Federal officials say there were more tornadoes in a single day last week than any other day in U.S. history. In all, 312 twisters set down across Southeastern states, causing billions of dollars in damage and killing more than 340 people.
Alabama took the brunt of the storm, with massive destruction in Birmingham and Tuscaloosa, home to the University of Alabama. Many smaller towns in Alabama are also devastated, but some of those communities are feeling ignored.
In the northwest town of Hackleburg, a backhoe pushes what's left of Cathy Purser's house into a big pile. She and her husband have lived here for 34 years, but, she says, it will never be the same.
"We were just lucky. All of my neighbors is gone ? they all died around me, every one of them," she says. "It's two people up there on the hill, the lady right there, the man and woman behind me, the lady behind them, a lady on down the road."
There are nearly three dozen confirmed deaths in this town of 1,400.
Purser and 10 other people survived by huddling in her basement. She says it took days for news of the devastation to reach the rest of Alabama.
"Nobody, I don't think, knew it hit Hackleburg, because there's this TV station that a lot of us watch in this area, and someone called in and told him, you know, 'Well what about Hackleburg?' And he said, 'Well, what about Hackleburg?' We're such a small community and a small town, nobody's ever heard of it. And they didn't know."
I don't know if they don't realize how bad it is here, or if they just ... I don't know, you know. It kind of makes you feel ignored in a way.
"People know Tuscaloosa, they know Birmingham," says state Sen. Roger Bedford. But, he says, what people don't know is that dozens of small communities like Hackleburg, Phil Campbell and East Franklin were also hit by tornadoes.
On Monday, Bedford was in Hackleburg, his mother's hometown, to see the damage for himself.
At the First Baptist Church, local residents and volunteers lined up for a hot meal. Over plates of mac and cheese, Wanda and William Terry say a family member has a generator. They've been watching some of the TV coverage, and every five minutes, they see a story about Tuscaloosa.
"I don't know if they don't realize how bad it is here," says Wanda, "or if they're just ? I don't know, you know. It kind of makes you feel ignored in a way, you know?"
"That's true," says William. "When you think about it, Tuscaloosa's a much bigger city, and they have a lot more injuries and probably casualties, too, you know, and so they have to concentrate where the need is needed first. In the bigger areas, they need more help there than what they do here."
Dave Fagan, the damage assessment manager for an American Red Cross team, says part of the challenge with small, rural towns is that rescue crews and volunteers have a hard time getting into them.
"If we have roads ? like I noticed the bridge was out in one area down here. We can't get there, " he says. "We gotta find some other way of getting there."
There's just one main road to town, and for a while it was impassable because of downed trees. The town also doesn't have any local media ? no TV, no radio ? so it's hard to get word out about the damage.
The Red Cross on Monday declared Hackleburg 75 percent destroyed. Every building in downtown is a pile of rubble. The school is demolished. The largest employer ? a Wrangler jeans plant ? may not reopen.
Everyone agrees it will be years, not months, before Hackleburg and other small towns across the Southeast recover.
Source: http://www.npr.org/2011/05/03/135936478/in-small-towns-hit-by-twisters-you-feel-ignored?ft=1&f=1003
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