• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Chicago Sports Today

Chicago Sports News continuously updated

  • Bears
  • Baseball
    • Cubs
    • White Sox
  • Basketball
    • Bulls
    • Sky
  • Blackhawks
  • Colleges
    • DePaul
    • Illinois
    • Loyola
    • Northwestern
    • Notre Dame
    • UIC
    • Valparaiso
  • Soccer
    • Fire
    • Red Stars
  • Team Stores

‘Lahaina will never be the same’: Maui wildfires devastate local residents, environment

August 25, 2023 by The Observer

Maui’s catastrophic wildfires have left many residents homeless, missing or dead. With at least 114 people dead in Lahaina and over 850 people still missing, residents are caring for each other to preserve their generational connection to Maui.

Alex Vento, a junior from Lower Kula, grew up on several islands but has spent most of his life in Maui. 

Vento said the wildfire source started upcountry but embers moved because of Hurricane Dora and started more fires.

He said his family was one of the first families to evacuate the area, safely fleeing at 4 a.m.

Kali Spalding, a sophomore from Makawao, described the direct impact of the fires on her friends and family.

“A lot of friends completely lost everything they had,” she said. 

Her grandmother’s house, located in an agriculturally rich area, is facing a severe water advisory. Spalding said the house has “no water to drink and no water to shower” and noted that boiling water intensifies the pollutant. The issue persists despite water transportation efforts.

Spalding’s mother works at King Kekaulike High School, which could not welcome students back until Tuesday.

Junior Anjeleigh Dela Cruz, a resident from Kihei, estimated that the fire came about 100 yards from her community. Her family evacuated, packing what they could in limited time, and went to Dela Cruz’s aunt’s house in Wailuku. Dela Cruz spent some time volunteering after the fires ravaged the community. 

“I was working with the Red Cross but it was under the county. And…seeing all of that [tragedy], it’s very sobering,” Dela Cruz said about her volunteering experience. 

Dela Cruz’s grandparents lost their home in the flames.

“My grandma and my grandpa, their house is completely gone. They lost everything. They have nothing but basically the clothes on their back and whatever documents they could grab,” she said. 

Despite the tragedy, residents from other islands and Maui are supporting those most affected.

“There are people who don’t know where their families are,” Spalding said. She said that for Hawaiians, especially Maui residents, “everyone is family.”

Spalding also said the robust culture in Lahaina will not change. The words “mālama” (to care for, protect and preserve) and “kokua” (altruistic help) are values ever-present in Hawaii, she said.

Vento said it is also a “wound to tourism,” but that the people of Maui are “resistant” in restoring Lahaina and nearby land back to its state of prosperity. 

“A whole community and area and lifestyle is just completely gone,” Dela Cruz said. “So many childhood memories for my mom and me” were lost in the fire, she added, including the charred Lahaina banyan tree.

Dela Cruz mentioned the hope she encountered while volunteering at another shelter.

“We had people flying in from other islands … and it was a constant line of people dropping off toilet paper, baby food, water and any necessities,” she said.

Dela Cruz said she hopes that the rebuilding of Lahaina and other parts of Maui will “keep moving forward, while honoring the past and respecting what has happened.”

Spalding offered advice to those with friends and family affected by the fires.

“In the midst of heartbreak, make sure you are loving and caring for those around you,” she said.

In response to the wildfires, Mikey Nguyen ’20 started a fundraising campaign to aid in replacing his family’s personal belongings, homes and cars. Their community ties are meaningful to both Lahaina residents and tourists with his mother working in the restaurant industry and his father as a taxi driver. The campaign notes that his family have been “proud members of the Lahaina community for over 35 years.”

The post ‘Lahaina will never be the same’: Maui wildfires devastate local residents, environment appeared first on The Observer.

Filed Under: Notre Dame

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • Groups Set For 2025 NBA Cup
  • Illinois Pollution Control Board denies stay to NRG Energy: ‘They are going to … remove the coal ash ponds from our lakefront’
  • UCF’s Scott Frost tries to skip talk of failed Nebraska tenure, but falls a bit short
  • The 2025 NHL Entry Draft Grades: Part One
  • Ángel Correa llega a Tigres de México tras pasar 10 años con el Atlético de Madrid

Categories

Archives

Our Partners

All Sports

  • CHGO
  • Chicago Tribune
  • Chicago Sun-Times
  • 247 Sports
  • 670 The Score
  • Bleacher Report
  • Chicago Sports Nation
  • Da Windy City
  • NBC Sports Chicago
  • OurSports Central
  • Sports Mockery
  • The Sports Daily
  • The Sports Fan Journal
  • The Spun
  • USA Today
  • WGN 9

Baseball

  • MLB.com - Cubs
  • MLB.com - White Sox
  • Bleed Cubbie Blue
  • Cubbies Crib
  • Cubs Insider
  • Inside The White Sox
  • Last Word On Baseball - Cubs
  • Last Word On Baseball - White Sox
  • MLB Trade Rumors - Cubs
  • MLB Trade Rumors - White Sox
  • South Side Sox
  • Southside Showdown
  • Sox Machine
  • Sox Nerd
  • Sox On 35th

Basketball

  • NBA.com
  • Amico Hoops
  • Basketball Insiders
  • Blog A Bull
  • High Post Hoops
  • Hoops Hype
  • Hoops Rumors
  • Last Word On Pro Basketball
  • Pippen Ain't Easy
  • Pro Basketball Talk
  • Real GM

Football

  • Chicago Bears
  • Bears Gab
  • Bear Goggles On
  • Bears Wire
  • Da Bears Blog
  • Last Word On Pro Football
  • NFL Trade Rumors
  • Our Turf Football
  • Pro Football Focus
  • Pro Football Rumors
  • Pro Football Talk
  • Total Bears
  • Windy City Gridiron

Hockey

  • Blackhawk Up
  • Elite Prospects
  • Last Word On Hockey
  • My NHL Trade Rumors
  • Pro Hockey Rumors
  • Pro Hockey Talk
  • Second City Hockey
  • The Hockey Writers

Soccer

  • Hot Time In Old Town
  • Last Word On Soccer - Fire
  • Last Word On Soccer - Red Stars
  • MLS Multiplex

Colleges

  • Big East Coast Bias
  • Busting Brackets
  • College Football News
  • College Sports Madness
  • Inside NU
  • Inside The Irish
  • Last Word On College Football - Notre Dame
  • One Foot Down
  • Saturday Blitz
  • Slap The Sign
  • The Daily Northwestern
  • The Observer
  • UHND.com
  • Zags Blog

Copyright © 2025 · Magazine Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in