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BLACK MOUNTAIN, N.C. (AP) — Sarah Vekasi is a potter who runs a store in Black Mountain, North Carolina, called Sarah Sunshine Pottery, named after her normally bubbly personality.

But these days she’s struggling with the trauma of Hurricane Helene and uncertainty about the future of her business. “All I can say is that I’m alive. I’m not doing great.



I’m not doing good. But I’m extremely grateful to be alive, especially when so many are not,” Vekasi said. One thing that makes her feel a little better is the fellowship of the daily town meeting at the square.

“It’s incredible being able to meet in person,” said Vekasi, who was cut off by impassible roads for days. At Wednesday’s session more than 150 people gathered as local leaders stood atop a picnic table shouting updates. In the midst of the devastating destruction left by the deadliest hurricane to hit the mainland U.

S. since , human connections are giving the survivors hope in western North Carolina. While government cargo planes brought food and water into the and rescue crews waded through creeks searching for survivors, those who made it through the storm, whose death toll has were leaning on one another.

Martha Sullivan, also at the town meeting, was taking careful notes so she could share the information — roads reopened, progress in getting power restored, work on trying to get water flowing again — with others. Sullivan, who has lived in Black Mountain for 43 years, said her children i.

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