Families are increasingly factoring climate into a move as temperatures and climate-induced disasters rise. Several
“It’s too many to do all at once,” he said. “It’s too sad and too hard. It’s impossible.”Eilat Shalev talks about the Hamas attack on Oct. 7, 2023, at the Nova music festival during an interview at her house in a village near Afula, Israel, Monday, Sept. 23, 2024. Shalev went to the festival with her husband, Shai Shalev. Eilat was able to escape and hide in an orchard, while Shai was killed. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)
Eilat Shalev talks about the Hamas attack on Oct. 7, 2023, at the Nova music festival during an interview at her house in a village near Afula, Israel, Monday, Sept. 23, 2024. Shalev went to the festival with her husband, Shai Shalev. Eilat was able to escape and hide in an orchard, while Shai was killed. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)Eilat Shalev remembers that the pomelos — large citrus fruits — were about to be harvested a few days after Oct. 7 in southern Israel.She knows that because farmers had already set out large collection bins, which she hid behind as Hamas militants overran the road leading to
where she had been dancing with her husband, Shai.The two got separated as militants began shooting at their car. Shalev ran toward nearby fields, jumping in and out of vehicles, until she found herself near a pomelo orchard.
“I grabbed the first tree I saw on the left side. I hid with my hands on my head and my face in the earth, just praying to God that God will rescue me so I will live and return to my kids,” she said.
An orchard where Eilat Shalev hid after trying to escape from the Nova music festival during the Hamas attack on Oct. 7, 2023, is seen near Kibbutz Reim, southern Israel, on Thursday, Sept. 26, 2024. Shalev went to the festival with her husband, Shai Shalev, who was killed during the attack. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)Ellie’s husband James found an engineering job. The family bought 192-year-old
with 237 acres (96 hectares) of forest and meadows.“I felt excited to go to a new place and be out of the fire place,” said 10-year-old Soraya Holden, one of five children, as she walked alongside the family’s herd of goats behind an old dairy barn. She ticked off the area’s perks — rock climbing, gymnastics and a climate that’s “not burning hot.”
(AP Video/Rodrique Ngowi)Families are increasingly factoring climate into a move as temperatures and climate-induced disasters rise. Several