[Introductory remarks posted at Rumor Mill News: One of my
friends, kt Frankovich, was in Hurricane Andrew.Her account of it is one
of the most riveting stories you will ever read.I tried to find one or two
snippets from her work that would grab your interest... After being "glued"
to her writing for about an hour, I realized that if I didn't choose something...
anything... and post it, I would be reading all night and never get this
message to you!
Kt survived hurricane Andrew. Kt was a television producer
with friends in the business. After she walked out of the dead zone, she
contacted them and told them what really had happened... which was a FAR
cry from what had been reported by the media. They would not run her story.
You can't even imagine what her story is like. I can't tell
her story for you... no one can tell it like kt can tell it. You really
HAVE to click through to her webpage and read ALL of it to fully understand
what Andrew did... and probably what Charley has done.
I have clipped and pasted a small section from her book.
This section follows her account of hearing the announcement on television
that Andrew had changed course and was headed directly at her area. Within
minutes, Andrew hit. Only God kept her and her son alive.
Here is a snippet that begins after Andrew hit, destroyed
her apartment building, devastated the surroundings, severely injured her,
and turned the survivors into walking zombies:]
*****
Hurricane Andrew (August 23, 1992)
from the book "Where Heavens Meet" by k.t. Frankovich.
Within hours of the sun making its appearance, the stench
of putrid death began to saturate the hot air. Remains of dead bodies and
body parts lay scattered all about. I stepped on something oddly strange
that caused me to stop. When I looked down, I thought the small hand belonged
to a doll. But as I stood there staring at it, I realized I was wrong. The
small severed hand was human.
The horror there to haunt me for the rest of my life...
Twelve other survivors wandered into our area that day. A
few had survived from the complex like us but the others straggled in from
elsewhere. Each one suffered from shell shock, too traumatized to speak.
We hugged each other repeatedly, not wanting to let go. The touch of another
human being seemed to be our lifeline. Unselfishly we shared in tears that
wept over and over again. Clinging to each other as we waited for help to
arrive. We'd speak a few words, then suddenly stop, suspending them without
finishing the sentence. We couldn't communicate coherently. Some, like myself,
were in dire need of emergency medical treatment. But there was no way to
escape the endless aftermath. Andrew had gobbled up our cars and spat them
out junked. My son's Astro Van rolled about the parking lot with a full
size tree speared through the interior. Massive gnarled roots jutted out
the rear door. Roads had disappeared out of sight. Telephones were a thing
of the past. Without water or bandages, there wasn't much we could do, other
than sit there and wait in the suffocating heat.
So, we waited and waited. Each hour passing by wretchedly
slow, while it took ten long days for President Bush to summon the Federal
Troops to South Dade with life sustaining supplies. Unknown to us, twenty-one
communities in South Dade had been completely devastated. Roped off from
the outside world by Metro Dade Police and military soldiers armed with
semi-automatic rifles, we had no idea what was happening beyond our immediate
area. Like little children, we truly believed emergency help would quickly
arrive. Airlifting out the injured and bringing necessary supplies. The
agonizing minutes dragged into hours, and hours dragged into days. No rescue
teams showed up. Slowly we had to accept the ghastly truth. No one was coming
to rescue us.
It was the worst, gut-wrenching betrayal I have ever experienced.
Where were the emergency rescue teams? Where was our government? Where were
our families? Where were our friends? Why didn't anyone come? We had no
water, no food, no medical supplies, or shelter. When the hot muggy skies
clouded with afternoon thunderstorms, we huddled together under any make-shift
shelter we could find. Lightning bolts blasted our shell shocked minds,
while our bodies shook with each approaching squall.
The stench of death tormented us with each passing hour.
Reeking the humidity with foul rotting flesh. It saturated our nostrils
deep into our throat, causing us to gag with each breath that we took. Just
within our immediate vicinity, the area within walking distance, over seventy
dead bodies were discovered. I watched a military personnel truck make its
way slowly past me, carefully steering around felled trees and smashed roof
tops, as it rolled out of the trailer park area on the morning Andrew ended.
Uniformed soldiers stared at me blankly from the rear of the vehicle, where
filled body- bags lay stacked on top of each other.
Soon thereafter, thick torrential black smoky clouds rolled
across the grove headed in our direction. The stench of burning flesh mixed
with lime descended so rapidly we didn't have time to react. The rolling
smoke blanketed us and choked us with coughing fits. Continuously blowing
our way for days on end. Metrozoo was burning dead bodies around the clock,
at the back of their property. Five days into the aftermath the fires still
raged on, while we gagged on thick dark mucous being coughed up from our
lungs.
Insurmountable problems escalated with each passing hour.
We had no sanitation facilities. What little water we managed to find was
contaminated. We competed against rhesus monkeys and big apes searching
for salvageable food. Asbestos dust blanketed everything. Rusty nails poked
us. Slivers of broken glass pierced our every touch. And then, there were
the nights ...when we moved about in total blackness constantly attacked
by swarms of mosquitoes. Cock roaches and scorpions took over. Rats ran
rampant. Snakes slid out of nowhere. As the unbearable temperatures climbed
higher and hotter, colonies of maggots nested in rotting food and animal
corpses. And, it wasn't long before armed looters began to infiltrate.
Hurricane Andrew
This section includes chapters 24-28 from the book "Where Heavens
Meet" by k.t. Frankovich.
Chapter 24
The largest natural disaster ever recorded in the history
of the United States is Hurricane Andrew. It struck South Dade, Florida,
on August 23, 1992. The United States Coast Guard Station,
located just off SW 152nd Street in South Dade, recorded the sustaining
winds at 214 mph, just before the wind measuring instruments broke. What
you are about to read is the actual account of Hurricane Andrew as it slammed
into South Dade unexpectedly. The exact location of where this account occurred
was less than one block from the above mentioned Coast Guard Station.
"We interrupt this program to bring you an emergency
alert from the National Broadcast Emergency Center! This is an emergency
alert! I repeat, this is an emergency alert! The outer winds of Hurricane
Andrew have just reached the Florida coast. Hurricane Andrew has unexpectedly
shifted five degrees south. I repeat, Hurricane Andrew has shifted five
degrees south. Andrew is expected to strike South Dade within minutes. I
repeat, Andrew is expected to strike South Dade within minutes. All South
Dade residents should take immediate cover. I repeat, all South Dade residents
should take immediate cover. This is an emergency alert."
I sat on the couch, scared out of my mind, as the television
repeatedly blared out the emergency alert just minutes before midnight.
My twenty-five year old son Eric, stood a few feet away, staring dumbfoundedly
at the television screen like a mute statue. He arrived home about fifteen
minutes prior to this, exhausted from working a double shift. His mouth
suddenly dropped open but no sound came out. My hands began to tremble so
badly that I accidentally dropped the cigarette from my hand. I leaned over
and picked it up, noticing how my legs shook too. The National Hurricane
Center had previously forecast Hurricane Andrew to strike Broward County,
coming ashore either at Palm Beach or Ft. Lauderdale. The distant coastal
communities were north-east of South Dade, far enough away for us to remain
safe. The news media advised South Dade residents to expect gusting winds
in the vicinity of 50 mph, without any significant flooding to the low lying
land. Taping windows or boarding them up had been advised as a precaution
against flying debris. We decided to board ours because the windows faced
the grove.
For days I knew the ferocious storm was going to unexpectedly
hit South Dade. Whenever I walked into the lime grove, I experienced one
premonition after another of the destruction that lay ahead. I repeatedly
warned Eric about the premonitions. We discussed seeking shelter in a concrete
warehouse located in North Miami. A huge rock-solid building used by his
band to store equipment in as well as a sound proof place to practice. Ideal
for us to ride out the hurricane for the simple reason the building had
no windows. Location wise, it wasn't ideal because North Miami resided closer
to Palm Beach and Ft. Lauderdale.
On the day of August 23, Eric found himself bombarded by one
problem after another at his place of work. His position as store manager
made him responsible for resolving the unexpected dilemmas. He called that
afternoon offering to drive me to North Miami with our animals. Stating,
he would not be able to remain at the warehouse with us. He didn't have
a choice about returning back to work. His boss wouldn't grant him permission
to take the rest of the day off. Not when the day proceeded to unfold with
one urgent problem after another. I sensed if Eric did this, he'd end up
stuck in South Dade. Often his job required him to work sixteen hours straight
through. By the time he got off work he'd be way too tired to drive. Forcing
him to spend the night alone in the apartment, while I remained stuck at
the warehouse. That wasn't something I wanted to risk with Andrew coming
ashore. My son and I needed to stay together regardless of where we were.
As I leaned over to put the cigarette out in the ash tray, the emergency
broadcast blared, "All South Dade residents are advised to stay put.
Do not attempt to leave the area!"
Our pre-fab apartment building was not much bigger than a
double width trailer. It had been constructed to safely withstand 90 mph
winds but anything exceeding that was considered to be unsafe. At that precise
moment I felt as though I were trapped in a plane flying thirty thousand
feet above ground, and the captain had just informed us that the wings had
fallen off. "I repeat, Hurricane Andrew has shifted course. The monstrous
storm packing sustaining winds of 175 mph, with gusts expected higher, is
not coming over the Broward County as forecast by the National Hurricane
Bureau. Dade County is now under emergency alert. All South Dade residents
are advised to seek shelter immediately!" "Oh-my-God! Oh-my-God!"
my son suddenly blurted out."What are we gonna do! Oh-my-God, why didn't
I listen to you! Oh-my-God!" I looked at him as calmly as possible.
Swallowing hard, I tried to steady my voice in a whisper, "We're gonna
survive this mother if it's the last thing we do. Move the piano up against
the front door. Come on. We haven't got much time!" "Oh-my-God!!"
he gasped again in horror."Hurry, Eric!" I insisted, raising my
voice to a command. "Shove the piano against the door. Wedge it between
the couch so the door can't fly open. Come on. We haven't got any time to
waste."
As I watched Eric react to the shock of Hurricane Andrew bearing
down on us, I didn't realize I was slipping into shock too. Our safety now
hinged on a plan I had rehearsed earlier during the day. The lights suddenly
flickered as Eric pushed the piano across the living room floor. "Make
sure it is squeezed in between the door and the couch as tight as it can
be," I said quickly. With a sudden rush of adrenaline he pushed and
shoved, wedging the heavy piece of furniture tightly into place. We could
hear the winds suddenly start to pick up at an alarming rate. Each passing
second hurled stronger and stronger gusts against the living room wall.
