Just as day is dawning... |
After getting ready for the day, I follow Gary out of the guesthouse and we make our way in the gray early morning light to where the plane is parked at the top of the sloped runway. Folks are already astir as we begin the preflight and some kids are hanging around, interestedly watching us check the plane over. By 6:00, we start the engine and take off for the short 15-minute flight out the valley to the long, lowland runway in Dekai.
The ramp is glistening from the last night's rain as we taxi up to our parking position. The cargo and fuel cart aren’t out yet; it’s a Sunday morning so things will probably take a little longer to get up to full-speed with operations. We shut down and Gary takes a moment to catch up on his texts and emails. Korupun of course doesn’t have regular cell service, which has actually been nice in some ways.
I undo my seatbelt and wait for a moment till Gary is done so I can ask how much fuel to pump into the tanks. But he seems to be very absorbed in something he’s reading. I notice some messages popping up on my own phone, but ignore them. Then Gary turns to me and shows me his phone. Pictures of smashed cars on AAI campus. “There was a flood last night,” he says. I quickly look back at my phone and realize the messages are images of Doyo Baru also. I pull them up and see more incredible pictures: debris piled all over the place, vehicles nose-down and half-buried in mud, collapsed buildings. “Sounds like everyone’s ok, but Hendrik has a broken leg,” Gary says with a sigh.
Our loading guys have just shown up and they have the news as well. The day’s schedule—and the rest of the week’s, for that matter— is out the window; it’s time to make immediate preparations to return to Sentani. We take on as much fuel as possible and then head back to Korupon to pick up Gary’s family and then continue to Sentani. Apart from the grim pictures, we have no idea what we’ll find upon returning. Our airbase runway is definitely gone, so we will have to land at the commercial airport. As far as getting back to campus from there, there’s a chance we’ll be walking.
It looks bad from up here; just wait till you get on the ground. |
Development above campus. Used to be houses where the river is. |
I begin slowly making my way toward the far side of campus where my house is, and I have a hard time recognizing exactly where on the campus I am. The place has been transformed from a lush green jungle compound to a sandy riverbed. Trees and undergrowth are gone and in their place are large boulders. I don’t remember those being here, I think before realizing with alarm that the flash flood had carried these huge pieces of rock along as if they were marbles.
Approaching my neighbor's and my house. |
Campus friends have told me they think my house is okay, although perhaps with some water leakage. I hope it’s true, but I try to prepare myself for the worst as I approach the building. My neighbor’s yard is filled with about 2 feet of tangled branches and driftwood. A small log is sitting against the corner of my house and my lawn is buried beneath a thick layer of muddy sand. I reach for the door and gingerly turn the key and peak inside. I almost can’t believe my eyes. It’s spotless. All around are destroyed homes or at least muddied floors, and my house has not one trace of misplaced moisture inside.
"Hitherto shalt thou come, but no further..." Job 38:11 |
I listen to harrowing accounts of that night. (Click here to read Ruth Boyd's story). Intense rain, a constant low rumble that sounded like thunder but just kept on going, a strong earthy smell, everyone fleeing their houses as water started rising, people crowding around outside the hangar and trying to find a way to get inside the locked building, the onslaught of water and debris breaching the side door after everyone had managed to get inside, water flowing through the bottom of the hangar while the families waited in darkness on the second floor, and outside, beyond the campus property, cries for help all night long. It must have been awful.
Right now it appears things are relatively stable. The decision has been made to allow the single guys to stay in my house for the time being with the warning that if it starts raining hard again and water levels rise we should head to the hangar. Only one guy decides to move in with me, as the others are too traumatized to stay on this side of campus.
Darkness arrives and with it an eerie, foreboding feeling. No electricity on campus; just flashlights. My new housemate and I get back to the house and agree on a plan for the night. I will sleep first till midnight while he keeps watch and periodically goes out to shine the light around to keep potential looters away and keep an eye on water levels. I’ve already noticed that despite the fact the rains have stopped, the small leftover streams running through campus have seemed to get wider and deeper through the course of the day. If it starts raining again, whoever is on watch will wake the other up and we’ll head to the hangar.
