Survivors recall escape, ponder future after Europe's floods
PEPINSTER,
It "was like a tsunami,” the way it entered the house and kept rising instead of retreating, said
The family went upstairs and kept seeking safety during the night as the water climbed steadily below them. They ended up on the roof, watching.
“We started to see buildings collapsing, people on the rooftops, buildings collapsing, falling into the water,” Brasseur said.
Eventually, making their way from rooftop to rooftop, they ended up perched on one with 15 other people, waiting hours for help to come. A boat arrived to rescue the children, but it began taking on water while a makeshift jetty started to collapse. Brasseur held his sons back.
“We held out, for those nine hours,” said Brasseur, who has lived in Pepinster since he was 10. “Then it was citizens, the father of my sons’ best friend who came ... up over the rooftops and saved us, too.”
More than 180 people in
As the floodwaters subsided, attention turned to the gargantuan task of repairing the damage wrought by the storm-induced deluges — and to the immense losses faced by those in affected areas.
In Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler, in western
“This was the worst thing that’s ever happened to me,” said Wachtveitel, who was covered in mud. “Thank God everybody in our house is still alive, but it was close.”
The sounds of the water rushing into his building’s lower floors and of nearby screaming haunt him, he said.
“We heard screams from the other side,” Wachtveitel said. “There’s a clinic and the patients were trapped.”
“It took such a long time to build the restaurant to get it where it is,” he said. “And now after the pandemic, this is catastrophic.”
“We are not talking about a few thousand euros” to repair the damage, he said. “I made a rough calculation; we are talking about a few hundred thousand euros to rebuild the place.”
Romanelli, originally from the Abruzzo region of
“If I look at Ahrweiler now, I could cry,” he said. “It’s my home.”
In
In Brommelen, in the southern
“Apart from the emotional value, which I find more important, magazines, radio bulletins from 1960 until 1997 all vanished,” he said, picking up a dripping copy of a magazine from 1924 as he pumped water out of the basement.
Down the street, the Kant family's car still was partially underwater. A single rubber boot floated in their flooded garden. Professor Ijmert Kant, 62, said he was grateful for their safety. Still, he added, the task of cleaning up the debris and repairing their home was daunting.
“It’s all material. Nothing happened. People were spared, and I mean that,” Kan said, “But I’m not looking forward to the hassle of, ‘How do you repair this? How does it work with insurance?’”
In
“My gift today,” Brasseurhe said, his voice breaking, “is that my family and all the friends who we were with are still alive.”
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