Eclipsed by tragedy
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Ellen McCarty
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -- In many cultures, eclipses are believed to be
omens of great change. Resident Dr. Colleen Fitzpatrick didn’t realize
how much the eclipse would shake up her recent visit to Turkey to view
it, but she’s thanking her lucky stars that she survived the Aug. 17
earthquake.
Every few years, Fitzpatrick makes a pilgrimage to view an eclipse
from its shadow edge, where the sun’s border appears florescent pink, she
said. This year, after viewing the eclipse on Aug. 11, the 44-year-old
traveled through Turkey for several days and ended up in Istanbul on the
night the 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Izmit, about 50 miles away, she
said.
“I woke up and my hair was standing on end,” she said. The four-story
hotel building was rocking, she said.
She stood in a door frame until a member of her tour group yelled to
her that the building might collapse, and they had to get out of the old
building.
“I could just see three stories of concrete collapsing on me,” she
said. “I thought I was going to die.”
The hotel was still shaking as she climbed down the stairs and reached
the lobby, she said. Finally, the earthquake stopped, only to be followed
by four aftershocks, and she joined the crowds of startled people
standing in the street in their pajamas. It was 3:02 a.m.
“For the first time, I felt what it was like to be a refugee,” she
said. “I was tired and cold and just hoping for a chance to sleep, or for
a warm jacket.”
Once her hotel was inspected early that morning, Fitzpatrick retrieved
her shoes and belongings and hit the streets.
There were hundreds of people in a park, but it was only later that
she realized they weren’t there to enjoy the sunshine. They were setting
up tent shelters.
She spoke with many residents who had lost their homes.
“One woman’s flat had completely collapsed, and she was delirious and
worried about her parents, who were also homeless,” she said. “I wish I
had stayed and volunteered for the relief effort. I wanted to bring them
medical supplies and jackets, but I was so tired.”
Her homelessness lasted only 24 hours before she flew back to the
United States, she said, and only then did she realize the extent of the
disaster.
“My family was hysterical,” she said. “And when I realized how many
thousands of people had died, I cried.”
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