The lights began to flicker on and off. Hurricanes weren't new to me, I'd
been through them before. But I had never seen one hit this way. Hurricane
winds gradually build in strength over a period of hours. That was not the
case with the approach of Hurricane Andrew. Although the wind had started
to pick up in the late night hours, we hadn't noticed any significant indications
for sudden alarm. When the emergency alert aired on television, within minutes
of the broadcast, Andrew struck out of nowhere exactly like a deadly tornado.
The four dogs lay on the floor, watching us with darting eyes
and twitching ears. None of them dared to move. Their uncanny behavior signalled
approaching danger. Suddenly the living room walls began to shake as if
an earthquake struck! I grabbed our sleeping cat, trying to scream over
the sound of the wind, "Grab the dogs! Throw them in the laundry room!
Hurry!" I raced to the laundry room just off of the kitchen and scooted
around the twin bed inside. Without hesitating, I opened the lid of the
washing machine and put Piedmont in, closing the lid back again. Eric was
right behind me, shoving two dogs into the small cramped area as fast as
he could. Back to the living room I dashed, grabbing the third scared dog
by the collar. Too scared to move he wouldn't budge an inch. I pulled and
dragged him to the laundry room, refusing to give up. Our giant schnauzer,
the only remaining dog in the living room, jumped to his feet and bolted
wildly through the apartment. Eric frantically tried to catch him but the
frightened dog escaped. "Stop it, Higgins!" I heard Eric shout,
just before the darting toward the hallway. He lunged at the dog but again
the animal managed to escape. The lights went out leaving us in pitch darkness.
With the third dog safely in the laundry room, I felt my way
back to the living room in hopes of finding the flashlight that had been
lying on the wicker table. The moment my fingers brushed up against the
familiar object I grabbed it and switched it on. The stream of light lit
up the living room.
"Higgins!" I heard Eric yell behind me. I turned to see the terrified
dog backed up against the bathroom door. The instant Eric grabbed the dog's
collar all hell broke loose. The floor beneath our feet began to shake and
rumble!
Eric quickly shoved Higgins inside the bathroom and closed
the door before rushing back to the living room. He took the flashlight
from me and stood in the middle of the room and listened. Waiting to see
what was next. We could hear Hurricane Andrew bearing down on us as it careened
through the lime grove! Slamming into us with the force of a speeding locomotive!
The horrendous wall of winds crashing against our apartment like an exploding
bomb!
The exploding impact sent glasses flying off the kitchen counter, shattering
into the quaking floor! Hanging pictures suddenly plunged straight down
the walls toward the ground! The huge hanging mirror crashed on top of the
television set, spraying the living room with shattered glass! The entire
apartment looked like the inside of a train, shaking fiercely, as we rumbled
down a railroad track! The screeching winds transforming into the shrill
monotone hum of a jet engine! Sounding as if we had been sucked inside!
So deafening, all other noises ceased to exist. It looked and felt like
a monstrous earthquake-and-tornado hitting us at the same time!
"J-E-S-U-S C-H-R-I-S-T!" Eric screamed at the top
of his lungs. The horrifying sight was unbelievable. The entire apartment
was shaking apart.
We stood just a few feet away from each other but I could just barely hear
him over the jet engine winds. I opened my mouth to scream back to him when
suddenly a gust of wind pushed me backwards. Eric instantly turned toward
me with the flashlight shining on his face, yelling, "Did you feel
that?"
"Yes!" I screamed with all my worth, hoping he could hear. "What
the hell was it?" he yelled, turning to shine the light on the front
wall. When the light beam hit the heavy metal front door my heart sunk.
The steel door looked like a piece of wet limp paper. Peeling down backwards
into the apartment. Down-down-down, it steadily rolled until it reached
the top of the piano and stopped. It couldn't roll any further because of
the piano pushing against it, backed by the heavy sectional couch extending
to the kitchen wall. The line of furniture created a pole like effect holding
the door in place. But it wasn't going to hold for long. All the living
room walls shook from the ungodly force outside.
"H-O-L-Y S-H!!" Eric screeched, staring at the incredible
peeling door. We could look directly outside. Raging, swirling clouds glowed
in a ghoulish mint-green color! Monstrous bolts of green lightning flashed
above us, whipping and sizzling through the hellish skies faster than the
eye could follow! The sight of it took my breath away! The horrendous hum
of the winds made it impossible to hear any sound of thunder! One bolt after
another furiously exploded through the raging clouds! Dumping sheets of
driving rains through the eerie sight! Spraying machine-gunned raindrops
faster than the eye could follow!
I felt the sting of rain hitting my face as I stood there paralyzed by fear.
Somewhere in the background I barely heard Eric screaming, "I don't
believe it!" He cautiously took a few steps toward the open doorway.
"Eric! Get away from the door!!" I screamed at the top of my lungs.
He didn't hear me. "Get away from the damn door!" I frantically
screamed again.
All of a sudden he turned to look at me. In the flashlight
beam I saw a crazed look cross his face. An expression of utter horror?
"GET BACK! GET BACK!" he yelled, wildly waving his arms like a
madman! "GET THE HELL BACK!" Before I had time to wonder what
he was screaming about, I heard the sound myself. It sounded like a gigantic
missile speeding directly toward us! And within a split second, I experienced
the horrible sensation of knowing we were about to die. I tried to move
my feet but they would not budge! I stood frozen in sheer terror. My entire
body locked firmly into place. Aware that Eric stood by the door, off to
the right side of the room. So terrorized, he could not move either. Time
came to an abrupt halt. Instantly shifting from slow-motion action to stilled
freeze-action. As if every single movement, every individual sound, slowly
dragged on forever, from one frame to the next. My mind exploded with, "Oh
shit! It's an electrical transformer pole!"
The gigantic two-story cement transformer pole torpedoed through
the roof! Exploding the apartment upon impact! I watched from beneath as
the living room ceiling buckled down into a perfect "V" shape,
taking forever as it sagged grotesquely downward, bulging at the seams,
until finally rupturing from the force of the titanic weight! The monstrous
concrete column steadily plunging down toward me! While the shattered roof
hurled log-size beams at me from all directions! And, enormous chunks of
plaster board came crashing down like breaking icebergs! The massive cement
transformer kept falling in line with me! Slowly, but steadily, aimed for
my head! When suddenly out of nowhere, a flying roof beam crashed into the
left side of my face! Knocking me off my feet and tossing me into the air!
Pitching me away from the deadly transformer pole! I caught a quick glimpse
of the transformer pole suddenly change direction just before crashing to
the floor! The mighty winds sucking it back up! Straight up! And, hurling
it out into the night! It disappeared from sight within a split second.
Potted plants flew past me! Clothes sucked up in whirlwinds
flew into the night! Chunks of speeding plaster zoomed right before my face!
My body suddenly slamming into the sectional couch! I toppled from the cushions
and fell to the floor! The adrenaline pumping so quickly, I automatically
struggled to get back on my feet! The pounding winds and driving rains repeatedly
knocked me over! But I couldn't be stopped! I struggled not to choke on
the warm gushing blood pumping inside my mouth, not knowing my jaw was broken!
I looked up just long enough to see the winds whip through the tiny kitchen,
snatching up everything in sight! A forty pound bag of dry dog food went
flying through the air and slammed into the sink, exploding upon impact!
My computer flew straight up and disappeared out of sight! My manuscripts
vanished in whirlwinds of paper! Within a split second a lifetime of work,
thrown to the voracious jaws of Andrew!
The second roof beam crashed into the side of my head before
I could move! As I fell toward the mound of debris covering the floor, a
third roof beam slammed into the back of my head! Each blow so powerful
that the optic nerves to my eyes were instantly torn on impact. I lost consciousness
by the time I hit the floor. Although I don't know how long I was out, when
I came to there was the sudden realization the apartment had been annihilated.
The roof had disappeared and along with it, most of the interior walls.
The piano now lay upside down in the mass of tangled debris. Flying objects
hurled through the night slamming into what had once been the living room.
I rolled over to discover I was lying on top of a dead lime tree. The branches
snagged into my torn soaked clothes and stubbornly refused to let go. Big
pieces of twisted metal and sheared boards darted through the air like deadly
spears, aimed for any target that got in the way. So much water covered
the floor that I lay in a stream of floating debris.
It took several seconds before I realized I was now wide open
to the hurricane. Demonic green skies raged directly above me, spewing lightning
in every direction. The driving rain stung bitterly as it pelted against
my skin. The damnable wind so ferocious I could barely breathe, much less
move. My entire body ached in excruciating pain. I cringed with horror when
I touched my arm. Big chunks of glass had impaled me like protruding knives.
Embedded so deeply I could not pull them out. My dazed thoughts snapped
back to attention when, through my blurred vision I noticed, one of Eric's
high-top sneakers float by. "Where is Eric?! Oh-my-God, where is Eric?!
Jesus-God, where is he?!" my mind erupted.
Driven by an incredible force I struggled to my feet, swaying
unsteadily in the bombarding winds. Aware that at any given moment I could
be swept up and hurled out into the deadly night. But that didn't matter.
I had to find Eric! Both eyes were almost swollen shut. I strained and struggled
to see shadowy forms nearby but I barely had any field of vision left. My
mouth so swollen I could barely swallow. It startled me to discover some
of my teeth missing. The taste of gushing blood made me nauseated but I
couldn't take the time to vomit. I had to find Eric! I tried to open my
mouth to scream against the horrific forces but couldn't. My lips had swollen
shut. I was frantic! I couldn't see or hear Eric! "Oh-my-God! Where
is he?!"
Eric crouched just yards feet away from me, screaming at the
top of his lungs! Trying as hard as he could to see through the blinding
sheets of rain! His every instinct telling him that I had been sucked up
by the winds! Thrown out into the night to die a death too horrible to imagine!
"OH-JESUS-GOD-HELP-ME!" he screamed out hysterically. But the
jet engine roar sucked up his voice, making it impossible to hear. "M-O-M!
M-O-M!? OH-GOD-MOM! PLEASE ANSWER ME!" Alone and terrified out of his
mind, he kept on shouting for all he was worth. Tears streaming down his
agonized face making it more difficult to see. "J-E-S-U-S! G-O-D! M-O-M!
ANSWER ME! PLEASE! SOMEBODY ANSWER ME!"
Out of the corner of his eye, he saw something move by the
floor. He turned and crawled over the debris as fast as he could! Trying
to stay close to the ground! The instant he caught a glimpse of my silhouetted
body struggling to stand, he lunged forward! Grabbing me with all his might!
