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'Heartbreaking': Dad digging up 5yo daughter’s grave buried under cyclone silt

Author
Adam Pearse,
Publish Date
Tue, 21 Feb 2023, 7:57am

'Heartbreaking': Dad digging up 5yo daughter’s grave buried under cyclone silt

Author
Adam Pearse,
Publish Date
Tue, 21 Feb 2023, 7:57am

When Peter Lafferty dug his 5-year-old daughter鈥檚 grave 22 years ago, he went seven feet deep.

That鈥檚 the required depth for a double interment - Peter wants to be buried with his first child Sarah, who died of pneumonia on November 8, 2001.

Digging a child鈥檚 grave is something no parent should ever have to do.

But Peter has to do it all over again after Cyclone Gabrielle caused the Mangaone River to swell, burying the small cemetery on the edge of the river near Rissington, Hawke鈥檚 Bay, in almost 5m of silt.

聽鈥淚 never thought I鈥檇 have to do this again,鈥 Peter tells the聽Herald, sighing and leaning on his shovel.

It鈥檚 just one of the countless examples of devastation in the wider Hawke鈥檚 Bay region after raging floodwaters submerged houses, levelled orchards and crops, destroyed bridges and claimed 11 lives so far.

罢丑别听Herald聽came across Peter on Sunday, quietly working away on his own with a shovel, spade and wheelbarrow.

The 59-year-old is standing in the cemetery, towering over those on the road it borders, thanks to the mountain of silt that has filled the square section.

The surrounding area is a hive of activity. Rissington and neighbouring Patoka are cut off after the Rissington Bridge collapsed during the floods.

With the Rissington Bridge gone, the only access across the Mangaone River is by boat. Photo / Mike ScottWith the Rissington Bridge gone, the only access across the Mangaone River is by boat. Photo / Mike Scott

Access is only possible via boat across the river. Diggers churn away on the nearby bank, forging a road through the debris amid plans to create a crossing to further enable supply deliveries.

Army soldiers are stationed on either side of the river, helping load supplies onto the boat, carrying them up to the road and into vehicles for transport into the villages.

Watching it all happen is Peter, but his focus is elsewhere. He has to be careful where he launches his shovel into the earth, not knowing what he might find.

The cemetery is small. Peter isn鈥檛 sure but says there are at least 50 people buried here.

The cemetery isn鈥檛 for everyone in Rissington. It鈥檚 private, owned by the local Absolom family who Peter grew up with.

Peter Lafferty is afforded a bit of shade by a towering oak tree planted in the cemetery. Photo / Mike ScottPeter Lafferty is afforded a bit of shade by a towering oak tree planted in the cemetery. Photo / Mike Scott

Following the floods, the cemetery was littered with driftwood, making it unrecognisable.

Peter describes the moment he saw the cemetery after the cyclone hit as 鈥渉eartbreaking鈥 - not just for him but for the families of all those buried there.

鈥淗eartbreaking, for all the other people too who may have trouble trying to find [people].鈥

The digging began on Wednesday, the day after the floods. He had to enlist the soldiers鈥 help to remove the mass of dirt blocking the gate.

It鈥檚 slow, punishing work. Wearing a faded, red plaid shirt and jeans, Peter is afforded brief periods of shade under a towering oak tree planted in the cemetery, but he can do little to escape the powerful Hawke鈥檚 Bay sun.

With a sharpened steel rod in hand, Peter drives it downwards until he hits something solid. Having played in the cemetery as a child, Peter knows where most of the graves are.

The cemetery is small, only for those connected to the local Absolom family. Photo / Mike ScottThe cemetery is small, only for those connected to the local Absolom family. Photo / Mike Scott

He鈥檚 managed to dig out the front row closest to the road. Large pieces of driftwood stick out of the ground to signal where graves are located.

After five days of digging and more than an hour by hand, he finally uncovers the black headstone of his daughter, Sarah.

Next to it is an unmarked headstone. It will be Peter鈥檚 when he dies.

鈥淚t鈥檚 hard standing here looking down there,鈥 Peter says, his head turned towards the picture of his daughter.

鈥淚t brings back the whole lot really, puts a lump in your throat.鈥

Born on June 26, 1996, Sarah and her mother Danielle were lucky to be alive after the latter suffered from pre-eclampsia - a blood pressure disorder that can prove fatal during pregnancy for mother and baby.

After five days of digging, Peter has managed to uncover his daughter's headstone. Photo / Mike ScottAfter five days of digging, Peter has managed to uncover his daughter's headstone. Photo / Mike Scott

Sarah was deprived of oxygen for 45 minutes, which led to her developing cerebral palsy. Doctors predicted she wouldn鈥檛 live past 10 hours.

But thanks to tireless efforts from Danielle, Peter and a variety of caregivers, Sarah lived for five and a half years.

Peter admits they were tough years. He described Sarah as a 鈥渓iving doll鈥, unable to sit or stand, walk or talk.

It wasn鈥檛 until he had another two children that Peter realised just how different it was to raise a child with special needs.

鈥淚 think of her every day as it is anyway, but stronger now that I鈥檓 here all the time.鈥

Casting his eyes over the rest of the cemetery, he tries to recall who is where.

Names don鈥檛 readily come to mind but he says some graves are more than 120 years old. In the southwest corner, a mother and a daughter are buried together - they died during the influenza pandemic more than a century ago.

鈥淚t鈥檚 just hard to remember, there鈥檚 all sorts of sh** happening in my head at the moment,鈥 he confesses.

鈥淭here are whole families here; father, mother and kids, all lined up.鈥

Several areas in the cemetery have sunken into the ground. Photo / Mike ScottSeveral areas in the cemetery have sunken into the ground. Photo / Mike Scott

He points to a sunken area in the centre of the cemetery. It鈥檚 like quicksand, Peter says, and he has serious concerns for the graves located there.

Peter also fears for the graves simply marked by rocks or other items, things surely now kilometres down the Mangaone River.

Peter says he鈥檚 been thinking about the last time he dug a hole in this cemetery, more than two decades ago.

The backdrop has radically changed. The nearly 100-year bridge is no longer standing. Four-foot piles of dirt line the roadsides to clear a path for vehicles.

鈥淸The cyclone has] basically changed the landscape forever ... it鈥檚 quite devastating.鈥

The clean-up has begun for areas including Rissington. Photo / Mike ScottThe clean-up has begun for areas including Rissington. Photo / Mike Scott

Peter will likely be digging for weeks. He wonders whether a small digger might be a better option, but is wary of destroying graves hidden deep below the surface.

Nevertheless, the father continues on - searching for his daughter鈥檚 teddy bear that once sat next to her headstone.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a mammoth task, I didn鈥檛 think I鈥檇 have to be moving all this dirt again, but never mind, someone鈥檚 got to do it.鈥

The last the聽Herald聽sees of Peter, he鈥檚 enjoying a beer in the late afternoon sun with locals and soldiers who haven鈥檛 stopped all day.

It鈥檚 a reward for a job not yet done, but a day well spent.

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