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A year after the Carmel fire, the anger still burns

As residents of the scenic area of northern Israel attempt to rebuild their lives, some feel neglected and betrayed

December 2, 2011 11:39
Meir Tsory at the spot where his house stood

By

Nathan Jeffay,

Nathan Jeffay

4 min read

There were flames everywhere, clouds of ash, and a smell that left you gasping for air. There was fear, as people ran from their homes, and tears, as 44 people died.

Now, driving along the winding roads through Israel's Carmel Mountains, it is difficult to recapture the utter horror of the scene here last December. A year ago today, the biggest forest fire that the country has ever seen began sweeping the region, wreaking devastation.

The tragedy gripped the nation. For the four days of the fire Israelis spoke of nothing else. Countries across the world put aside any diplomatic bones they had to pick with the Jewish state and sent help. Even Turkey, which is increasingly antagonistic to Israel, and the Palestinian Authority, with which peace talks had broken down, contributed aid.

A year on, the world has all but forgotten about the fire, but residents of the area, in the north of the country, cannot. "Before the fire it was all green, now it's all black," says 17-year-old Alex Kulik sadly, pointing to the charred hillside by his home. In the end the fire destroyed an estimated 6,200 acres of land and claimed five million trees.