And, struggled to hold on for dear life! "I THOUGHT YOU WERE GONE!"
he yelled directly next to my ear. "GOD, I THOUGHT I WOULD NEVER SEE
YOU AGAIN! ARE YOU HURT?" I nodded no, unaware I was in so much shock
I did not realize the extent of my injuries. He hugged me tightly and yelled,
"WE HAVE TO TRY AND MAKE IT TO THE LAUNDRY ROOM! GET BEHIND THAT WALL
SO THE WINDS DON'T SUCK US UP!" What laundry room, I thought? We still
have a laundry room?
He locked his muscular arms through mine holding on as tight
as he could. We slowly crawled through the floating debris, inch by inch,
while the winds pounded us without mercy. To my surprise the laundry room
wall was still barely standing. The sagging ceiling threatened to rupture
at any given moment. Above the ceiling another hidden danger lurked. An
attic that stored heavy trunks threatened to crash down upon us. Streams
of water gushed down the walls like miniature surging waterfalls. But the
most horrifying thing of all stalked us relentlessly just beyond the doorway.
Andrew fiercely hammered away at the kitchen! Lashing out driving rains
and pounding winds into our tiny shelter! The entire apartment had been
gutted.
All three of our dogs nervously greeted us with whines and puppy kisses.
Our fourth dog, Higgins, was not amongst them. It was impossible for us
to know if the bathroom was still in tact, or whether it had disappeared
into the night. Knowing that our beloved animal had been shoved into it,
with the hope of protecting him from harm, was too painful to face.
Only fifteen minutes into Hurricane Andrew ... totally isolated
from the outside world ... defenseless against the nightmare from hell ...
forced to accept our fate. There wasn't a soul in the world who could help
us. It felt as though the earth had tilted on its axis. We didn't have a
shot in hell of making it out alive. In the pitch darkness of the tiny laundry
room, we hugged each other as tight as we could, and whispered the only
words that seemed important in lieu of our inevitable parting. "I love
you, Eric. I always have and I always will..."
"I love you too, Mom... God, I love you!?"
Time seemed to stop, fading into the only thing that was lasting.
Nothing had ever been more important than our love for each other. Our simple
words felt comforting, like a warm snug blanket tucked all around us, despite
the horrid threat of death. During those early morning hours the force of
the winds ripped two corners of the foundation away. The battered building
threatened to flip! The floor coming right up off the ground, rumbled and
shook wildly before crashing back down! Tangled in a maze of dogs and flying
debris, we flew through the air helplessly! Crashing from wall-to-wall!
While huge gaping cracks sliced the floor wide open and gouged out crater
size holes.
The eye of the hurricane saved our lives. It missed us by
six blocks. Once it passed by, the winds shifted, bearing down from the
opposite direction. Andrew began to hammer away at the other side of the
building. We desperately hoped the two remaining corners would hold, knowing
what would happen if they didn't. By morning, over six-and-a-half-hours
after the first winds slammed into us, we were more dead than alive. We
looked like ravaged zombies who just couldn't seem to die.
The last of the powerful gusts ripped through what had once
been our apartment complex, now levelled to massive piles of scattered debris.
Eric and I crawled out of the wreckage as soon as it was safe. Only to discover
a badly wounded male baboon huddled on the ground close to us. His bloodied
face a portrait too horrifying to describe. Every step we took posed a dangerous
risk. The ground, a mine field just waiting to be detonated. Tangled debris
hid electrical lines winding through felled branches like huge slithering
snakes. Razor sharp daggers of ominous glass guarded the forbidden battlefield.
Rusty nails jabbed upright, ardently perched at attention for unsuspecting
feet. Broken gas lines gnarled their way through mounds of twisted scraps.
The earth no longer colored the ground in pleasing tropical
greens. Rubbished beneath an endless garbage dump, the grass like everything
else, stripped of all life. Stark bare trees lay lifeless in anguished silhouettes.
Their brittle skeletons, the ugly remnants of all that remained. The stilled
hushed air tolled in the silences of death. Hell's fury had purged South
Dade.
The Hiroshima horror reached beyond catastrophic. Miles and
miles of residential communities bombed off the face of the earth. The eerie
silence deafened us. Too terrifying to endure. Even the once familiar aromas
vanished without a trace. Our shell shocked minds had nothing to identify
with. Our senses, nothing to be comforted by. Like prisoners of war trapped
within a battle zone, we plunged deeper into shock with each passing moment.
I stood in the midst of the wreckage, where the parking lot once had been,
just standing there blankly staring at the endless gruesome sights. Nothing
but twisted debris as far as the eye could see. No sights or sounds of human
life close by or in the distance. I stood there quietly waiting ... waiting
for people to appear. Not able to accept that what I once knew as my home
had so quickly been destroyed. And, all the while there were no signs of
any other life.
The rain ran down my battered face and dripped onto my blouse.
A garment now of ragged cloth clinging to my body. I felt nothing but the
presence of silent emptiness. A vast tomb that defied life. Within hours
of the sun making its appearance, the stench of putrid death began to saturate
the hot air. Remains of dead bodies and body parts lay scattered all about.
I stepped on something oddly strange that caused me to stop. When I looked
down, I thought the small hand belonged to a doll. But as I stood there
staring at it, I realized I was wrong. The small severed hand was human.
The horror there to haunt me for the rest of my life...
Twelve other survivors wandered into our area that day. A
few had survived from the complex like us but the others straggled in from
elsewhere. Each one suffered from shell shock, too traumatized to speak.
We hugged each other repeatedly, not wanting to let go. The touch of another
human being seemed to be our lifeline. Unselfishly we shared in tears that
wept over and over again. Clinging to each other as we waited for help to
arrive. We'd speak a few words, then suddenly stop, suspending them without
finishing the sentence. We couldn't communicate coherently. Some, like myself,
were in dire need of emergency medical treatment. But there was no way to
escape the endless aftermath. Andrew had gobbled up our cars and spat them
out junked. My son's Astro Van rolled about the parking lot with a full
size tree speared through the interior. Massive gnarled roots jutted out
the rear door. Roads had disappeared out of sight. Telephones were a thing
of the past. Without water or bandages, there wasn't much we could do, other
than sit there and wait in the suffocating heat.
So, we waited and waited. Each hour passing by wretchedly
slow, while it took ten long days for President Bush to summon the Federal
Troops to South Dade with life sustaining supplies. Unknown to us, twenty-one
communities in South Dade had been completely devastated. Roped off from
the outside world by Metro Dade Police and military soldiers armed with
semi-automatic rifles, we had no idea what was happening beyond our immediate
area. Like little children, we truly believed emergency help would quickly
arrive. Airlifting out the injured and bringing necessary supplies. The
agonizing minutes dragged into hours, and hours dragged into days. No rescue
teams showed up. Slowly we had to accept the ghastly truth. No one was coming
to rescue us.
It was the worst, gut-wrenching betrayal I have ever experienced.
Where were the emergency rescue teams? Where was our government? Where were
our families? Where were our friends? Why didn't anyone come? We had no
water, no food, no medical supplies, or shelter. When the hot muggy skies
clouded with afternoon thunderstorms, we huddled together under any make-shift
shelter we could find. Lightning bolts blasted our shell shocked minds,
while our bodies shook with each approaching squall.
The stench of death tormented us with each passing hour. Reeking
the humidity with foul rotting flesh. It saturated our nostrils deep into
our throat, causing us to gag with each breath that we took. Just within
our immediate vicinity, the area within walking distance, over seventy dead
bodies were discovered. I watched a military personnel truck make its way
slowly past me, carefully steering around felled trees and smashed roof
tops, as it rolled out of the trailer park area on the morning Andrew ended.
Uniformed soldiers stared at me blankly from the rear of the vehicle, where
filled body- bags lay stacked on top of each other.
Soon thereafter, thick torrential black smoky clouds rolled
across the grove headed in our direction. The stench of burning flesh mixed
with lime descended so rapidly we didn't have time to react. The rolling
smoke blanketed us and choked us with coughing fits. Continuously blowing
our way for days on end. Metrozoo was burning dead bodies around the clock,
at the back of their property. Five days into the aftermath the fires still
raged on, while we gagged on thick dark mucous being coughed up from our
lungs.
Insurmountable problems escalated with each passing hour.
We had no sanitation facilities. What little water we managed to find was
contaminated. We competed against rhesus monkeys and big apes searching
for salvageable food. Asbestos dust blanketed everything. Rusty nails poked
us. Slivers of broken glass pierced our every touch. And then, there were
the nights ...when we moved about in total blackness constantly attacked
by swarms of mosquitoes. Cock roaches and scorpions took over. Rats ran
rampant. Snakes slid out of nowhere. As the unbearable temperatures climbed
higher and hotter, colonies of maggots nested in rotting food and animal
corpses. And, it wasn't long before armed looters began to infiltrate.
While we remained roped off from the outside world by Metro
Dade Police and the military, the news media reported grossly understated
information from the first day onward.
On August 24, 1992, the morning Hurricane Andrew ended, the
Miami Herald's headlines broke with:
Andrew Hits Hardest in South Dade. Five thousand people
were left homeless by the storm, Metro Dade Police Director announced.
They'll be moved into shelters in North Dade.
August 25, 1992, Miami Herald's headlines read:
Destruction at Dawn. Among worst hit in the Country
Walk area of South Dade, few homes escaped at least minor damage and many
were utterly destroyed. 10 killed in Dade.
August 27, 1992, Miami Herald's headlines read:
The Toll Rises. 22 dead as the search continues. 63,000
homes destroyed. 175,000 homeless. 1 million without power.
August 28, 1992, Miami Herald's headlines read:
WE NEED HELP. Relief effort collapsing due to United States
inaction, Metro charges. Aid us now or more will die, Feds told. As Dade
County's hurricane relief effort neared collapse Thursday, more than 1,500
airborne U.S. soldiers were ordered into the county to cope with what
is now being called the worst natural disaster in the United States history.
The move came after a day of bitter snipping among agencies that share
responsibility for the relief effort.
United States Aid Official, Wallace Stickler, stated, "Andrew
has caused more destruction and affected more people than any disaster
America has ever had." Dade County's Emergency Director pleaded for
federal help, one angry voice among many that spoke in the dire terms
of needs unmet. Frustrated to the point of tears, Kate Hale said, the
relief project was on the brink of collapse, a victim of incompetence
and political games. "Where the hell is the cavalry on this one?
We need food! We need water! We need people! If we do not get more food
into the south end [South Dade] in a very short period of time, we are
going to have more casualties!" "We have a catastrophic disaster,"
Hale went on to say. "We are hours away from more casualties. We
are essentially the walking wounded. We have appealed through the State
to the Federal Government. We've had a lot of people down here for press
conferences. But Dade County is on its own. Dade County is being caught
in the middle of something and we are being victimized."
