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AFTER THE WAVE
Australian Women’s Weekly NZ
|January 2025
Twenty years ago, the Boxing Day tsunami tore across the Indian Ocean, shredding towns, villages and holiday resorts, and killing hundreds of thousands of people from Indonesia to Africa. Three survivors share their memories of shock, terror and loss with The Weekly.

The reminders are everywhere for bereaved father Joe Giardina. A beach ball bouncing near him, with nobody else in sight.
A heart-shaped patch of condensation on the bedroom window, mirroring a framed snapshot of his late son, Paul. It's 20 years since the brutal Boxing Day tsunami killed an estimated 227,898 people. Sixteen-year-old Paul Giardina was one of those victims.
Among the world's worst natural disasters, the tsunami was born of a massive undersea earthquake which ruptured the earth's crust just south of Banda Aceh in Indonesia and released the equivalent of two million atomic blasts' worth of energy over 10 minutes and across 1200 kilometres. The resulting ocean swell wiped out entire communities in 14 countries around the Indian Ocean, with waves up to 30 metres high.

Newlywed Trisha Broadbridge, honeymooning on Thailand's Phi Phi Island, lost her sporty husband, Troy.
Sydneysider Moi Vogel, who'd phoned home the previous day to tell her family she was pregnant, also perished.

To this day Paul's mother, Evanna, remains so distressed that she finds it impossible to share her thoughts outside of close family. But his father, Joe, gains solace from talking about Paul and his enduring legacy of unconditional joy.
"His memory is with us all the time," smiles the indomitable 67-year-old.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der January 2025-Ausgabe von Australian Women’s Weekly NZ.
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