After getting my backpack ready just in case, I climb into bed and do my best to fall asleep. I feel very uneasy. Finally, as my few hours before midnight evaporate, I manage to doze off.
Until I hear it. Light rain sprinkling outside. I’m instantly awake, paralyzed with nervousness, willing the pitter-patter to stop. It seems to slow down; I wait. And then it starts raining heavier. And keeps raining. Heavier now.
I wonder if my friend is going to come and wake me up or if he was out walking around when the downpour started. After a moment more of waiting I make the decision that we'll leave for the hangar. I get up, grab my stuff and go out to the front of the house where I find my friend sleeping an exhausted slumber on the couch. With difficulty I wake him up, tell him what we’re going to do, and then we head out.
We stop at my neighbor Stenli’s house to make sure he’s coming too. He says he is, he’s just getting some things together first. A moment later he appears with a small suitcase and we head out for the hangar, doing our best to step across the growing streams. I can still step through some with my waterproof low rise shoes, but there’s definitely a lot more water then when we arrived.
Arriving at the hangar, we slosh through that smelly water on the floor and then climb the stairs to the second floor where we drop our stuff. Then back down to start figuring out if everyone is making it back to the hangar from their houses. Roberts's arrive. Then Boyds. A good number of people are already here, having never moved out in the first place. Finally we’re all in.
Waiting for morning on the second floor of the large hangar. |
A bleak, but still very welcome sight after a long, tense night. |
Over the next couple hours the rain slows. And finally stops. Someone shuts off the generator and everything becomes peacefully quiet. I sit up and squint through my sleepy eyelids. A faint gray light is spilling through the hangar door opening. It’s finally morning. I have never felt so relieved for dawn to come. We’re still safe.
Standard uniform for the next week. |
Yep, this is the good stuff (chocolate, not mud). |
God is our refuge and strength,
A very present help in trouble.
Therefore we will not fear,
Even though the earth be removed,
And though the mountains be carried into the midst of the sea;
A very present help in trouble.
Therefore we will not fear,
Even though the earth be removed,
And though the mountains be carried into the midst of the sea;
Though its waters roar and be troubled,
Though the mountains shake with its swelling. Selah
Though the mountains shake with its swelling. Selah
Familiar words, but in real context now. Words to repeat at night when you can hardly hear yourself think because of the noise of the rain thundering on the corrugated roof. And then a beautiful picture in the next phrase:
There is a river whose streams shall make glad the city of God,
The holy place of the tabernacle of the Most High.
The holy place of the tabernacle of the Most High.
God is in the midst of her, she shall not be moved;
God shall help her, just at the break of dawn.
God shall help her, just at the break of dawn.
In place of the terrible destructive watery deluge is this scene of a river that brings healing and peace. So different from the fearful, forceful flood that has swept away so much; instead, this is the river of life flowing from the very throne of God.
Things ever so slowly start to look up. Heavy equipment works all day long collecting debris and loading dump truck after dump truck. I move back to my house and Stenli runs a generator for a couple hours each day to briefly power the essentials in our houses. Gary and I start flying again from Sentani airport, first doing the most important flights while splitting time with important projects back at campus and then eventually resuming a slightly busier flight schedule. Then a temporary runway is smoothed out close to the hangar. It’s about the size of a grade-school soccer field, but after a couple careful passes, Gary is able to bring PK-TCA in for a safe landing. It’s an important step as we’re now able to do periodic maintenance at home base in between regular flights out of Sentani.
Parked at Sentani Airport after a full day's flying. |
For one reason or another, I’ve had a hard time calling this place that I moved to 7 1/2 months ago home. But for right now, at least, it feels closer to home than it ever has.
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