"Quit playing like a bunch of kids and get us aid!
Sort out your political games afterward!"
On the same day Hale made the desperate plea, Miami Herald
Staff Writers, Martin Merzer and Tom Fiedler, wrote:
The question echoed through the debris Thursday: If we can
do it for Bangladesh, for the Philippines, for the Kurds of northern Iraq,
why in God's name can't we deliver basic necessities of life to the ravaged
population of our own Gold Coast? The short answer: Because no single
person or agency is in charge. The result: A plane load of food and equipment
is still a rarity. Instead of delivering goods, helicopter pilots shuttle
government officials who just sit idle. Metro police turn away individuals
trying to bring in food or water to a barren South Dade.
August 29, 1992, six days into the aftermath, the Miami Herald
read:
Problems Plague Red Cross. The man on the phone
wanted to donate 100 electric generators, extension cords and enough tools
to build a small subdivision. But the operator who took his call at the
Red Cross Command Center in Miami had no idea what to do with the offer.
"We get a call, we take a message, we give it to somebody, who signs
it to somebody else," said the operator, Melitta de Liefd. "We
have no idea what happens to it. The whole place is being run by senior
citizens and college kids."
Welcome to Red Cross headquarters - where the brains of
Dade County rescue effort have been knocked almost unconscious most of
the week. Callers offering services and supplies are put on hold. Others
can't get through at all. The hurt and suffering plead for help over ham
radio.
August 29, 1992, one full week after Hurricane Andrew struck,
the Sun-Sentinel reported 250,000 people homeless in South Dade.
The children in our small group were pathetic. Their small
faces mirrored horror and fright. A six-year old blind boy joined our small
group of refugees the day after Andrew ended. He and his mother lived in
a trailer across the road from us. The same huge community trailer park
that the military truck had picked up bodies from. Most families were sleeping
in their trailers when Andrew unexpectedly careened through the lime grove
charging at them. Somehow the little boy's mother managed to drag him outside
a split second before the monstrous winds squashed their trailer flat. They
spent the long horrifying night outside, desperately clutching the grounded
hitch, holding it with all their might! The mother, lying on top of her
terrorized child fought for all her worth. By morning, the entire trailer
park was bulldozed into the ground. It wasn't even recognizable. The bodies
of two dead teenagers lay sprawled out in plain view. Other mutilated bodies
laid tangled in debris. I never saw the little boy let go of his mother's
dress during the three weeks I was with them. He clutched it as tight as
he could and always hid behind her. Any loud noise instantly threw him into
the shakes. The poor little fellow lived in constant fear. So scared, he
cringed whenever anyone touched him.
There were two more children we found, who were hidden beneath
the debris at our complex site. When their apartment began to explode apart
their mother threw them in the bathtub and crawled in on top of them. She
screamed at the top of her lungs all through the horrifying night, begging
God with all her might to spare her precious babies! The shattered roof
caved in on top of her, burying them in debris. She saved their lives but
by the time Andrew ended, she had completely lost her voice. She couldn't
utter a single sound for over a full week. Her children didn't speak either.
Animals suffered right along with us. A critically injured
horse stood quietly nearby, with a sawed off two-by-four board impaled all
the way through his neck. There was nothing we could do to help put him
out of his misery. And so, he stood and stood, until he finally toppled
over to the ground. Where he lay there gasping for breath in the excruciating
heat.
Within twenty-four hours after Andrew ended, the twelve survivors
of our group, including our animals, broke out in big raw oozing sores that
burned and itched at the same time. We had horrible headaches, which made
us so nauseated we got the dry heaves. Our stomachs cramped badly from sudden
onsets of diarrhea. There wasn't any toilet paper available. With the soaring
high temperatures, and no water to replenish our bodies with, we dehydrated
very quickly. This added to our misery. The symptoms continued to persist
for well over three months. I often think what a coincidence that Hurricane
Andrew did one-hundred-million dollars worth of damage to Florida Power
& Light Company's Turkey Point Nuclear Power Plant, damaging smokestacks
so badly they had to be demolished immediately, a grim reminder of the Chernobyl
tragedy. So strange, considering we were situated within the thirty-five
mile perimeter of Turkey Point Nuclear Plant.
About the fifth day into the aftermath, a Red Cross jeep came
into our area. The young driver wasn't on a mission to transport the injured
out of the devastation. His sole objective was to assist with minor injuries.
He inspected the chucks of glass still impaled in my skin, not knowing quite
what to do about the situation. All the while, ignoring my severe facial
and head injuries. Finally he asked three young men from our group to hold
me down on the ground. He proceeded to make incisions with a scalpel knife
and remove the glass. When finished, he discovered that he didn't have any
stitches in his First Aid Box to sew up the deep wounds. Neither did he
have any gauze bandages or antibiotics. With no means to stop the profuse
bleeding, he tore a dirty shirt into strips and used them as bandages. He
drove away that day never to return.
On the tenth day of the aftermath, the Federal Troops
finally made an appearance. President Bush made a very brief appearance
at Homestead Air Force Base and so did Presidential Candidate Bill Clinton.
With a great show of force the military set up food stations for the survivors
to walk to. Struggling to carry packaged food back to our site was no easy
chore to do in 90+ degree heat. Clothes donated by outsiders were promptly
dumped on the wet ground. Where they remained strewn about in heaps for
the survivors to take. The clothes quickly became soaked with mud and smelly
mildew from daily rains and constant high humidity. We already wore wet
mildewed clothes so what was the point of gathering up more? We had no place
to wash them or store them. Medical help was limited, restricted to the
confines of mobile units, which were stationed sporadically throughout the
devastation. Trying to get there by foot posed the same problem we had with
trying to collect food. Our dehydrated bodies were way too weak to walk
in blistering sun. Especially with bad injuries and the dysentery that constantly
plagued us.
Three weeks into the aftermath, Eric and I tried to escape
the devastation on our own. Homeless and penniless, and with no insurance
to cover our losses, we slowly made our way north toward Broward County.
Our only possessions were the clothes on our backs and our beloved animals.
The long agonizing journey turned into another nightmare from hell.
Our fourteen year old beloved German Shepherd died in my arms
one week later. Our beloved Higgins, who was shoved into the bathroom, survived
Andrew but due to bad head injuries, we lost him shortly afterward.
Over 4,000 names were listed as Missing in Andrew when we parted South Dade.
I lost twenty-three pounds during those wretched weeks of being trapped
in the aftermath and still had not received any medical attention. Little
did I realize it would take another three weeks before a doctor would even
agree to see me without any money or identification. By then, six weeks
had passed since I had been injured. Most of my teeth turned a putrid gray
color because the nerves had died as a result of the fierce blows. The final
heartbreak came when a doctor discovered both my optic nerves had begun
to die off. Which meant, as a result of the severe head injuries, I was
going blind.
I buried my heart in South Dade during the year of 1992. My
home and friends disappeared right off the face of the earth, like the lime
groves I had loved so dearly. Never would I see them again. Just three months
previously I had witnessed the most incredible sights of a lifetime, right
there, beyond my front door. Sights of unexplainable beings, so wondrously
phenomenal, I would always remain truly in awe of them. The groves now gone
and with them, what little tangible proof I had of the encounters. For gone
was the invaluable business card belonging to the Federal Agents, who relentlessly
kept a vigil on me during those last few months.
Chapter 25
It may affront the military-minded person to suggest
a regime that does not maintain any military secrets. ...Albert Einstein
The official number of dead listed from Hurricane Andrew is
ludicrous. The news media botch-ups inadvertently fed and nourished the
massive military cover-up right from the start. Both worked hand-in-hand
creating a beast that ultimately manipulated the world and the survivors.
Tragically, the final results stemming from the cover-up served to inflict
more pain on those who had already suffered the most. Namely, the families
who lost loved ones and the already wounded survivors.
Why the survivors? Well, individuals who suffer from severe
shell shock need to heal. The only effective means of healing from mental
trauma is to talk about it. Communicate it. Release the horror inside. Psychologists
and psychiatrists will agree. The inevitable situation created by the cover-up
is that survivors cannot speak the truth because the world does not believe
them. Doesn't this have the familiar sound of Vietnam? What the survivors
lived through and witnessed does not jive with what the world was intentionally
led to believe. Trying to tell the truth under these conditions doesn't
work. The survivor is tagged as either a liar or a loony. Six of one, half-a-dozen
of another, it doesn't really matter. At the end of the day the truthful
guy is silenced. This is the crux of all major cover-ups. It works. It's
fast. And, it's efficient. A nice tidy little package all wrapped up in
one.
This is a specific example of what I mean. Recently, I received
a long distance telephone call from a friend in the State of Arizona. They
spoke of homeless shelters there, which housed a few Hurricane Andrew survivors.
Survivors who are now catatonic and who are also homeless. This makes logical
sense considering those who have lost the ability to communicate can't possibly
hold down a job. The end result being that they are forced into the streets.
Quickly becoming another face amongst the millions of homeless. Such a pitiful
ending for those who survived so much. Yet, from the point of view of those
who intentionally designed the cover-up, victory has been achieved.
No lie or cover-up merits a human life, regardless of how
important it may seem to be. Life is the most precious gift on the face
of this earth. To intentionally destroy it is an inhumane atrocity. Hitler
taught us many painful lessons we need to use wisely. Another major factor
that fed the cover-up resided in the ethnic groups populating South Dade.
The devastated areas were inhabited by a large number of Spanish speaking
Cubans and Mexican migrant workers, who spoke little or no English. This
presents problems with communication all over again. How does one convey
the truth when one speaks a foreign language?
At the time Andrew struck, the State Attorney of Florida was
Janet Reno. Her office located at the Dade County Courthouse in the City
of Miami. The President of the United States was George Bush and the Vice-President
was Dan Quayle. Bill Clinton was running for Presidency, with Al Gore running
for Vice-Presidency. The late Lawton Chiles was Governor of Florida. His
successor turned out to be Jeb Bush, the current Governor of Florida who
ironically enough is President Bush's son. In addition to this, Texas Governor
George William Bush (who is running for the next Presidential election)
is also the son of former President George Bush. To get a realistic handle
on what it was like to survive the aftermath of Andrew consider this. What
if, immediately following the tragic Oklahoma bombing, the building had
been roped off from the public without any survivors having been removed?
And what if, those survivors had to fend for themselves for ten long days
without any food, water, or medical supplies, no matter how badly they were
injured? Horrifying thought isn't it? Yet, this is exactly what happened
when Hurricane Andrew struck South Dade in August of 1992.
