Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Retired mailman and Vietnam veteran Thomas Leonard, whose condo burned in the 2023 wildfire, looks out to the ocean at his temporary residence at the Royal Kahana, Monday, July 8, 2024, in the Napili-Honokowai area near Lahaina, Hawaii. “We all got to stay together here on Maui," Leonard said. "We’re going to survive and it’s going to come back.” (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
FILE - Ekolu Lindsey, a Lahaina community advocate who has long pushed to restore coral reefs, fishing and traditions in his hometown, picks up a coral reef of pohaku puna - a lobe coral and one of Hawaii's most prominent reef-building coral species, at Olowalu Landing on Friday, Feb. 23, 2024, in Lahaina, Hawaii. Lindsey’s so familiar with the area he notices when more crabs are around or fish are undersized. He has brought school groups there to teach them about the coral, seaweed and the ocean. (AP Photo/Mengshin Lin, File)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Ekolu Lindsey, who lost the waterfront home where his family has lived for five generations, points to a cleared property next to his own on Front Street, Saturday, July 6, 2024, in Lahaina, Hawaii. Lindsey lives at a friend’s place on Oahu, because of a lack of affordable housing options. He says that being unable to surf in the waters near his home leaves him drained of spiritual energy. “My reset button is to jump in the water at home,” he said. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Morgan "Bula" Montgomery helps clear water out of a canoe after practicing with the Napili Canoe Club on Monday, July 8, 2024, at Hanakao'o Park in Lahaina, Hawaii. Montgomery, a recent Lahainaluna High School graduate who was displaced by the 2023 wildfires, plans to leave Maui this fall to study fire science at Hawaii Community College on the Big Island. “I want to come back to Lahaina and come back to Maui and try to be a firefighter,” he said. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Leola Vierra touches a wall left standing at the now-cleared site of her former home, Wednesday, July 10, 2024, in Lahaina, Hawaii. As he was dying of colon cancer, Mike Vierra spent sleepless nights fretting about where his wife Leola and their daughter would live when he was gone. The wildfire had reduced their home of more than half a century to hardened pools of melted metal, burned wood and broken glass. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
New vines grow through Ekolu Lindsey's home gym at the waterfront home where his family has lived for five generations, destroyed in the August 2023 wildfires, Saturday, July 6, 2024, in Lahaina, Hawaii. Lindsey is living at a friend’s place on Oahu, another island, a plane ride away. He couldn’t find anything in Lahaina for less than $4,000 a month. State conservation officials won’t allow people to enter the ocean from the burn zone. He surfs on Oahu, but it’s not the same. “You get the physical exercise,” he said, but not the “rejuvenation of that mana.” (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
FILE - Members of the Lahainaluna High School football team, including Morgan "Bula" Montgomery (63), in red jersey third from right, watch the coin toss between the San Francisco 49ers and the Kansas City Chiefs before the NFL Super Bowl 58 football game Sunday, Feb. 11, 2024, in Las Vegas. The game was one of just a handful of times Montgomery left Maui. (AP Photo/Adam Hunger, File)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Ai Hironaka's family, including daughter Ayumu,15; Ai's wife Megumi; son Hoken, 17; and daughter Minori, 13, bow their heads at the end of a service at the Kahului Hongwanji Mission, Sunday, July 7, 2024, in Kahului, Hawaii. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Retired mailman and Vietnam veteran Thomas Leonard, whose condo burned in the wildfire, sits on the couch at his temporary residence at the Royal Kahana, Monday, July 8, 2024, in the Napili-Honokowai area near Lahaina, Hawaii. Even as he hid behind a seawall from the flames, Leonard knew Lahaina’s wildfire would give him flashbacks to his service as a U.S. Marine 55 years ago. The nightmares started a few months later. His Veterans Administration doctor prescribed new sleeping medication. “Thank God for the VA,” he said. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
The Rev. Ai Hironaka walks through the remains of the Lahaina Hongwanji Mission on Sunday, July 7, 2024, in Lahaina, Hawaii. Hironaka returns to the site of the Lahaina temple occasionally, to check the columbarium, which survived. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
