Such Great Heights

Because everything looks perfect from far away.

The Wildfires. August 29, 2007

Filed under: Family, Greece — Clink @ 9:25 am

fires1.jpg

In many ways, Greece has always felt more like home than any of the other places I’ve lived: New Jersey, Manhattan, the suburbs of Philadelphia, London. 
 
My family is fortunate to have a house there, on a beautiful island, in a small town where everyone knows your name and then some.
 
I could kick myself for being the bratty teenager that I was, stomping my feet about the fact that we had to go to Greece again, and why didn’t we go to the Caribbean or Hawaii or Florida or the shore like the rest of my friends? Why couldn’t we be like everyone else? I’ve never even been to Disneyworld, Mom and Dad! GOD!
 
My kids will probably give me much of the same, pouting and complaining and wanting to be “normal.” They won’t realize until a little later that most people would kill to be “abnormal,” to go to Greece every summer of their lives to a house just a block from a crystal clear ocean and sand so white and fine it feels like sifted confectioner’s sugar between your toes.
 
Many of you have emailed about the fires, to inquire as to my family. That means a lot to me. The fact that you took time out of your day to shoot me a “hey, is your family okay? What’s going on with your mothership?” email just reinforces the fact that y’all are so awesome.
 
My heart is broken for the lives lost, the towns destroyed. Luckily, my family is fine.
 
Initially, I dismissed the fires as the media playing up something that is so commonplace in Greece. We have had wildfires on our island, Kefalonia, almost every summer that I can remember. And, while it is a terrifying sight to see fires raging up on the mountains, normally it looks more threatening than it really is. In fact, there’s only one summer I can remember that it threatened us directly.
 
I was going into third grade at the time, woken in the middle of the night by my mother urging me to put on my sneakers and grab a few of my belongings – things that would’ve been inconceivable to live without at the time, like Pink Dog and my journal. Also, Gameboy.
 
They rushed us down to the ocean, where many in the town had gathered. It looked like an impromptu beach party, without the laughs. Everyone was drinking wine. I remember being carried by my father down the road that led to the beach and sneaking a look back at the fires that were closer than I had ever seen before. Smoke so thick that everything beyond our orange and lemon groves was not visible, not even in the slightest. Miles and miles of road and homes and hotels leading to the mountain that looked like they had just been erased.
 
We were lucky enough to have a rich and generous uncle who ferried everyone out to his yacht, docked in the Ionian, where his staff served bread and feta and olive oil and ouzo.
 
I remember crying because my grandmother and my great uncle – hearty Greek stock that they were and are – refused to leave. They were going to resist the fire with garden hoses. They had worked hard to build the house that still stands, the place where we go every year, that gorgeous refuge, a maze of white washed bedrooms and marble baths and beautiful verandas and balconies off of each room. My mother and father pleaded and begged, to no avail.
 
To hell if they were going down without a fight.
 
My parents – of less hearty Greek American stock – weren’t taking any chances.
 
We stayed on the yacht until the early morning, until the relentless dumping of water from the planes overhead finally made some headway, until it seemed safe to return home.
 
We went back to the house, to my grandmother who was already cooking the afternoon meal, shaking her head at the “idiot shepherds.” She was cursing in Greek and in English; she rarely ever cursed in either language.
 
Apparently, the fires – on our island, at least - are usually set by shepherds so that the grass will grow fresh for their herds. Idiots, indeed.
 
I don’t know if that’s the case in the fires that are currently raging in Southern Greece. There has been a lot of speculation. I do know, maybe, why some have died: we Greeks are stubborn.
 
I read about a couple who perished because they refused to abandon their only donkey. They rejected a drive to safety in a police car because of a donkey. That’s love, that’s loyalty. That’s also part of the problem.
 
My parents’ (American?) sensibilities told them to get out and fast that summer. My grandmother and great uncle’s Greek sensibilities told them to defend, go down with the ship. Luckily it all worked out for them but that story could have had a very different, very tragic ending, as it has for so many in Greece recently.
 
I read about the graves being dug for a mother who died with her arms around her children, a teacher who died in a futile effort to shield her students, people too sick or disabled to flee in such a short period of time. I cried at work. These are my people and many of them are in peril and the government is playing a blame game. It’s oddly Katrina-esque, on a much, much smaller scale.
 
I’m not a very religious person, but bless everyone over there that has been affected.

fires2.jpg

 

19 Responses to “The Wildfires.”

  1. Molly Says:

    That brought tears to my eyes…

  2. Sass Says:

    Wow. What an amazing story. I’m glad your family is OK.

  3. libby Says:

    i’m happy to hear your family is ok. my prayers are with those in greece too - i thought of you when I heard the story!

  4. A Lil' Irish Lass Says:

    I’m not a religious person either, but everyone in Greece is much in my thoughts. I am very happy to hear that your family is okay and, at least physically, unaffected by this tragedy.

  5. Michelle Says:

    As Libby said, I heard about the fires yesterday on the news and thought of you. I wasn’t sure if your family was near the destruction, but I’m glad to hear they’re ok!