Here's an interesting tidbit available for public information.
The Dade County Planning Department registered a population census of South
Dade in the year 1992. According to the census survey taken right before
Andrew struck, which reflects the devastated areas, the official population
of South Dade totalled 414,151. This leaves me to wonder what were the accurate
numbers of those left homeless in the aftermath of Andrew?
Here's another interesting tidbit. The number of deaths reported
by the news media differs depending upon which source one uses. The
figures range from 15 to 59 officially listed as dead. But in my small area
alone, there were over 70 dead bodies picked up by uniformed soldiers and
police. Something seems to be askew here.
On August 27,1992, the Miami Herald ran a small article printed
right next to "the official death toll" for Hurricane Andrew.
Bearing in mind only 22 names were listed, the article
has an interesting twist. It stated, and I quote:
All day Wednesday, doctors at the Dade medical examiner's
office scurried from case to case, performing autopsies on Andrew's victims,
some of them bodies without names. Side-stepping the coroners, investigators
tried frantically to figure out how many people had died in...or, later,
because of...the storm. New cases arrived in a dreadfully steady stream...
Dade County's Medical Examiner's Office is a huge facility
located next to Jackson Memorial Hospital, one of the largest hospitals
in the State of Florida. I don't think "22 bodies" would exactly
constitute doctors at the Dade Medical Examiner's Office to "scurry"
about ... not with a facility that size! Neither would "22 bodies"
be considered as "cases arriving in a dreadfully steady stream."
Over a full year later, September 9, 1993, NBC's
local news broadcaster, Bryan Norcross, stated on air, "15 people died
as a result of Hurricane Andrew."
If, the aftermath of Andrew looked like Hiroshima, felt like
Hiroshima, and had almost identical population to Hiroshima (480,000) then
how could such a small number of causalities have occurred? Perhaps the
answer lies with the survivors, who still have not had the opportunity to
come forward as witnesses. By survivors, I refer to those who were trapped
within the roped off, restricted areas of the aftermath. As news of the
aftermath spread across the television media, many people came forward claiming
to be Hurricane Andrew "survivors" when in fact they had been
on the outer edges of the devastated areas, sustaining little or no damage.
Kind of hard to interview real shell-shocked victims who can't communicate.
In October of 1992, two months after Hurricane Andrew, I participated
in a revealing conversation with the wife of a retired Coast Guard Officer.
This is an extract from our conversation.
"So what part of South Dade were you in?" she
asked curiously.
"I lived on SW 137th Avenue, right behind Metrozoo. A couple of blocks
away from SW 152nd Street," I explained.
"Oh yes, I know exactly where that is,"she answered. "You
were near the Coast Guard Station on SW 137th Avenue."
"Yes... The Coast Guard Station was located next door
to the complex where I lived."
"My husband works for the Coast Guard,"she said. "He was
summoned down there during the first ten days of the aftermath when the
area was roped off. He said it is just unbelievable. Everywhere you look
there's miles of devastation."
"It's horrible," I nodded."The public has
no idea. A lot of people died," I sighed. Tears instantly began to
spill over my eyelids. "They took 60 bodies out of Country Walk.
Another 6 out of the trailer park across the road from me. Two were teenagers.
And, then another..." I paused, trying to fight off the flow of tears.
"I know,"she gently interrupted. "I know all about the
deaths. The Coast Guard called my husband down there to help collect the
bodies out of the water... You know, the lakes and Biscayne Bay. They
pulled 1,500 bodies out. My husband said they couldn't be identified.
It was horrible. Just horrible!"
I wiped the tears from my eyes, barely able to choke out, "It was...
You can't imagine..." I had to pause a moment, hoping she wouldn't
see my quivering lip.
"... How many bodies did they find on land..."
I finally asked.
"I don't know,"she replied. "I just know the Coast Guard
pulled out 1,500 from the waters alone. Men ... women ...children ...
babies ... My husband said it was the worst thing he has ever seen. Most
were mutilated. No one knew where they came from. They found a lot of
body parts too. He said the winds ripped bodies apart and threw them everywhere.
There were even dead bodies out in the Everglades. God almighty, it must
have been so horrible."
I sighed heavily, "It was..."
"Everyone called down there to work on the body-pick-up
had to take a sworn oath. The Oath of Secrecy, that's what they call it.
Those who took it can't discuss what they saw or did during those first
ten days of the aftermath. Not with anyone, family included. My husband
was so depressed he had to talk. So he talked to me. He's still so depressed.
I'm worried sick about him..."
"Why won't the government tell the public?" I asked.
She shrugged her shoulders, "My husband said the government
doesn't want to cause mass panic. It's the same way with Metrozoo. I have
a close relative who works there. Metrozoo told the news media only a
few animals died but that's not true. At least 95% of all the animals
at the zoo died during Andrew. The deaths were horrible."
"I know," I answered softly. "We watched the fires burn
at Metrozoo for days on end. I'll never forget the stench of those burning
bodies with the lime."
"And, what about the rhesus monkeys? And, the big apes
that escaped? They were infected with the AIDS virus," she continued.
"The news media keeps saying this is just a rumor. Some rumor. My
relative told us the monkeys and apes are infected with the AIDS virus.
There's a research center on the back property of Metrozoo that no one
was supposed to know about. And, experiments were being conducted there
with deadly viruses."
"We had rhesus monkeys living in the debris with us," I said.
"And, an injured baboon. Before Andrew struck, none of us knew there
was a research center on Metrozoo property. But we found out differently
after Andrew struck. Did they ever catch any of them?" I asked.
"They found two dead rhesus but that was it," she answered.
"The rest are still running loose in South Dade."
"I wonder how the government plans to keep all the deaths a secret?
I mean, there's a lot of survivors who witnessed the bodies being picked
up during those first ten days."
She looked at me and said, "I don't know. All I know is that thousands
of people died in Hurricane Andrew ...Thousands ... And, there is no way
of identifying them."
Chapter 26
Three may keep a secret, if two of them are dead.
...Benjamin Franklin
How does one heal from something like Hurricane Andrew? Possibly
it isn't so much a matter of healing, as much as it is being forced to live
with it. Deplorable as conditions were in the aftermath, there was one saving
grace, which instantly ceased to exist once I escaped to the civilized world.
Victims trapped in the devastation bonded with one another in a special
way. We had to in order to survive. We seemed to have bonded as a family
of human beings. Selfishness, greed, and hoarding didn't exist amongst us.
Our humanness stripped down to the seams of our souls, we truly cared for
each other. I had never witnessed this type of behavior before and I doubt
that I ever will again. Whatever it was, it certainly gave credence to the
preciousness of each individual life.
Once I left the aftermath, things changed. Entering the outside world was
a shock I couldn't handle. The callous rudeness of others slugged me in
the face repeatedly. One incident in particular stands out vividly in my
mind. I stood in a checkout line at the grocery store in Broward County,
waiting for my turn. I couldn't afford to buy much food so I stood there
without a cart. Besides, I couldn't afford to take a taxi back home, restricting
what I could carry.
The two women standing behind me spoke loudly to each other
in thick New York accents. "I am so God-damned tired of hearing about
Hurricane Andrew victims! Every time I turn on the television there it is
being shoved down my throat!"
Her words stabbed me in the gut. The pain so immense I could
not move from the spot where I stood. Tears began to stream down my face
faster than my trembling hand could wipe them away. "Such bullshit!"she
added disgustedly. "Such damn bullshit! What the hell do I want to
watch that crap for?"
I wanted to race out the door and keep on running! But what I overheard
stunned me so much, I couldn't seem to move. The last thing I wanted to
do was to see their faces. So, I stared straight ahead at the little old
woman standing in front of me, trying to focus my attention on her instead
of the creeps behind me. She meekly stretched her hand across the counter,
handing the clerk some money. While she waited for change to be handed back,
I couldn't help but notice something strange on her bare arm. There were
burnt-black concentration camp serial numbers branded deep into her flesh.
The sight of the little lady's branded arm snatched away my
breath! Without thinking, I reached over and gently touched her arm. Her
head jerked up quickly and swung around. And, there we stood locked eye-to-eye,
seeing nothing else around us. "... I'm ... I'm so sorry," the
hushed words choked out of my mouth. "So terribly-terribly sorry..."
I'm sure the sight of me crying was one she hadn't expected to see. For
a brief instant her eyes clouded and then she quietly nodded her head. I
took my hand off her arm and quietly nodded back. The quiet nods stated
many things without a word being said. "...Thank you," she barely
whispered as one lone tear slowly rolled down her cheek.
"Here's your change ma'am," the clerk interrupted.
The little lady brushed the tear from her face and turned to look at the
clerk. I set down the items I held and walked away from the check-out line.
I kept on walking right out of the store and never turned to look back.
Crying, all during the long five mile hike back to my tiny apartment. There
were times when I did try to communicate what I had witnessed in the aftermath.
The obvious glances of disbelief stifled my every effort."Well, we
didn't hear about any deaths or anything like that," I heard repeatedly.
And every time I heard the words, "South Dade is on the road to recovery,"
I immediately wanted to puke.
Whose recovery? Surely they didn't mean mine. Or, the families
who lost loved ones but had no dead body to bury. Or, the little blind boy
still stuck back in the aftermath of South Dade. Or, the thousands of other
victims still trying to survive. Hurricane Andrew had barely left Florida
heading for the State of Louisiana, when the Division of Tourism placed
a $47,000 advertisement in the magazine called USA TODAY. "Florida,
we're still open,"it read.
"Most people have very short memories. We're all sort of banking on
that," said Donal Dermody, Director of the Nova University Center for
Hospitality Management. South Florida's annual thirty-one-billion dollar
tourism trade carried more importance than the people of South Dade. Kind
of puts a big damper on belief in the human race. Hide the truth, ignore
the suffering, do it for a dollar!
I suppose after having been homeless on the streets of Miami
Beach, and then surviving the horror of Andrew followed by the aftermath,
it isn't difficult to understand why I withdrew from society and fled to
the seclusion of the Ocala National Forest. When trust is broken in mankind
the hermit flees to safety.
My wounds were deep and badly scarred. I wanted to be left
alone. All I wanted was for the pain to stop hurting. Deep into the forest
I fled, rarely leaving my poverty-stricken trailer, which was all I could
afford to rent. The dreadful thing was such a junk I fell through the kitchen
floor more than once. I didn't have a heater during the long cold winter
when temperatures dropped below the teens. And so, I spent long grueling
hours searching for dry branches to burn in the small pot-belly stove. I
was so cold that winter ... so dreadfully cold and poor. I searched for
food at the garbage dump, salvaging what remnants I found. Stale bread and
rotting potatoes frequented my cracked dinner plate. A special bargain I
discovered at the dumpster, free for the taking. The sight of empty kitchen
cabinets scared me so much, I gathered discarded food boxes from the dump
and took them home to store. At least I didn't have to look at the emptiness
any more.