The Rev. Ai Hironaka, center, watches as his son Hoken, 17, left, and daughter Ayumu, 15, play a racing game at the Fun Factory in the Maui Mall, Sunday, July 7, 2024, in Kahului, Hawaii. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Cars destroyed in the August 2023 wildfires sit next to an empty swimming pool at the condo building where retired mailman and Vietnam veteran Thomas Leonard lived near Front Street, Saturday, July 6, 2024, in Lahaina, Hawaii. Leonard, who escaped the fire by hiding behind a seawall, says the experience gave him flashbacks to his time as a U.S. Marine. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Jordan Ruidas, a "Lahaina Strong" organizer, kisses her nine-month-old daughter Aulia Scott on Friday, July 5, 2024, in Lahaina, Hawaii. Ruidas was seven months pregnant when last year’s fire destroyed the historic town. “My kids will never grow up seeing or knowing the Lahaina that I grew up seeing and knowing,” she said. “The Lahaina that we lost was a very special and beautiful place.” (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Leola Vierra hugs Uilani Medeiros-Beyer, left, while moving out of the Honua Kai Resort and Spa, Wednesday, July 10, 2024, in the Kaanapali area near Lahaina, Hawaii. Vierra and her daughter moved multiple times after the 2023 wildfire, switching hotel rooms and vacation rentals whenever the unit’s owners would return. Not until last month did Vierra find some stability, securing a six-month lease while they wait to someday rebuild on their own property. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
An attendee reads from a prayer book during services at the Kahului Hongwanji Mission, Sunday, July 7, 2024, in Kahului, Hawaii. Ai Hironaka, the longtime resident minister for the Lahaina Hongwanji Mission, escaped the wildfire with his wife, four children and their dog, losing his temple and all their belongings in the blaze. The Hironaka family now lives in Kahului, where Ai has been reassigned as the resident minister in Kahului. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
FILE - The Rev. Ai Hironaka, resident minister of the Lahaina Hongwanji Mission, offers a prayer inside the nokotsudo, or columbarium, that survived being destroyed by wildfire, Thursday, Dec. 7, 2023, in Lahaina. After moving three times in the months after the fire, he now lives across the island, nearly an hour away, at another temple, Kahului Hongwanji Mission, where he is also serving as resident minister. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson, File)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
FILE - Thomas Leonard lies on an air mattress at an evacuation center at the War Memorial Gymnasium after his Lahaina apartment burned down, Thursday, Aug. 10, 2023, in Wailuku, Hawaii. Leonard's condo building is still a pile of ash and rubble. He suspects it might take five years to rebuild, but he’s determined to see it through. He’s been living in hotels and a rented condo. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer, File)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
FILE - Jordan Ruidas, left, speaks to people at the Fishing for Housing camp on Kaanapali Beach in Lahaina, Hawaii, on Wednesday, Nov.14, 2023. Ruidas brought the baby along, strapped to her chest, when she helped organize the "fish-in" protest at a popular beach resort to demand that more short-term rental housing be made available for survivors. (AP Photo/Audrey McAvoy, File)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Jordan Ruidas, a Lahaina Strong organizer, stands for a photo in an area of state land she is working to help re-green with Kaiaulu Initiatives, Friday, July 5, 2024, near Lahaina, Hawaii. Ruidas, who was born and raised in Lahaina, says she uses activism to cope with the aftermath of the fires. "One day it's gonna hit me like a train," said Ruidas. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Capt. Ikaika Blackburn, an 18-year veteran of the Maui Fire Department, who led one of the crews that responded to the 2023 Lahaina wildfire, poses for a photo on Wednesday, July 10, 2024, in Kahului, Hawaii. His five-person crew was one of the first on scene Aug. 8. He spent a lot of time growing up with his grandparents in Lahaina. His wife is from Lahaina. His mother-in-law lost her home. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Capt. Ikaika Blackburn, an 18-year veteran of the Maui Fire Department, who led one of the crews that responded to the 2023 Lahaina wildfire, poses for a photo on Wednesday, July 10, 2024, in Kahului, Hawaii. His five-person crew was one of the first on scene Aug. 8. There was no time to think, "no time to have these sentimental feelings,” as he fought through the night. At daybreak, it set in: “We lost Lahaina.” (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Elsie Rosales leaves her apartment complex on the way to take a bus across the island Tuesday, July 9, 2024, in Kahului, Hawaii. After arriving in Maui from the Philippines in 1999, Rosales saved her money while working as a hotel housekeeper and was able to buy a house in Lahaina in 2014. The home was wiped out in the wildfire that destroyed Lahaina. She’s now renting a two-bedroom apartment with her husband, their son and their son’s girlfriend in Kahului, an hour-long bus ride from Lahaina. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