  6. Tilly Says:

    Many blessings.

  7. Hope Says:

    Clink, that was a very special post. I have been trying to find the words to express how I feel about this tragedy but can’t. One of the Sunday papers front page in Athens was simply a black page with the words “Den uparxoun lekseis” (There are no words.)

    Your post really touched me.

  8. ...BeccaLynn Says:

    I remember, not that long ago, You said that you have a huge heart and anyone that is lucky enough to have you love them is loved so much.
    I just think that this is evidence of this. You feel love for an entire country of people going through a very difficult time.

    I’m very sorry that this is happening. My heart breaks too that this is happening, so many beautiful homes being destroyed. So many beautiful people being hurt. Thank you for this post, it let me be reflective, if even for a moment throughout my crazy day.

    By the way, You should feel very lucky that you actually have a ‘home’ in Greece. I’ve only once been out of the south of the U.S., and never been out of the country. Very lucky indeed.

  9. nicole Says:

    This was a very powerful piece - I’m so glad your family is OK. I just got back from Greece a few days ago (had spent 2 weeks on Spetses) and it’s so devastating what has been happening there. What *is* inspiring is how the EU countries are coming in to help — if only it wasn’t so awfully, awfully dry there, as you well know.

  10. DG Says:

    Oh Clink, I SO meant to email you and ask about your family - I’m sorry I forgot. But I am happy that they are ok. Every morning when I watch CNN I am horrified by the images of the people that are so close to the fires and are fighting the authorities that tell them to evacuate. It’s because the people from Greece have a heart - that’s very apparent. My thoughts go out to them during this difficult time.

  11. BaianaFalsa Says:

    the images on the news are heartbreaking. it’s like these are fires of biblical porportions… maybe now IS the time 2 get religious?

    my heart & prayers are out to your family and anyone else there.

  12. Peter Says:

    Glad that your family is OK.

    The story with the mom with her arms around her kids… That one is rough.

  13. lisa Says:

    I’m glad to hear everybody is okay! And I’m totally jealous of the cotton candy sand!

  14. onebigholiday Says:

    I’m so glad your family is ok. I almost started to cry reading this.

  15. cdp Says:

    Wow. I don’t have words for this.

    Glad to know your family is okay.

  16. Ellie Says:

    I too wondered about your family when I heard about these terrible fires; I’m glad they’re all OK. How undescribably sad for those who have lost homes, pets, possessions, and worst of all, lives.
    What an awful feeling to be up against nature, to largely have no control over it and be forced to sit and watch, knowing there is very little you can do against such ferocity. And to think that a number of these fires were deliberately lit - it just makes your blood boil. Here’s hoping they get them under control sooner rather than later, before any more devastation…

  17. aernyc Says:

    So glad to hear your family is ok, what a horrible tragedy. Hopefully your family will remain safe and that the fires can get under control. I had a few close calls myself when I lived in Texas, frightening to be so helpless in front of something so consuming, so devastating.

    PS. Not sure if I’ve ever actually commented, love reading your posts though!

  18. caitlynintherye Says:

    You know, when I heard about the fires I immediately thought of how you’d written that your family was there. I’m glad their ok, relieved really. And the post was sad, but beautiful.

    Thanks Clink.

  19. Lioness Says:

    A few years ago the whole of Portugal seemed to be burning, dead animals everywhere, houses destroyed, lives forever changed in ways I can’t even imagine, and we watched it burn, helplessly. I remember having been called to go to a wolf sanctuary to try and anaesthetise and remove as many as we could. We could see the hills across from us all ablaze, and the hills behind, steady line sof fire that were entirely too close. This was 30 min away from Lisbon but the fires were of such magnitude everywhere that my flat in Lisbon was filled with smoke, and I left the keys with a neighbour, just in case, bcs my 2 cats stayed behind. In the end we only managed to grab a few wolves, they are wild ones, live in huge holdings, it was night already, they are shy of people and very wary of smoke, it was impossible to dart them. In the end I knew that if the wind turned we could all become trapped there, and I knew that even if we made it the majority of the wolves (there were about 20 then) would be burnt to death. We were lucky, ours were lucky, the ones from the natural reserve right below us weren’t. Most died, along with the deer etc. It felt, that Summer and the one after, that it would be impossible for any trees to stand afterwards, for any wildlife to remain.

    In Portugal, almost all fires are arson, for cheap lumber. I often wish, and I do not bloody care whether it’s bad karma, that the arsonists are trapped in the fires they start. It also doesn’t help that the Portuguese have no notion regarding safety measures, eg, keeping the area surroundung the houses free of bush. But no matte. I stopped watching the news years ago, too much grief, but I often think of the Greek and offer a prayer because whenever I catch a glimpse of them on the telly I recognise those faces, their peasants are my peasants, their fear and despair at having to fight huge fires alone is the fear and despair of my people, their livelihood so resembles that of ours. It breaks my heart and I pray for their safety, and for rain. We have been lucky this year, the coldest in 20 years. We will one day stop being lucky and then those faces will be ours again.

    KALI TIHI to us all.

Leave a Reply