There was solace in my numbness. Comfort in solitude. My journey
into the wilderness helped me through the grief. The animals there to quietly
share my silenced need to speak. They listened when humans did not. I spoke
to the great bald eagle who visited every day. Landing in back of the trailer,
he rested on a wooden post, while I sat on the ground nearby and poured
out my betrayed trust. I spoke with the great wise owl who constantly watched
over me. Perched on the old oak tree, there by my sliding glass door, she
watched as I moved about inside and stayed when I came out the door. I wept
there in front of her, not shamed in my misery, and she listened very thoughtfully
when I cried, soon I would no longer see. She built her nest in that tree
right by my sliding glass door, and when her babies soon arrived I stood
there and smiled with joy. When her babes were ready to fly they perched
on that old oak tree, and spread their wings just as far as they could and
glided right down to me. She watched them land on my shoulder and never
batted an eye. I laughed aloud at the adorable clowns when they nibbled
away at my hair. While she perched on the limb above me without a worry
or care.
Slowly, my life began to awaken.
August of 1995 found me still living in the same run down
trailer tucked in the heart of the forest. Making it three years to the
month, since Andrew's force devastated my life. One evening in particular
began the start of a new cycle. Another unexpected August evening whereby,
things changed.
As was my usual habit, I wandered to the back bedroom and
turned on the television to watch a program before going to sleep. I sat
down on the bed and watched as Fox Network began to air something called
the Alien Autopsy Footage. I didn't have the foggiest notion as to what
this related to. The commentator explained the footage about to be shown
related to the UFO crashes in the year 1947. The same year of my birth date
certainly caught my attention! As I listened he went on to say, the dead
bodies were allegedly filmed by the United States military forces, during
the alien autopsy performed after the Roswell, New Mexico, UFO crash. The
moment the body of the alien came into view my mouth fell open in astonishment!
The same kind of being I had witnessed in the lime grove lay right before
my eyes! I recognized the facial features immediately. Then those six incredible
digits. And, those awesome powerful legs.
Memories suddenly flashed back to those treasured moments
in the lime grove! That exhilarating chase through the grove...those precious
moments at the window...and the sheer rapture of it all! Those three gentle,
timid, beings who had so wondrously entered my life and changed my entire
perception about it! As I sat there alone that night, my feelings of sheer
astonishment were overcome by the memories of my past. As the camera shifted
to the lifeless hand, I suddenly remembered the spectacular sight of our
reaching hands...the nurturing caretakers...the protectors of life... who
had crossed the boundaries of fear and stepped into the realm of trust.
The miraculous moment that cradled me then, and always would. I suddenly
broke down and wept.
Through the years 1992 to 1995, I had recounted the lime
grove encounters to enough people to substantiate I had witnessed six-digit
beings three years prior to the Alien Autopsy Footage broadcast. One of
those individuals was Curt Collier from the television program called Sightings.
Shortly after my first public release of the lime grove encounters,
in the beginning of 1998 on Linda Moulton Howe's radio program called Dreamland,
followed by the live broadcast on the Art Bell Show called Coast To Coast
AM, I received an interesting call. Curt Collier phoned about video footage
that had been shot in South Dade, shortly after my encounters. The video
depicted a group of UFO's hovering around the Turkey Point Nuclear Plant.
A distance of about fifteen to twenty miles from where the lime grove encounters
had occurred. There were two different segments on the video, each shot
on a different night but filmed from the same location. In each segment
the UFO's appeared plainly visible. He informed me the footage had been
proven real and authentic by a gentleman named Greg McCormack, who resided
in Pennsylvania. Curt was kind enough to put me in touch with him. McCormack
wasted no time in getting a copy of the video to me. Viewing the footage
helped to further reinforce my convictions of going public with the lime
grove encounters. Obviously others had proof of strange things going on
in the South Dade area. I felt a great sense of relief in knowing I was
not alone.
History proved to be the best teacher I had in terms of gaining insight
and wisdom. I realized explorers like Christopher Columbus, Ferdinand Magellan,
and Ponce de Leon had been challenged by similar situations such as mine.
From that point onward my entire perspective strengthened. In the year 1513,
Spanish navigator Ponce de Leon discovered the coast of Florida. Imagine
the shock he experienced the first time he set eyes on an alligator. Alligators
didn't exist where he had come from. No one had ever heard of such a thing,
much less seen one! What was it? Where did it come from? How could he ever
describe a thing like this to his fellow countrymen back in Spain and Portugal?
Would they believe him? Could they believe him?!
Curious how the same problems still exist in our modern world.
It takes courage to expose new discoveries and yet, they are such a necessary
part of man's evolution. On more than one occasion I have heard it stated,
"Homestead Air Force Base is closely linked into Area 51." Area
51 is notoriously known for being a secretive military base located north
west of Las Vegas, in the middle of the Nevada desert. Many sources have
come forward claiming this military installation has been conducting experiments
with UFO's and ET's out in the desert for years. I don't find this difficult
to believe. Neither do I find any secretive activity involved with the Homestead
Air Force Base to be shocking. Mainly because of three distinct predominant
factors. The first one has to do with some shocking information I was forced
to deal with directly. Unknown to any of us at the time Hurricane Andrew
was approaching South Dade, bearing in mind the National Hurricane Bureau
predicted the massive hurricane would strike well north of us by Palm Beach
County, the United States Government evacuated all the military families
living on Homestead Air Force Base. But none of the civilian residents of
South Dade were ever advised to do the same. My son and I had no idea the
base had been evacuated. And, neither did any of our neighbors. As far as
I know, none of the local news stations ever broadcasted the information.
I was shocked when I discovered this after escaping the aftermath. Why were
military families forced to evacuate, while civilians in the same area were
never so much as "advised" to evacuate?
To further substantiate this, a peculiar incident happened
during the late afternoon hours prior to Andrew striking. I had just walked
out to the garbage dumpsters, located by the parking lot, to throw away
some garbage. I turned to head back to the apartment when the horn of an
oncoming car began blasting away non-stop. I looked up to see a familiar
resident, whom I had spoken to on many different occasions, heading directly
toward me. This particular individual worked at Metrozoo. Because he was
affiliated with wild animals, he frequently stopped by to ask questions
about the behavior of certain species. He sped right up to me and then slammed
on the brakes!
"Come here!" he whispered excitedly, summoning me
closer to the car. I walked over the driver's side and leaned close to him.
"What's the matter?"
"Listen!" he paused to look around nervously. "You've got
to get the hell outta here now!" "Why?" I asked puzzled by
his behavior. "I haven't got time to explain," he whispered. "But
I just came from the National Hurricane Bureau in the Gables. Gotta friend
of mine who works over there. Big wig, know what I mean?" "Yeah?"
I nodded. "Well, this isn't for public information, if you get my drift,"
he went on rapidly. "But the National Hurricane Bureau has known all
along that Hurricane Andrew is going to slam into South Dade! They're telling
the public it's going to come in at Palm Beach because they want Miami Beach
evacuated, and there aren't enough shelters for South Dade residents to
evacuate too. They don't wanna cause panic. So they're keeping quiet. We're
all a bunch of God-damn-sitting ducks! You got to get the hell outta here!
This is a killer hurricane! Nobody's ever seen anything like this before!"
"Holy shit!" I exclaimed, shocked out of my mind.
"You mean Andrew is coming over South Dade?" "Damn straight!
That's exactly what I mean! They figure the eye of the storm is coming right
in over us! Those fellas at the National Hurricane Bureau have known it
all along! I'm gettin the hell outta here now! Shit man, this thing is a
killer hurricane! Listen, I gotta run! Get your son and get the hell out
now! You ain't gonna have a shot in hell once it hits!"
I ran into the apartment and called my son at work, begging
him to come home so we could get out. I had no reason to disbelieve anything
I had just heard. I knew my neighbor well enough to know he wouldn't fabricate
anything like this! So I related the entire conversation to my son, verbatim.
My son was stunned! He said he would leave work within a few minutes but
as the minutes ticked on, they dragged into hours. One catastrophe after
another seemed to crash down on him, until finally it was just too late.
By the time he got home it was almost midnight. Within minutes of his arrival,
Andrew slammed into us full force.
Another immediate course of action I took after hearing the
terrifying warning from my neighbor was to phone the local CBS broadcast
station located in Miami. I called three separate times and each time my
call went directly into the local news broadcast room of meteorologist Bryan
Norcross. Although I never spoke to Norcross directly, I did manage to speak
to three separate individuals working in the broadcast room. I specifically
stated, "I live in South Dade, adjacent to Metrozoo and within walking
distance of Country Walk, in a pre-fab apartment that is constructed to
withstand up to 100 mph winds. Should I evacuate?" All three individuals
advised and reassured me that I was situated in a safe area. There definitely
wasn't need for me to take any evacuation measures.
Now here's something that ought to knock your socks off. An
article written by Miami Herald Staff Writer, John Dorschner, which was
published in "Hurricane Andrew, THE BIG ONE." The particular article
is titled, The Hurricane That Changed Everything. Let me just quote the
article directly, in the fascinating true account of meteorologist Frank
Marks. Listen carefully to what Marks states, particularly beginning with
Saturday onward:
On Tuesday, the area's experts started daily 7:30 a.m. conferences at the
hurricane center to keep track of Andrew, standard procedure for all tropical
storms. Frank Marks, a Miami-based research meteorologist with the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and most others who attended the
meetings were not initially impressed. "The thing was kind of looking
bad," Marks recalls. "It went through terrible throes. It ran
into a storm headed to England, and it fell apart. It was really kind of
disorganized."
On Wednesday, Aug. 19, things changed. Andrew started running
into a strong high pressure area flowing down the Eastern Seaboard. Since
a storm is a low-pressure system, it had to move away from the high pressures.
It would either shift north, where it would quickly dissipate in the cooler
waters of the North Atlantic, or it would be shoved west, where it would
remain in the warm tropical waters that give storms their energy. When the
satellite maps showed Andrew heading west, Marks became excited. His specialty
was measuring storms by airborne Doppler radar. In his 12 years as a hurricane
researcher, he had flown into hurricanes 300 times. Once, during Hugo, he
was in a plant that lost an engine and almost crashed into the storm-tossed
seas. In 1983, he rushed to Galveston, to record ground winds during Hurricane
Alicia. There, he was in a building that experiences gusts of 92 mph; it
was not a particularly scary experience. The more Marks heard about Andrew,
the more he liked it. The intense high-pressure area served to ventilate
the strengthening storm, stoking the flames of the hurricane's force.