The Rev. Ai Hironaka looks down at his former temple and residence, the Lahaina Hongwanji Mission, destroyed in the 2023 wildfires, Sunday, July 7, 2024, in Lahaina, Hawaii. Hironaka escaped the wildfire with his family but lost his temple and all their belongings in the blaze. He now lives across the island at the temple, serving as resident minister. He performs much of the same work he did at the Hongwanji Mission in Lahaina: leading ceremonies and counseling members, including fire survivors. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Cars destroyed in the August 2023 wildfires sit next to an empty swimming pool at the condo building where retired mailman and Vietnam veteran Thomas Leonard lived near Front Street, Saturday, July 6, 2024, in Lahaina, Hawaii. Leonard, who escaped the fire by hiding behind a seawall, says the experience gave him flashbacks to his time as a U.S. Marine. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Ekolu Lindsey, who lost the waterfront home where his family has lived for five generations during the August 2023 wildfires, stands for a photo on Saturday, July 6, 2024, in Lahaina, Hawaii. Lindsey is living at a friend’s place on Oahu. He couldn’t find anything in Lahaina for less than $4,000 a month. He returns regularly to Maui to help restore native forests, a focus of the nonprofit his father founded, Maui Cultural Lands. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
A framed photo of Leola Vierra's late husband, Michael, who died in April from colon cancer, sits on a bench at Vierra's new rental home, Wednesday, July 10, 2024, in Lahaina, Hawaii. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Jordan Ruidas, a "Lahaina Strong" organizer, walks through an area of state land she is working to help re-green with Kaiaulu Initiatives, Friday, July 5, 2024, near Lahaina, Hawaii. Ruidas was seven months pregnant when last year’s wildfire destroyed the historic town. “I don’t think I’ve dealt with all the emotions that came with losing Lahaina and being postpartum,” she said. “I feel like I cope by staying busy with work, with Lahaina Strong.” (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Members of the Napili Canoe Club paddle to shore near other club boats on Monday, July 8, 2024, at Hanakao'o Park in Lahaina, Hawaii. Morgan "Bula" Montgomery, a member of the club and a recent Lahainaluna High School, said he plans to leave Maui this fall to study fire science at Hawaii Community College on the Big Island, inspired by the devastation and the firefighters who tried to save the community. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Morgan "Bula" Montgomery helps bring a canoe in after practicing with the Napili Canoe Club, Monday, July 8, 2024, at Hanakao'o Park in Lahaina, Hawaii. Montgomery, a recent Lahainaluna High School graduate who was displaced by the 2023 wildfires, now plans to attend Hawaii Community College on the Big Island due in part to a scholarship for those impacted by the fires. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Cars destroyed in the August 2023 wildfires sit next to an empty swimming pool at the condo building where retired mailman and Vietnam veteran Thomas Leonard lived near Front Street, Saturday, July 6, 2024, in Lahaina, Hawaii. Leonard, who escaped the fire by hiding behind a seawall, says the experience gave him flashbacks to his time as a U.S. Marine. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Cars destroyed in the August 2023 wildfires sit next to an empty swimming pool at the condo building where retired mailman and Vietnam veteran Thomas Leonard lived near Front Street, Saturday, July 6, 2024, in Lahaina, Hawaii. Leonard, who escaped the fire by hiding behind a seawall, says the experience gave him flashbacks to his time as a U.S. Marine. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Cars destroyed in the August 2023 wildfires sit next to an empty swimming pool at the condo building where retired mailman and Vietnam veteran Thomas Leonard lived near Front Street, Saturday, July 6, 2024, in Lahaina, Hawaii. Leonard, who escaped the fire by hiding behind a seawall, says the experience gave him flashbacks to his time as a U.S. Marine. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Cars destroyed in the August 2023 wildfires sit next to an empty swimming pool at the condo building where retired mailman and Vietnam veteran Thomas Leonard lived near Front Street, Saturday, July 6, 2024, in Lahaina, Hawaii. Leonard, who escaped the fire by hiding behind a seawall, says the experience gave him flashbacks to his time as a U.S. Marine. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Hawaii Wildfire Anniversary Vignettes
Cars destroyed in the August 2023 wildfires sit next to an empty swimming pool at the condo building where retired mailman and Vietnam veteran Thomas Leonard lived near Front Street, Saturday, July 6, 2024, in Lahaina, Hawaii. Leonard, who escaped the fire by hiding behind a seawall, says the experience gave him flashbacks to his time as a U.S. Marine. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
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Retired mailman and Vietnam veteran Thomas Leonard, whose condo burned in the 2023 wildfire, looks out to the ocean at his temporary residence at the Royal Kahana, Monday, July 8, 2024, in the Napili-Honokowai area near Lahaina, Hawaii. “We all got to stay together here on Maui," Leonard said. "We’re going to survive and it’s going to come back.” (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)