Survivors of deadly Maui blaze face displacement after displacement: ‘I live a nomadic life’
Four months after the deadliest US wildfire in modern history, thousands of people have yet to find stable housing
When Charles Nahale checked into a one-bedroom time-share condo in Kapalua Bay, a tourist mainstay on Maui's north-west coast, in mid-October, front desk staff told him he would only be staying for 12 days. Nahale, a Native Hawaiian musician who had lost his west Maui home in the ferocious wildfire of 8 August, wasn't surprised by the blunt notice: he'd been bouncing from hotel to hotel, often at a moment's notice, under a sheltering program run by the Red Cross and the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
After the move, Nahale turned his pickup truck into a storage unit - part closet and part pantry - filled with boxes of clothes and nonperishable food. He brought only toiletries and essentials into the hotel suite. When he was hungry, he went to the truck to grab a can of tuna. A ukulele, a guitar and a set of work clothes were the only possession he was able to save from the fire. I live a nomadic life," said Nahale, who's in his 60s. What's the point of unpacking if I'm moving again after 12 days?"
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