At 5 a.m., Friday, Aug. 21, the hurricane center advisory
announced: "Andrew begins to strengthen." That afternoon, Marks
joined a team of scientists who flew to Puerto Rico to study the storm.
Hurricanes are still mysterious, and scientists learn something new from
every storm. "Our adrenaline was really pumping." On Saturday
morning, 800 miles east of Miami, with winds a little over 75 mph, Andrew
became a hurricane. In his San Juan hotel room, Frank Marks stared at a
map and, for the first time, he realized that the storm was headed directly
at South Florida. Because of the high-pressure area, it would be virtually
impossible for Andrew to change course. Still, as he prepared to fly into
the storm, the image of Andrew hitting his Miami home was only a vague abstraction.
From the air, Andrew seemed awesome and beautiful. Twice,
the research plane carrying Frank Marks did figure eights through the storm.
The flights, like most through hurricanes, were uneventful, and in late
afternoon, the plane headed back to Miami. As the day went on, hurricane
advisories became more ominous. At 11 a.m.: "Andrew continues to strengthen
rapidly." At 2 p.m., with the storm 655 miles east of Miami: "The
westward movement is expected to continue through Sunday, increasing the
threat to South and Central Florida. Interests in that area should closely
monitor advisories on this hurricane."
At 5 p.m. Saturday, a hurricane watch was announced for Southern Florida,
stretching up to Titusville. At 1 a.m. Sunday, Frank Marks returned to Miami
and drove to his home in Sabal Chase. The research scientist had become
the family man. Now Andrew was anything but academic. "This is going
to be hell," he told his wife, Anita.
Early Sunday morning, as the announcement was made that the
barrier islands would have to be evacuated, Marks began preparing his rental
townhome in South Dade. [Let me just inject a thought here. Marks lived
within walking distance of my apartment complex. My question is, "Why
didn't South Dade residents have access to the same information this meteorologist
had? Why weren't all the huge trailer parks located throughout South Dade
evacuated, along with residents living in pre-fab apartments?" Bearing
in mind that when Andrew ended, the Red Cross estimated 8,230 trailers had
been completely demolished, along with 9,140 apartments destroyed. Families
in South Dade slept inside those trailers and apartments, unaware they were
in the path of Andrew.] He knew that, because hurricane winds churn counterclockwise,
his greatest problem was going to be the eastern and northeastern bedroom
windows. He boarded up all the windows he could and, in those places where
he couldn't attach plywood to concrete, he taped them up. He moved all the
valuables- stereo and television- to an upstairs closet, placed them up
high, then pushed a dresser against the closet door.
Downstairs, Marks protected sliding glass doors with a bookcase,
weighted down by a barbecue grill. He decided the safest place would be
the family room, because its only window faced west. "This is where
we stake our claim," he announced to his wife, 9-year-old daughter
and a 10-year-old nephew who was staying with them. All the furniture was
placed in the center of the room, along with mattresses. If necessary, Marks
decided their "escape hatch" would be a windowless half-bath off
the family room. All emergency provisions- flashlights, batteries, a sleeping
bag- went in there.
As he worked on the storm preparations, Marks received a call
from a French hurricane expert who happened to be staying in a Brickell
Avenue hotel [located in the downtown City of Miami]. The hotel was closing,
and the Frenchman didn't know where he and his wife should go. Marks invited
them down. The Frenchman was excited: This was a rare chance for him to
experience a hurricane.
This same article went on to further state about the night
Andrew struck: At midnight, a hundred journalists and meteorologists were
packed into the National Hurricane Center [located on highway U.S.1 in Coral
Gables, which was situated well outside the devastated areas of South Dade],
where usually only about 15 staffers work. Located on the sixth floor of
a Coral Gables office building, the center's offices were the only ones
that had hurricane shutters, but the staff was confident that the office
could survive any problem. Director Bob Sheets, fueled by a constant supply
of canned root beer, kept making live reports for the television stations.
At 12:13 a.m. Monday, he announced: "Looks more and more like it's
coming right across South Dade."
At 3:00 a.m., radar showed the center of the 140 mile-an-hour
winds was 40 miles east of Miami. Hurricane - force winds stretched out
90 miles to the north from the center, and a somewhat shorter distance to
the south. At 4:28 a.m., the eyewall was entering Southern Biscayne Bay.
At 4:30 a.m., dispatchers ordered all police and fire personnel off the
streets . In the offices of the National Hurricane Center, reporters and
staffers could feel the building sway. Everyone stopped for a moment, astounded
at the eerie feeling of a sixth-story waving in the wind. One staff member
announced he felt seasick.
The dazed reporter asked Sheets: "What direction is the building swaying?"
The ordinarily unflappable Sheets came as close as he ever did to loosing
his cool. "I don't know," he snapped. "You tell me."
Moments later, there was a large boom. Everyone froze. What was it? A radar
suddenly went out. Apparently, the radar on the roof had tipped over. At
5:20 a.m. the wind gauge recorded a speed of 164 miles an hour. Then the
gauge broke. From that moment on, whatever happened in Dade County was beyond
measure.
Something has always puzzled me about the speed of Andrew's
winds. Why did the National Hurricane Bureau measure the wind velocity of
Hurricane Andrew from their offices in Coral Gables, instead of measuring
the wind velocity from South Dade's devastated areas? Why wasn't it measured
from locations like the National Coast Guard Station located on SW 137th
Avenue, or Homestead Air Force Base, or Tamiami Airport? Surely the Coast
Guard Station and the Air Force Base had wind measuring instruments. If,
the eye of the hurricane passed either directly over these three locations
or very near to them, doesn't it make more sense to measure wind velocity
from them?
Now to get back to Homestead Air Force Base, the second reason
I have no problem believing the base is directly linked to cover-ups is
due to what I witnessed in the lime grove. Homestead Air Force Base was
just minutes away from the lime grove. Why would these strange looking beings
be in the lime grove to begin with? Where did they come from? Why that particular
lime grove? And, where did the two Federal Agents come from? Why would Federal
Agents be in a place like South Dade?
There were secrets tucked away in South Dade,
kept from the public until Andrew hit. A perfect example of this occurred
about the fifth day into the aftermath when a black government carpulled into our area. The car bore government license plates. Twelve
survivors in my area, including me, were stunned by the sight of a normal
looking car. What was left of the cars around us looked like wrecks from
the demolition derby.
A well-groomed man dressed in an expensive looking black business suit,
stepped out of the car and approached us. The sight of him alone was almost
too much for our shell shocked minds to comprehend! A man in a business
suit? In the devastation? Where had he come from?!
He stayed his distance from the group, calling out to us, "Have
any of you seen any rhesus monkeys or big apes roaming around?"
We looked at him as if he were nuts. Of course we had seen rhesus monkeys
and big apes! They were all over the place! Competing with us as we tried
to find the remains of food buried in the debris. The injured big ape my
son and I spotted just as Andrew ended, kept wandering around the devastated
complex. All the survivors had seen him. And rhesus monkeys scampered everywhere.
That morning I had seen two of them sitting on top of my toppled piano!
Watching, as I rummaged through the scattered debris.
"Who wants to know?" one of the survivors yelled
back.
"The United States Government," the indignant answer returned.
"F.E.M.A., to be specific."
"Why?" someone else asked.
"Just answer the question!" he demanded impatiently.
"They're all over the place," another voice piped up.
"Don't go near them!" he commanded, turning to head back toward
his car.
"Why not?"
He didn't answer.
"Hey buddy!" someone else yelled out just as he was about to get
back into his car. "Answer the damn question! Why not?!"
Mr. F.E.M.A. paused a moment, staring directly at us. "Because
they're infected with deadly viruses... like AIDS..." He quickly got
into his car and drove off.
Deadly viruses? How could monkeys from Metrozoo be infected
with deadly viruses? And, what was he doing here? Where had he come from?
We didn't have a clue as to what was going on. I didn't discover the reason
behind his mysterious visit until I escaped the aftermath. Unbeknown to
the public and those in my neighborhood area, the University of Miami ran
a medical laboratory located on the back property of Metrozoo. Donna Gehrke,
Miami Herald Staff Writer, wrote an article during the aftermath that stated:
Though zoos from around the country rushed to help devastated Metrozoo,
its assistant curator said it would take longer to repair than the six months
workers first estimated. "It will be months just to clear the debris,"
said Ron Magill. "The devastation is unbelievable. I have no words
for it."
Zoo workers were also having to contend with an unexpected
problem: Potentially dangerous baboons running around the grounds after
escaping from the nearby University of Miami Primate Center. "There's
a lot of them out there," Magill said. One worker said he spotted a
baboon swinging from a tree. Another employee, who lives near the zoo, said
his neighbor last night complained of a large and bloody ape suddenly jumping
onto his car and swinging into a tree. Other workers said the animal was
probably one of the missing baboons.University of Miami Administrators could
not be reached for comment. The animals are considered dangerous, and any
residence spotting one should call police or Metrozoo.
[Click
here to read the next section of this chapter which discusses Bebe Rebozo,
Richard Nixon and comedian Jackie Gleason. Jackie Gleason was given
a night time tour of Homestead AFB by Richard Nixon to view dead alien bodies
in 1973, which shook Gleason profoundly. This section also includes a discussion
of the Alien Autopsy film and the cameraman who filmed it . Note- The Alien
Autopsy film and the story surrounding its production are likely a disinformation
ploy (http://educate-yourself.org/cn/hurricanandrewaccountsexcisedsections15aug04.shtml)..Ken]
Chapter 27
"We have suffered enough. If, the United States
of America is to be a leader of future world events, then the government
of this great country must set world wide precedence by taking responsibility,
and being held accountable for, all the peoples of this nation!"
...k.t.
There are millions of good, honest, hard working Americans
stranded out on the streets without a home to live in. Without food to feed
their hungry children. Without the means to get help just as I was when
I landed on the streets back in 1985. This atrocity is way beyond the point
of being shameful. It is a crime and nothing less. In 1989, the staggering
statistics recorded by the National Coalition of the Homeless, documented
3 million Americans living on the streets. That survey was taken over ten
years ago. I have shown you the horrifying reality of what it is like to
be forced out into the streets. The sheer terror children are forced to
endure. The inhumane suffering mothers are forced to live with. And, the
sheer wretchedness handicapped people are forced to accept. Those who passed
us by while we were in the street, turned their heads the other way.
