ground. Pipes were half-bent as water continuously sprayed onto the streets. Workers and police had already populated the scene, but not enough to stop the incoming individuals surveying the damage of the storm.

I walked for about four hours photographing and got around 500 pictures and I want to share some of those I think best portray the situation,

Sectioned off Zone

Down and Under

Craddle

A Closer View

Sewer

The Lake on 15th

Housing

Vantage Point from 15th Street Lake

Volunteers

Wideshot of Disaster

Behind a house

Roll Tide

Everyone

Foraging through the wreckage

TX0



The Remnants of 15th

Missing Clothes

Where We Stand

Lost Lives

What's Left

You can check out the Crimson White article of the entire event HERETo check out this set of pictures on flickr check here or here.



4 comments:

  1. Xay, what a horrible mess...so sad. You did an amazing job photographing the damage. I'm sorry you had to see all of this but your pictures will be around so that people won't foget the absolute strength of Mother Nature and they will take shelter when an alarm is sounded. Well done.
    Kindly,
    Leah

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  2. Thanks for the documentation, X! I knew you would have something together. (I had a longer post but it got lost in my transition from generator power to real power.) I should have been in Tuscaloosa during this time, but due to a sequence of events (most of which were quite frustrating at the time, even involved a long conversation with a sheriff's deputy who came after me, long story...) I wound up in my hometown helping out with my mom. Still, I did set out for class Wednesday afternoon. 3 miles down the road I gave up -- there was just too much debris in the road, 3 hours of driving... probably not a good idea. Just then, tornado warning directly in line for the little community where I live. Got home, got Mom, got to the basement...

    I've been dealing with so many practicalities of caring for my mom and making sure she was okay while the power was out that I haven't been able to catch up on anything about Tuscaloosa. Your page was the first one I came to. Again, thanks for the documentation. I'm about to go scan the missing lists. Kinda dreading that.

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  3. @Leah

    It's been a lot going on this way. What I hope does not happen is (after tonight's disclosure of Osama being killed) the plight that is going on in Alabama is completely overshadowed. Also, thank you very much Leah

    @G

    Be glad you ended up going back. Had you been on campus you would've been alright, but anywhere else in the main Tuscaloosa area and you may not have been as lucky.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Older sister of Radio, Beta Eta '04May 3, 2011 at 2:49 PM

    Ran across your blog via iamthenublack. As a fellow Alabama native and UA alum thanks for the coverage. Keep up the Great Work!

    ReplyDelete

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