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Australia remembers Black Saturday on the 10th anniversary of catastrophic bushfires

Categories: Oceania, Australia, Disaster
Black Saturday - The lie of the land [1]

The lie of the land April 8, 2009 – courtesy Elizabeth Donoghue Flickr account
(CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

Ten years ago, on Saturday 7 February 2009, Victoria experienced catastrophic bushfires [2] which killed 173 people, injuring more than four hundred and destroying over two thousand homes. Seven people died later as the result of their injuries.

During the week of the 2019 anniversary, Victorians have remembered Black Saturday, [3] with mainstream media presenting many personal stories of the fires. ABC Melbourne, the local arm of the national broadcaster, commemorated the victims by sharing stories from survivors [4].

Others have shared their memories online. On her blog, The small Adventurer, [5] Indya recounts losing her home and shares the impact of the fires on her life since that day:

Ten entire years, and I still don’t think one single day has passed without me mentioning – or at least thinking about – the fires.

[…] I am also still really, really nervous around things like ovens, stoves, heaters, and even lighters. As a baker, you can imagine how difficult having those fears is when I’m going to take something out of the oven, and suddenly something doesn’t move the way I expect it to or something like that, and I instantly freeze up and freak out.

[…] Tomorrow I will be thinking of all those who had it much worse than me, and hoping that the people who are still alive and lost so much more are doing okay. But, I will also be thinking about myself, and allowing myself to feel whatever I happen to feel, because my feelings are valid too. My fear and sadness is valid too, and always have been, it just took me a while to realise it.

Dianne McNamara posted only the second tweet on this account:

Melbourne lawyer Georgia was fifteen at the time. She summed up the feelings of many:

Robin Steenberg shared a devastating memory:

Many people are connecting the Black Saturday tragedy to current extreme weather conditions that are wreaking havoc in other parts of the country. Another natural disaster with extraordinary flooding has hit Northern Queensland following record rainfall. Blair Drysdale gave some sense of the impact in inland areas:

The situation in the coastal city of Townsville was also extreme. Video news agency Ruptly documented the torrents:

Melburnian Ann Moorfield made the connection:

Elizabeth Donoghue took the photo at the top of this story “from a road that many people describe as a death trap, a road that I have always avoided till now. But it was worth a hairy drive!” She posted it two months after the fires on Flickr [1]:

Now that everyone knows that this beautiful country that was so burnt in February is not really destroyed, but is just doing what nature intended, and is regenerating, as nature intended, let me show you this amazing landscape. It gives some idea of the scale of the fires; and it also shows, for me, the folds and rhythms of the land beneath the vegetation. i took this from a road that many people describe as a death trap, a road that I have always avoided till now. But it was worth a hairy drive!

Finally, Adrian Cutts reflected on the growth of social media since Black Saturday: