Friday, November 22, 2024, 09:54 | Updated 6:09 p.m.
Last Friday Santiago Posteguillo, expert in the History of Rome, was in the Senate giving a conference on the importance of Hispania. The Valencian writer remembered the day of DANA. Just that October 29, he was preparing the text of the speech that he would deliver days later in the Upper House. The story by the author of the Africanus and Trajan trilogy is shocking.
ยซAt 6:40 p.m. on October 29, I was reviewing this conference in Paiporta. My partner interrupts me, telling me to go up to the terrace. We are 50 meters from the Poyo ravine and it is overflowing, but it is not raining in Paiporta. I had the car in the garage and we went down the six floors of the building when we saw that a foot of water covered the entire square. The neighbors agreed that it was not a good idea to move the car from the site. “We didn’t go for the car,” says Posteguillo, who days later located the vehicle a kilometer from where he parked it.
ยซIn 13 minutes there was a brutal torrent of two meters of water advancing without control, dragging weapons, trees, cars, everything. They took out an industrial warehouse in front of the building where we were, which was built by my partner’s father. The water took away the front door of the building, the faรงade wall, the bookstore next door, La Moixaranga…, I was afraid because of the structure of the building. There were six hours of non-stop torrential rain. โWe saw people disappear into the water,โ he says.
He continues: ยซWe went to bed without electricity or water thinking that logically at dawn the Civil Guard, the Firefighters, the Army would be there, but at dawn there was no one. Yes, there was the body of a young Chinese woman, with whom he had exchanged some words, and, next to it, her mother watching over the body. There was no police, no army. No one came for a whole day. The cars were overturned, everything was full of mud, silence, fear.
Posteguillo remembers the second night. ยซNo one comes. There is looting. I don’t know if you’ve seen the movie ‘The Purge’, same thing. At dawn, no one had come. The neighbors had removed the girl’s body to a basement. How can it be that no one comes in 48 hours? Can someone explain it to me? In Spain? “In the 21st century?” asks the author of ‘The Night Frankenstein Read Don Quixote’.
ยซAs I know a lot of people, I have given many conferences for the Army, I made some calls. I called the Army. I can’t say what they told me. When I hung up I told my partner: ‘We have to get out of here on our own,’ recalls the author of ‘Julia’, a novel with which he won the Planeta award.
ยซAt the third dawn, when there was no one, no one institutional, because volunteers began to arrive, my partner and I dragged the suitcase for kilometers and kilometers through a devastating spectacle like I have never seen in my life and like I think people don’t. you imagine. We saw corpses, overturned cars, all the buildings destroyed… until we reached Valencia, where I have an apartment. They cannot imagine what these people are going through, they cannot conceive the level and feeling that those people from Paiporta, Algemesรญ, Alfafar,.. have because they are not getting the institutional help that is needed. Thank God the people are always different, but the people with shovels cannot,” he says.
ยซThere are already cases of infectious diseases that are being treated in La Fe because the streets are not being cleaned with the necessary speed. Please, in the small or large influence that each of you may have, fight so that this does not happen like this,” pleads the Valencian writer.
“It has been very cruel not to warn but it is more cruel not to help with the energy that is needed,” he maintains. ยซThere are many older people, who lived on ground floors, who cannot fill out the aid nor do they know how to fill out the documentation. How can institutions be so miserable? “They have no idea what people are going through, no idea,” exclaims the Premi de les Letres Valencianes 2010.
ยซIn the 1st century BC, politicians killed each other. The Gracchus, the grandsons of Scipio Africanus, were clubbed to death by opponents of the land law reform and their bodies thrown into the river. You already know how they killed Caesar. Now I am going to make a generalization, which I know is unfair because there are honest politicians, but the feeling that exists in the towns where I come from is that the politicians of the 21st century stab the people,” he says.
He closed his speech by quoting Antonio Machado and that โone of the two Spains must freeze your heart. ยปSometimes the feeling there is is that the two Spains are freezing our hearts,ยซ Posteguillo concluded.
Comment Report a bug
**Whatโข specific policy โฃrecommendations does [Expert Name] offer to address the systemic issues revealed by the inadequate responseโข to the floods in Valencia?**
## Interview: The Deluge and its Aftermathโ – Aโฃ Conversation with Santiago Posteguillo
**Introduction:**
Welcome โขto World โToday News. โToday, we’re joined by โขacclaimed historianโ and author Santiago Posteguillo, whoseโฃ firsthand experience with the recent devastating floods in Valencia serves as a stark reminder of the human costโค of natural disaster. We will alsoโฃ beโฃ joined by [Expert Name],โค an expert in disaster relief and recovery, to provide important context and insights.
**Partโข 1: A Night of Terror – Witnessingโฃ the Unthinkable**
**Interviewer:** Mr. Posteguillo, your account of the floods in Paiporta is profoundly affecting. Can you describe the moment you realized the severity of the situation andโ the fear you felt as the water surged?
**Santiago Posteguillo:**
[ Posteguillo shares his experience]
**Interviewer:** [Expert Name], โwe often hear about the immediate dangers of floods, but Posteguillo’s account
highlights the terrifying speed with which this disaster unfolded. What are some of โthe โmost critical challengesโ that emergency responders โฃface in those initial hours?
**[Expert Name]:**
[Expert provides analysis]
**Part 2:โฃ Absence in the Aftermath – Institutional โFailure and the Power of Community**
**Interviewer:** Mr. Posteguillo, you describeโข a haunting silence after the floods, a lack of official presence that only amplified the sense of abandonment. This experience raisesโฃ serious questions about the adequacy of emergency response systems. What do youโค believe led to this breakdown in the immediate aftermath?
**Santiago Posteguillo:**
[Posteguillo expresses his perspective]
**Interviewer:** [Expert Name], how common are these โgaps in emergency response, and what factors contribute
to them, particularly in the context of sudden, widespread disasters?
**[Expert Name]:**
[Expert offers insights into disaster response challenges]
**Part 3: The Long Road to Recovery – Trauma, Resilience, and Rebuilding Trust**
**Interviewer:** โคBeyond the physical damage, it’s clear โthis event has left deep psychological scarsโข on the community. โ Whatโฃ are some of the long-term challenges facingโ those directly affected by โthe โfloods?
**Santiago Posteguillo:**
[Posteguillo discusses the emotional toll]
**Interviewer:**
[Expert Name], how can communities effectively address theโข psychological trauma of such events, and what support systems are crucial in the long road to recovery?
**[Expert Name]:**
[Expertilluminatestheimportanceofmentalhealthsupportindisasterrecovery
**Part 4: A Call to Action – Addressing โSystemic Issues and Preventing Future Tragedies**
**Interviewer:** Mr. โฃPosteguillo, you mentioned the โฃfeeling โคthat โฃsome feel “stabbed in โthe back” byโฃ those in power. Can you elaborate on this sentimentโ andโค whatโ needs to change to ensure a more proactive and effective response to such โคdisasters in the future?
โข**Santiago Posteguillo:**
[Posteguillo โshares his vision for change]
**Interviewer:** [Expert Name],โ what concrete โขsteps can be taken at the institutional and community
levels toโ improve disaster preparedness and ensure a more robust โand equitable response to future emergencies?
**[Expert Name]:**
[Expert suggests practical solutions and policy recommendations]
**Closing:**
**Interviewer:** Thank you, Mr. Posteguillo and โ [Expert Name], for sharing your valuable perspectives.
We hope this conversation inspires action and helps build a more resilient and compassionate future for all.