How many thousands, or is it millions, of people have already
died on the streets as of this point in time? How many of those dead victims
are children? How many are women? How many men? And, how many are handicapped?
These are questions that need to be answered. It is time for the American
government to be held accountable and responsible for this ongoing growing
tragedy. It took President Bush ten long days to get food, water, and medical
supplies delivered by the United States military forces, to the survivors
trapped in the devastation. The survivors have the right to demand the reason,
why?
Many foreign immigrants inhabited South Dade, like the Mexican migrant workers
housed in migrant camps. Relatives living in foreign countries have the
right to know what happened to their loved ones. In reading the cameraman's
report from the Alien Autopsy Footage, there is one section in particular
that brought back the horrifying memory of something that occurred to me
during the aftermath of Andrew. In the cameraman's report he states, "Again,
the Freaks were still crying and when approached they screamed even louder.
They were protective of their boxes, but we managed to get one loose with
a firm strike at the head of a Freak with the butt of a rifle."
What I am about to relate was witnessed by two other survivors
of Hurricane Andrew. About the third day into the aftermath, a caravan of
police cars cautiously drove into my area during the late afternoon. We
had not had contact with any other people from outside the devastation up
until this point. There were approximately 12 to 15 police cars comprising
this caravan, each marked from different locations throughout the state.
Each car was driven by a man dressed in a dark policeman's uniform and had
three other plain-clothed men ridding as passengers, making it a total of
four men in each vehicle.
Someone from our group spotted the caravan and ran to get me, knowing I
had been badly injured and that I urgently need emergency medical help.
My twenty-five year old son and one other adult male survivor, helped escort
me to the caravan. We hurried toward the lead car. It stopped moving when
we approached the driver's side. The officer sitting behind the wheel rolled
down the window. For a few moments, he rudely ignored us, at one point giving
us an impatient look of disgust.
This is the exact conversation and course of events which
took place. "Please sir, I need medical help," I begged, barely
able to speak due to my broken jaw. The officer sitting behind the wheel
sighed heavily. He turned his head away from me and gazed out his windshield.
The other three men in the car quietly looked at me. "Sir, please,
I need to get to a hospital!..." I begged frantically. The officer
took his time about reaching over to turn off the engine. With another sigh,
he slowly opened the door and climbed out. He then proceeded to close the
door and stood there with his legs spread astride.
"Lady, do me a favor," he answered. "Find
yourself a piece of paper and a pencil. Write down your name and social
security number next to the telephone number of your nearest living relative.
Tuck the piece of paper in your pocket so tomorrow when I find your body,
I'll know who to contact."
"No!... No!" I cried out. "You don't understand. I need to
get to a hospital. I've been badly injured."
"No! You're the one who doesn't understand," he hissed back.
With that, he reached over to his holster and took out his
gun. He grabbed me, forcing me up against the side of the car, and proceeded
to put the barrel of the gun against my temple. I heard the hammer cock.
From the position he had pushed me into, I could see directly
into the car. The man sitting in the front passenger seat looked away from
me immediately, glancing down at the floor. The two passengers in the back
seat turned their heads quickly, staring out the window on the opposite
side of the car. My son and the other survivor watched as the officer had
pulled back the hammer on the gun. So shocked out of their minds by what
they were witnessing, neither one could move!
"You, don't belong here!" the officer growled, pressing
the barrel into the side of my head.
"Now you get the hell outta here before I blow away
your ass!"
He shoved me into the car and then released me. Someone grabbed
me from behind and whirled me around so fast, I didn't have time to think!
Before I knew it, I was being thrown over their shoulder. They took off
running as fast as they could! I caught a brief glimpse of my son running
right next to me. With one gigantic leap, he and the survivor who carried
me, dove behind a pile of debris! All three of us crashed on top of each
other in one tangled up heap. "I'll shoot your damn asses!" the
officer's voice rang out. It is because of this specific incident that I
don't have a problem believing the brutality of the cameraman's report.
Chapter 28
We are, each one of us, a world unto itself. When we
come into the presence of others it is glorious. For we align ourselves
as independent worlds to create a Universe....k.t.
I have reached way beyond the point of declaring, "I
believe." Life has shown me how to state, "I know." There
is a vast difference between the meaning of the two words. One is based
on assumption but the other is not. I feel no need to try and prove, or
justify, what I know to those who choose to believe otherwise. Life has
been an incredible teacher and for that, I will always be eternally grateful.
This is a very precious thing, this word called life.
If we are going to survive ourselves then we must start behaving
like responsible human beings. The Universe does not need our presence to
exist. It is we, who need the presence of the Universe to continue our existence.
The earth does not belong to mankind. On the contrary, it is mankind who
belongs to the earth. Time to put everything in the correct perspective
it belongs. There is nothing more important or urgent than to learn how
to become the protectors of life. Not destroyers, as history has repeatedly
proven us to be. History is a great teacher but few have learned the lesson.
Future generations will be dependent upon motherhood for their very existence.
This is something mankind has never learned how to recognize, respect, or
honor. Oh yes, it is the mothers who are the nurturers. The Universal caretakers
of life.
Even a mother's patience wears thin after a while. Greedy
immature men with big titles definitely don't impress me anymore. Not when
I can find starving children, shivering from the cold, in the streets of
the United States of America. The wealthiest nation in the world. What is
a government within this world if it is not for All the people? This I ask
in all sincerity. Evil comes in many forms. It cannot be prayed away. Atrocities
against humanity must not be permitted to prevail. There is nothing human
about the vileness of those like Milosevic and Hitler. Their very presence
on the earth is a deadly threat to life. Who is stupid enough to believe
forgiveness should be given to those who are not human? To those who intentionally
perpetuate inhumane suffering? Who is willing to be responsible for the
crimes these monsters commit against humanity? "I know not with what
weapons World War III will be fought. But World War IV will be fought with
sticks and stones," so said the wisdom of Einstein.
Corrupt governments have muscle-armed their way across this
planet destroying the very foundations of life itself. Killing off families.
Plundering homes. Ignoring the starving pleas of their own peoples. The
countless mothers like myself have suffered the worst. Along with their
precious children. Who is willing to stand up and take the responsibility
for what happened to my child living in the streets of America? It destroyed
his life, you know. And who is willing to be accountable to the starving
millions living on the streets of America today? Children born on the streets
who have never known the security of a home. Who has the guts to be accountable
to them? Not one single thing on the face of this earth is more important
than the preservation of life. Even the good mother-earth has taken an incredible
beating. Who will take the blame for this? The blame for mankind intentionally
destroying his own home.
I am convinced man, by his own doing, has been responsible
for isolating himself from the rest of the Universe. It will continue to
stay that way until man learns how to behave like a being who is human and
humane. It is said there are many mansions within the heavens. Many forms
of life which remain unseen. I am convinced mankind is standing at the threshold
of his own historical evolution. We have reached the point where we either
choose that which is good and endearing, or that which is evil and short
lived. It is our choice to make. Whichever choice it is to be, where else
can it begin except right here on this planet first? There is a place within
our Universe where a race of humans have evolved into a true family of human
beings. It is a beautiful place like ours, similar but not the same. In
this place there is more light and because of it, there are more colors.
The human beings there are very knowledgeable, having gained incredible
scientific insight. They are more highly evolved than us and use telepathy
as a means of communication. They perceive this thing we call time as a
continual flowing of past-present-future events. According to our means
of measuring time, they live a much longer span than we do. To them a 100,000
years is but a normal lifetime. Our life is that of a mere butterfly compared
to what they live. They look like us and care for us, as an extension of
their human family.
I know there are some amongst us who are descendants of Abraham's
tribe. The seeds once intentionally placed here for the hope of a better
mankind. Generation after generation of these offspring now inhabit the
earth. These are the descendants of the tribe of Israel, whose forefathers
planted the earth.
Sadly though, we have not yet evolved into a family of human beings. There
are definite reasons for this arising from different origins. Not all human
beings originate from the tribe of Abraham. Other tribes inhabited the earth
before his time of birth. I know several different types of human species
were seeded upon our planet. Just look at the behavior of man since the
beginning of recorded time. Throughout the evolution of man's history there
have been those who were just plain evil. Those who gleefully commit atrocities
against life and humanity. Those too vile to ever consider as being truly
human. This should not go unheeded. The earth has been used as a battlefield
between the forces of good and evil. Time to pay attention before the battle
ends.
What battle was ever won by indifference? "The most important thing
in life is trust. Because once it is broken, you can never get it back again,
no matter how hard you try." Thus stated the wisdom of a hundred-and-four
year old woman. Caring families nurture trust.
I have chosen not to write about what I know of the other
side. The encounters I have written about pertain to life as we know it,
here in the now. I think Leslie McGregor's testimony over the loss of her
beloved little Jaime, in Chapter 2, validates the authenticity that there
is life beyond life. And, also serves to prove we do have misconceptions
about how life begins. I do not have the answers as to where the six-digited
beings in the lime grove came from. I have no problem accepting they could
be Star People too. They did have obvious human physical characteristics
and displayed behavior I could easily identify with. I think this says a
lot. As far as referring to them as aliens, this is something I choose not
to do. Not when they display human characteristics like my own. The word
"alien" sounds way too detached.
Recently, scientists announced Dolly, the cloned sheep, is
showing signs of accelerated genetic ageing, raising new fears about the
consequences of cloning humans. The sheep, which made history being the
first mammal cloned from an adult, appears to be perfectly normal on the
surface. But scientists have discovered that at a genetic level she is at
least six years older than she should be. I have now reached the point in
my own evolution whereby I am older than my lady of the garden. My body
now appears to be almost three times older than hers.
The lady in the dining room who showed me the Ace of Spades,
specifically instructed me to remember the word "card" ... I was
told on good authority by a reliable source, during a tape recorded conversation,
that the confiscated dead bodies picked up in South Dade during the first
ten days of Hurricane Andrew's aftermath, were hidden at an isolated military
base just above the Florida Keys called Card Sound Navy Base. In the year
1967, when I was only twenty years old, I made a promise to the two most
incredible human beings I have ever known, at the valley of the dry white
bones. I made a promise to both men, over thirty-two years ago. On this
day of August 23rd, 1999, I now close this book with these final words.
"IT IS DONE"
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of the most fascinating people you will ever find!!
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the opinion of the author and is provided for educational purposes only.
It is not to be construed as medical advice. Only a licensed medical doctor
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of your choice for medical care and advice.