Centuries-old cotton tree, national symbol for decades, felled by storm in Sierra Leone
Storm Wednesday evening in the capital, Freetown, destroyed all but the stump of the iconic tree
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Torrential rains in Sierra Leone's capital felled the centuries-old Cotton Tree, a national treasure whose loss has left "a gap" in people's hearts, the country's President Julius Maada Bio said Thursday.
"There is no stronger symbol of our national story than the Cotton Tree, a physical embodiment of where we come from as a country," Bio told the Associated Press. "Nothing in nature lasts forever, so our challenge is to rekindle, nurture, and develop that powerful African spirit for so long represented,.’
Standing 70 meters tall and 15 meters wide, the roughly 400 year-old tree has been Sierra Leone's national symbol for decades.
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It has appeared on bank notes, woven into lullabies and visited by royalty, such as Queen Elizabeth the II, to mark the country's independence in 1961, according to a statement by Zebek International, a press agency working with Sierra Leone's government.
SEVERE WEATHER OVER SOUTHERN PLAINS TO BRING HEAVY RAIN, TORNADO THREAT
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While the tree had withstood damage throughout the years, including a lightning strike that has left it partially scorched, Wednesday's storm left nothing of the tree but a stump.
For Sierra Leone, the loss is comparable to the fire that destroyed Paris' Notre Dame cathedral in 2019, said Zebek, the government's press agency.
Sierra Leone is among the countries most impacted by climate change. In 2017 more than 1,000 people were killed by a landslide due to heavy rains.
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President Bio said he looks forward to discussions how best to use the space.
"What the Cotton Tree represents will live on: How something so big and strong can grow from something (as small) as a seed, how many people can gather together under the protection of something bigger than the sum of their parts; and how for centuries it would be an embodiment of our history, unity, and resilience," he said.