You are here, you are safe, you are present, you are safe.
You are here, you are safe, you are present, you are safe.
You are here…
This is Melanie Harris-Brady’s mantra. These days, it’s more like a reflex. The words cycle through her head whenever she smells smoke or feels the baking heat of a particularly scorching summer day. But they used to be more of a crutch, a way of convincing herself that she did in fact survive the inferno that engulfed her community 10 years ago.
The mother of two was one of those lucky to escape the town of Kinglake when Black Saturday bushfires roared across the ranges on February 7, 2009. There were 120 people killed in that area alone, and a further 60 perished in blazes across the state.
Her home was razed. The home her daughter, Keeley, had grown up in; the home that held the memories of her husband Adam, who’d died of Cystic Fibrosis just 18 months earlier. His clothes had still been hanging in the wardrobe, his shaver sitting in the bathroom. Melanie made it out with Adam’s ashes and a jewellery box. The rest was reduced to cinders.
“This was the house that I felt warm, safe and nurtured in,” she writes in her book, Ten Years On. “It was our home, our sanctuary, ours.”
Top Comments
Thank you for this article. Ten years ago thousands of
volunteer RFS/ CFS and SES fought these fires. Many years after, a lot of these
people suffered PTSD and long term depression, a direct result of their actions
during this tragic time. Then, in 2011, the then PM Julia Gillard announced the
National Emergency Medal which was back dated to include the 2009 fires.
However, the criteria for this medal was so convoluted that the majority of
people who fought these fires were not eligible to receive the medal, instead,
bosses and other who sat in air conditioned safe area- not on the fire ground
or anywhere near the danger- received the gong. It was a travesty for all those
involved and successive governments and ministers, who are always happy to be
photographed with volunteer emergency services, have since ignored the issue
and have left these people without recognition that they fought the worst
bushfire in Australia’s history. Personally, I will never forget the smell, the
sound, the fear, and the absolute devastation of the countryside and on the
faces of the people affected.