Photo source: David Anastasi/LaPresse via AP |
Located on the island of Sicily, Mount Etna is one of the most active volcanoes in the world. It's also among the most deadly having wiped out more than a dozen towns and villages over the centuries, killing more than 17,000 people and leaving 30,000 or more homeless.
It's an absolutely amazing sight to see. I've got a pretty good feel for it because I lived it. Or I should say I lived in Catania, a city of about 300,000 at its base, during the summer of 1983 when I served as a missionary for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
The funny thing is just before living in Catania I lived in Siracusa about 40 miles to the south. During that eruption, we would go out on our balcony to view Etna's eruptions off in the distance. My parents wrote me a letter stating they had seen video of Etna's eruption on television and expressed relief that I was a more safe distance away. But by the time that letter found its way to me, I had been transferred to Catania where instead of looking to the northern horizon to see Etna, we looked up. It was right there, a mere 18 miles above our balcony.
Photo source: Salvatore Allegra/AP |
When I recall those days living beneath Mount Etna, I remember one particularly steamy and very muddy day in Catania along the Ionian Sea. We were in the heart of Sicily's summer months. Not only was it hot, extremely humid and downright nasty outside but there was also a bus strike. That is how we got around the city. With no public transportation available - taxis were out of the question for us missionaries who didn't have much money anyway - we walked and walked and walked.
I remember putting some serious miles on our shoes that day. Anziano Ron Smith, my missionary companion, and I had a bit of a rough but humorous go of it. First of all, we walked a great distance just to get to our designated zone in order to carry out our missionary work. We swung by a contact who was not home so we sought out others we were teaching. It seemed no one was home or available. Sure, we stopped by bars (small stores that sold everything from water to soda to liquor) to get water and/or a bite to eat, but as far as missionary work went on this day, we just plain struck out. Since we were so far from home and had no way to catch a bus ride back, we instead decided to walk downtown to stop by the Italy Catania Mission's office.
Let me re-set the scene. It was hot. It was humid. All busses drivers were on strike. And yes, there was an ashfall. Not only was ash falling but it was thick, really thick, like a fog, during midday. It had to be late afternoon by the time we knocked on the mission office door. Sister Turner, wife of our mission president Norman Turner, opened the door.
"Oh my goodness!" she exclaimed.
I just wish we had a picture of us that day. As we stood there in our white shirts, slacks and ties, each of us were an absolute mess, drenched to the bone by perspiration yet covered from head to toe with ash that turned to liquid mud dripping down our faces and arms. Man, I wish I had a picture. Because so many years have passed, I don't have distinct memories what happened next. I imagine we peeled off those muddy shirts and threw them in the washer and either dried them with an iron or received a couple of loaners from our fellow missionaries for the return trip home. (A handful of missionaries worked and lived in the office.) I'd also like to think those missionaries, who had access to a car, eventually drove us back to our apartment too.
Once back at our place, what I do remember is sweeping the ash off our balcony that evening as we had many times before. We sat there, looking up to Mount Etna, which rose 11,000 feet from sea level, and watched the lava flows make their way down the mountain side. Just amazing!
Photo source: Salvatore Allegra/AP |
Oh my goodness - I feel like I just took a walk down memory lane! We must have been serving together at that time because I had the identical experience: mud in my hair, dirty laundry hanging outside and walking and walking forever since the buses were all on strike! I do remember the watching the lava flow glowing in the night - such an impressive sight! I didn't know it was erupting again - thanks for sharing this fun memory!
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