Easter Island rebounds after fire that singed statues
UNESCO recently allocated nearly $100,000 for assessment and repair plans
Moai statues stand on Ahu Tongariki, Rapa Nui, or Easter Island, Chile, Sunday, Nov, 27, 2022.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS |
PUBLISHED: December 16, 2022 at 11:44 a.m. | UPDATED: December 16, 2022 at 11:53 a.m.
By Maria Teresa Hernandez | Associated Press
RAPA NUI, Chile The hillside of Rano Raraku volcano on Rapa Nui feels like a place that froze in time.
Embedded in grass and volcanic rock, almost 400 moai the monolithic human figures carved centuries ago by this remote Pacific islands Rapanui people remained untouched until recently. Some are buried from the neck down, the heads seemingly observing their surroundings from the underground.
Around them, there has been a pervasive smell of smoke from still-smoldering vegetation the vestige of a wildfire that broke out in early October. More than 100 moai were damaged by the flames, many of them blackened by soot, though the impact on the stone remains undetermined. UNESCO recently allocated nearly $100,000 for assessment and repair plans.
In this Polynesian territory that now belongs to Chile and is widely known as Easter Island, the loss of any moai would be a blow to ancient cultural and religious traditions. Each of the moai the nearly 400 on the volcano and more than 500 others elsewhere on the island represents an ancestor. A creator of words and music. A protector.
The president of Rapa Nuis council of elders, Carlos Edmunds, recalled his emotions when he first heard about the fire. Oh, I started crying, he said. It was like my grandparents were burned.
It takes a close look at a map of the Pacific to find Rapa Nui, a tiny triangle covering about 63 square miles (164 square kilometers). Home to about 7,700 people about half of them with Rapanui ancestry its one of the worlds most isolated inhabited islands. The quickest way to get there is a six-hour flight from Santiago, Chile, covering 2,340 miles (3,766 kilometers). Much farther away, to the northwest, are the more populous islands of Polynesia.
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