CharlestonGal
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NASSAU, The Bahamas — They straggle through the door in small groups, uncertainty written across their faces.
A green or yellow band wraps around each person’s wrist. Green bands are for those with someplace to stay the night, maybe with friends or family.
They’re the easy ones.
Yellow bands are harder.
Those wrap the wrists of Hurricane Dorian refugees who have no one to help them here in Nassau, the capital island of this coral archipelago nation still staggered by the biggest hurricane to ever hit the Bahamas, a terrifyingly violent storm that sat atop neighboring Abaco and Grand Bahama for days.
“They wasn’t doing anything in Abaco. So it’s great to see people caring. It’s so nice,” said evacuee Cecil Grant, 31, as he cradled his sleeping daughter, Yalissa, 7 months.
Dazed and weary, Hurricane Dorian refugees descend on Bahamas capital of Nassau
A green or yellow band wraps around each person’s wrist. Green bands are for those with someplace to stay the night, maybe with friends or family.
They’re the easy ones.
Yellow bands are harder.
Those wrap the wrists of Hurricane Dorian refugees who have no one to help them here in Nassau, the capital island of this coral archipelago nation still staggered by the biggest hurricane to ever hit the Bahamas, a terrifyingly violent storm that sat atop neighboring Abaco and Grand Bahama for days.
“They wasn’t doing anything in Abaco. So it’s great to see people caring. It’s so nice,” said evacuee Cecil Grant, 31, as he cradled his sleeping daughter, Yalissa, 7 months.
Dazed and weary, Hurricane Dorian refugees descend on Bahamas capital of Nassau