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Across the northern Bahamas, what used to be stunning islands are now scenes of widespread destruction.

Hurricane Dorian pulverized the islands for two days, hurling catastrophic winds and relentless rain. It was the strongest storm ever to make landfall in the country.

Now, the only airport on the island of Grand Bahama has been ripped apart by Dorian.

“After two days of trying, we’re finally able to get into the Freeport airport,” CNN’s Patrick Oppmann said from the scene Wednesday.

“It’s gone. … The level of devastation is actually breathtaking. There are no walls left at the airport. The ceiling has come crashing.”

The airport’s obliteration deals a devastating blow for residents who desperately need medical evacuations or emergency aid.

“The runway field is now a debris field,” Oppmann said.

Now that Dorian’s vicious bands of rain and wind are slowly crawling up the southeast US coast, Bahamians are finally seeing sunlight again.

“Nothing compares to what we went through the past two days,” survivor Michael Hynes said. “Almost 48 hours now with nonstop carnage.”

At least seven people, including an 8-year-old boy, were killed. Authorities say that number will almost surely rise.

“We can expect more deaths to be recorded,” Prime Minister Hubert Minnis said. “Our priority is search, rescue and recovery.”

Volunteers are rushing to rescue trapped residents and deliver aid three days after Dorian slammed the country as a Category 5 storm.

“There is tremendous human suffering,” storm chaser Josh Morgerman said. “These people really need help. They’ve lost everything.”

HOW TO HELP VICTIMS OF HURRICANE DORIAN

Volunteers wade through flooding to save strangers

Rochenel Daniel is one of the many Bahamians who took it upon himself to rescue others.

“The first one we found was my brother. He was clinging on to a tree, and he made it out safe,” Daniel said.

“But we are unable to locate his wife at the moment. We hope that she’s OK.”

Volunteers are fighting their own fatigue to save survivors worn out from the prolonged hurricane.

“Some people, they were exhausted. Some we had to carry,” Daniel said. “Some couldn’t even make it.”

Freeport resident Harold Williams and his son went out on a Jet Ski to get stranded relatives who waded out to them in chest-deep waters.

“I don’t think we’ve seen anything like this in our lifetime,” Williams said. “Total destruction.”

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In parts of the Abaco Islands, going door-to-door isn’t an option because there are no doors. Houses have been replaced with rubble.

A hospital isn’t even reachable

Swaths of Grand Bahama now look like ravaged wastelands.

Injured residents can’t reach one hospital because it’s blocked by submerged cars.

Not only is the island’s airport ruined, a road leading up to it has been replaced by a river of floodwater.

Between Grand Bahama and the Abaco Islands, about 60,000 people may be in dire need of food relief, the World Food Programme said.

The US Coast Guard has conducted 61 rescues in the Bahamas so far and is doing aerial surveys, Rear Adm. Doug Fears told reporters during a FEMA conference call Wednesday.

Houses look like they were put in a blender

Even new homes built under more stringent building codes were destroyed, said Brandon Clement, who shot footage of the destruction from a helicopter.

One older neighborhood was wiped out, he said.

“You can’t tell that there are any homes there,” he said. “It looks like a bunch of building materials were put in a big grinder and thrown on the ground.”

The Abaco Islands suffered massive destruction, the Prime Minister said, with 60% of homes in the town of Marsh Harbor damaged.

A catastrophically slow-moving storm

Bahamians endured Dorian’s brute force for days, as the hurricane moved only 30 miles in 30 hours from Monday into Tuesday.

TRACK THE STORM

By Wednesday morning, all tropical storm warnings for the country had been discontinued. But the arduous recovery is just beginning.

“It’s very hard, but we shall overcome.” said Daniel, the rescue volunteer.

The recovery will be especially difficult for Freeport resident Howard Armstrong. His wife drowned in front of him after a storm surge overwhelmed their home, leaving only their heads above water.

The couple waited for hours to be rescued before Armstrong’s wife succumbed to hypothermia and slipped beneath the surface.

“She was standing on top of the kitchen cabinets until they disintegrated. And I kept with her, and she just drowned on me,” Howard said. “She was gone so quickly.”