Booker has provided countless earthquake-related stories in the fifteen months since then. And in Saturday's Herald he reflected on the feelings of Cantabrians when the earth moved again on Friday afternoon. It's an excellent piece (one which he hadn't seen until this morning), so we are reproducing it in full:
Fooled again.
I was sure these damn earthquakes had finally run their course. I had let my guard down. Even though living in Christchurch this year had taught me not to.
For a few seconds, I couldn't quite believe it was happening again as my two-storey flat shook violently in the 5.8-magnitude quake and I struggled to stay on my feet.
Judging by other people's reactions in this quake-ravaged city yesterday, many thought the same way.
After a year in which big quakes ripped the heart out of the city, surely we had suffered enough. Surely it would not strike again in the holiday season.
But it did. Just as people were starting holidays, finishing their Christmas shopping, or winding down with a drink on the last day of work. The physical damage may not be as bad this time round, but it is another psychological hammer blow.
People are not just shocked, as they were when the previous big quakes hit.
They are angry. They had started to return to normality, begun repairing homes and restarting businesses, were looking ahead to a relaxing break - then abruptly they were snatched back to the hellish days of February and June.
People were again spilling out of buildings, fighting through traffic gridlock, frantically trying to reach loved ones on overloaded phone networks, crying and embracing each other in the streets - and all while the aftershocks continued throughout the afternoon.
Suddenly liquefaction was the buzz word again - small fountains spewing out more of the water and sludge that became so familiar in the previous quakes, deluging streets and properties.
Robin Thompson summed it up as he trudged around his sodden section: "No one wanted this for Christmas."
Of course, many will again be questioning whether they can stay in Christchurch. Especially those families coping with terrified children. And who can blame them?
But most of us will stay, knowing that eventually there must be an end to it all. Even amid yesterday's shakes there were signs of the resilience that defined the city's people after the previous disasters.
Pensioner Norma McKenna, 85, could still manage a smile as she showed the Weekend Herald around her liquefaction-hit property yesterday.
She had just walked back from the local supermarket where, during one of the quakes, "my trolley moved and another lady helped me so I wouldn't fall down".
Her home is still under repair from the previous quakes; now her driveway is flooded and she has fresh patches of sludge across her section.
Mrs McKenna won't let it ruin her Christmas, and I'm sure others won't either. But once again, we will have to be on guard.
Jarrod Booker is right on the money when he talks about the resilience of the folk of Canterbury. In all probability, those that have stuck it out this far will stay, and those that stay will see Christchurch rebuilt into a vibrant, modern city.
Their resilience will have its reward; of that we have no doubt whatsoever.
1 comment:
The earth wobbled.
Ho hum.
Move on folks (accompany your wallets to Christchurch).
Everything to see there, nothing here.
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