excerpts from Arutz 7 below
300,000 people are reported to have lost electricity, and ports, train
stations, and airports are still closed.
Houston, Texas' World Bnei Akiva team announced on Friday that prayers
would be canceled and the synagogue closed due to Hurricane Harvey.
Harvey hit Texas on Friday night as a Category 4 hurricane, with winds
gusting at up to 130 miles per hour.
World Bnei Akiva emissary Rafi Engelhart said, "We're preparing for
the worst. If there are a few centimeters of water in our home, we'll
go to a friend's house that's a bit higher up. We've taken most of the
chairs out of the synagogue, and placed the prayer books on the top
shelves."
"Obviously every family has a lot to worry about. There may be a lot
of damage to property, cars, and homes, but there isn't a threat to
life."
He added that the Friday night and Saturday morning prayers would take
place as scheduled, but Saturday afternoon and evening prayers had
been canceled. World Bnei Akiva activities scheduled for Sunday have
been canceled as well.
"Our community consists both of people whose homes are
hurricane-proof, and those whose homes are ordinary," he said. "Those
who have relatively low homes will place everything valuable on chairs
and chests, and ensure everything is stable and can withstand possible
flooding. They also ensure that there is enough water for drinking,
because when there is flooding, the water becomes contaminated. They
also make sure to stock up on food, because there is a fear of
flooding on the roads, which will not make it possible to reach the
supermarket."
Rafi and his wife Shifra do not intend to leave the area, though,
since they have friends who are staying put.
"The Torah teaches us that we should not abandon the public in times
of trouble, so we are staying here in the meantime," Rafi said.
300,000 people are reported to have lost electricity, and ports, train
stations, and airports are still closed.
"This is going to be an unprecedented long and frustrating event for
the state of Texas," US Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
Director Brock Long told MSNBC on Saturday. "The recovery from this
disaster is going to be years."
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