TIME natural disaster

What Remains After the Flames: Scenes From the Ash-Colored Streets of Maui

August 12, 2023  Kula, Hawaii  This small hillside town on Maui suffered damage from deadly fires that hit several parts of the island on August 8. Although there were several homes in this neighborhood that burned down, there have not been any reported deaths in this area. Photo by David Butow for TIME.
David Butow for TIME Ruins of a home in the small hillside town of Kula on Aug. 12, 2023.

Lahaina vanished in less than a day. And without warning.

Images of smoldering landscapes have been coming out of Hawaii for as long as there’s been photography. But those pictures were ultimately about creation: Because the archipelago is among the youngest pieces of land on earth, built around the volcanos reaching from the sea floor, every eruption announced another addition. And if flowing lava took houses, or even whole neighborhoods, on its way to augment the island’s coast, that destruction happened slowly—and with so much warning that professional photographers had time to gather from around the world to document it.

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Lahaina vanished in less than a day. And without warning. The destruction on Maui was unalloyed. A brush fire that sprang back to life on the afternoon of Aug. 8 had, by mid-morning on Aug. 9, reduced every building and vehicle in the historic city of 13,000 to the color of ash. The death toll, which stood at 99 on Aug. 15, made it the deadliest U.S. wildfire in more than 100 years, and the search for victims was far from over.

Lahaina Hawaii Time Magazine Cover

The night sky over the city’s harbor glowed orange, images of the flames captured by citizen journalists—people holding up camera phones as the embers rode howling winds to the next bit of fuel, in a leeward region whose famously dry, hot summers had been aggravated by drought. At least 2,200 structures burned to the ground. Some people survived by climbing into the sea.

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When they arrived, what awaited news photographers, including David Butow, on assignment for TIME, was the human effort to navigate the brutal topography of climate change. “The particular skills of the local culture came into play immediately,” he writes. “Rescuers and relief supplies were ferried in a range of craft, from large tourist boats to jet skis and traditional Hawaiian canoes.”

Read more: How to Help Those Affected by the Maui Wildfires

In the summer of 2023, weather reports sounded like klaxons, and the very sky pulsed red with warning. Even in a world where technology exists that might mitigate future harms, if only we would put it to use, we are confronted again and again with our powerlessness in the face of humankind’s own past actions. And so the news from Maui carried a potency beyond even the devastating tally of deaths. Much of what makes Hawaii feel like paradise, after all, is a lushness that—even among the infrastructure of mass tourism—reflects a culture of respectful harmony, first of all with nature. But along with the rest of the world, the islands have grown hotter, drier, and subject to extreme weather, like the wind that drove the flames down the mountain and the people into the sea. There is no escape.

August 13, 2023 Kula, Hawaii A water dropping helicopter flies in and out of a neighborhood in this hillside town after picking up water from the swimming pool of a burned-down house. There are sill some areas nearby that are smoldering days after the fires were mostly extinguished. The fire that burned a dozen or so houses in Kula was separate from other fires that caused deaths on the island. Photo by David Butow for TIME August 12, 2023  Kula, Hawaii  Spencer Kim helps clear debris at the ruins of a house belonging to a friend. This small hillside town on Maui suffered damage from deadly fires that hit several parts of the island on August 8. Although there were several homes in this neighborhood that burned down, there have not been any reported deaths in this area. Photo by David Butow for TIME. August 13, 2023  Wailuku, Hawaii   At the first Sunday service since the deadly fires last week, parishioners of the Kupaianaha church  pray for healing after the tragedy. Much of Sunday’s service was devoted to finding purpose in spiritual thoughts and also practical efforts by the community to deliver aid to victimes. Photo by David Butow for TIME.
August 14, 2023  Lahaina, Hawaii  Scenes of devastation where deadly fires swept through this popular island town on August 8, 2023. Some of the burned vehicles show an “X” which was painted by search and rescue crews signifying the vehicle has been checked and does not contain human remains. Photo by David Butow for TIME.

Read more: Why the Maui Wildfire Was So Deadly

August 12, 2023  Kula, Hawaii  This small hillside town on Maui suffered damage from deadly fires that hit several parts of the island on August 8. Although there were several homes in this neighborhood that burned down, there have not been any reported deaths in this area. Photo by David Butow for TIME. August 12, 2023  Kula, Hawaii  A woman who asked not to be named, hoses down a still-hot part of the property of a friend whose house burned down. This small hillside town on Maui suffered damage from deadly fires that hit several parts of the island on August 8. Although there were several homes in this neighborhood that burned down, there have not been any reported deaths in this area. Photo by David Butow for TIME. August 12, 2023  Kula, Hawaii  This small hillside town on Maui suffered damage from deadly fires that hit several parts of the island on August 8. Although there were several homes in this neighborhood that burned down, there have not been any reported deaths in this area. Photo by David Butow for TIME.

Read more: What to Know About the Government Response to the Maui Wildfires

August 14, 2023  Kahului, Hawaii  Maui residents line up to get free supplies at a Costco. The company provided the goods to aid those affected by the deadly fires last week. Photo by David Butow for TIME.
August 13, 2023  Wailuku, Hawaii   At the first Sunday service since the deadly fires last week, parishioners of the Kupaianaha church  pray for healing after the tragedy. Much of Sunday’s service was devoted to finding purpose in spiritual thoughts and also practical efforts by the community to deliver aid to victimes. Photo by David Butow for TIME. August 14, 2023  Lahaina, Hawaii  Scenes of devastation where deadly fires swept through this popular island town on August 8, 2023. Some of the burned vehicles show an “X” which was painted by search and rescue crews signifying the vehicle has been checked and does not contain human remains. Photo by David Butow for TIME.
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