Prøve GULL - Gratis
Finding Hope In The Ashes
The Australian Women's Weekly
|February 2019
A decade ago, author Ella Holcombe lost her parents and childhood home in the Black Saturday bushfires. Despite the unimaginable tragedy, Susan Horsburgh finds it has inspired healing and hope.
-

For Ella Holcombe, much of Black Saturday remains a blur, but she can’t forget her mother’s final, terrified words before hanging up on their last phone call: “We’re in really big trouble”. Ella, 26 at the time, was living in a Melbourne share house with her 23-year-old twin brothers, Patrick and Eugene, while her parents were at the family’s mountaintop home in Kinglake, an hour-and-a-half’s drive north-east of Melbourne.
Living next to Kinglake National Park, Ella’s mum and dad had fended off bushfires before – every summer they sent the family photo albums to their daughter in the city for safekeeping – but that Saturday in February 2009 the winds were fierce and the temperatures in the mid-40s. By the afternoon, the siblings knew it was serious.
When they lost phone contact with their parents, they headed for their childhood home, but were stopped short by police roadblocks in Whittlesea. There they joined a panicked, ever-growing crowd of loved ones looking for answers. “We could see the whole top of the mountain on fire,” recalls Ella. “Everyone was trying to talk to the police and SES guys. No one knew anything.”
They went home to Brunswick that night and worked the phones for two days, flipping between optimism and despair. At one point, a friend whose father had seen the family block told Ella the house was gone, but she refused to believe it. Finally, 48 hours after they saw the flames, police came to their door. “They didn’t need to say anything,” says Ella.
Ella and her brothers had lost their mother and father, their much-loved family dog and the timber and mudbrick home their parents had built two decades earlier – the backdrop for all their childhood memories: chasing skinks, poking ant nests, lying under the stars together on the trampoline.
Denne historien er fra February 2019-utgaven av The Australian Women's Weekly.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA The Australian Women's Weekly
The Australian Women's Weekly
The pharmacist will see you now
The menopause journey isn't always a straightforward one, but thankfully help is at hand.
1 mins
October 2025

The Australian Women's Weekly
Can you reverse hair ageing?
Yes, there is a way to revive brittle, thinning hair that has lost its youthful lustre.
2 mins
October 2025
The Australian Women's Weekly
Money matters with Effie
Not outliving your money is all about finding your ideal super savings balance – and knowing how to use it in retirement.
3 mins
October 2025

The Australian Women's Weekly
The new girl
It was just like any other day for Andie Tanner when an invitation to end a schoolyard rift set in chain a run of events which would change her entire universe.
7 mins
October 2025

The Australian Women's Weekly
The first couple of comedy
As Anne Edmonds signs on to host Ten's upcoming Talkin' 'Bout Your Gen, proud partner Lloyd Langford is by her side to cheer her on - and share a laugh or two.
7 mins
October 2025
The Australian Women's Weekly
Love at second bite
Cooking for the masses was once a chore. Now it brings a wealth of happiness to this columnist's heart.
2 mins
October 2025

The Australian Women's Weekly
Messing with your mind
Here's how to spot the sure-fire signs you're being gaslit, whether it's in a romantic relationship, a friendship, at work or in your doctor's surgery.
3 mins
October 2025

The Australian Women's Weekly
And baby makes three
As they welcome their first child, AFL power couple Abbey Holmes and Keegan Brooksby open up their home to talk about their path to parenthood - and what is ahead for their little family.
8 mins
October 2025

The Australian Women's Weekly
Dinner for 2
This simple fish tray bake is a quick, healthy dinner for two. The minimal prep makes it ideal for busy weeknights or relaxed weekends.
1 min
October 2025

The Australian Women's Weekly
THE LADY IN THE BOTTLE
At 8pm on September 18, 1965, a new show was launched on American TV, hoping to win over audiences with a mix of magic and mayhem. Sixty years on, Barbara Eden talks to The Weekly about the impact of I Dream of Jeannie - and the reason it's still endlessly re-run around the world.
7 mins
October 2025
Translate
Change font size