South Florida Boy Who Rode Out Hurricane Dorian In Bahamas Got Big Hugs From Classmates

FORT LAUDERDALE (CBSMiami/CNN) - A South Florida boy who rode out Hurricane Dorian on Grand Bahama, got an outpouring of love from his classmates when he returned to school.

When Makai Simmons, 3, walked into his Pembroke Pines classroom on Monday, he was instantly met with hugs. In the video recorded by his mother, Tekara Capron, Makai starts wiping away tears as someone says "we missed you."

"They came and they hugged him and supported him," said Capron. "It really touched me, you know, this is what I needed."

Capron, who grew up in the Bahamas, said she tries to get back there every time she has a holiday weekend. So when Labor Day weekend came it was no question she'd make the trip to Freeport with her son, all while hoping to avoid Hurricane Dorian as it moved toward the Florida coast.

"Instead, it came directly to my island where my entire family, my friends, my loved ones were," Capron said.

Hurricane Dorian tore a path of destruction across Grand Bahama and the Abaco Islands, leaving at least 50 people dead, hundreds missing and some 70,000 people homeless.

The 22-year-old said she had experienced hurricanes before but this one was "horrific."

"This one was absolutely devastating and had me terrified, especially with my son there," Capron said.

She recalls the terrifying moments as the door of her grandmother's house flew open as Dorian passed over the island. She wrapped Makai up in her arms and held him tight.

"Makai said 'mommy, I'm so scared'," she said. "I'm going to hold on to him in case I have to make a run for it."

They survived Dorian but the house they were in flooded. Capron took a picture of Makai standing next to the water line inside the home that almost comes up to his chest.

Capron said her family lost a lot but that "they are material items." She's thankful to just have survived with her family.

On Saturday they returned to Florida after being able to evacuate the island on the Bahamas Paradise Cruise Line Grand Celebration ship.

Makai refers to Dorian as the monster because that's what the wind sounded like to him, Capron said.

After surviving the wrath of Dorian, witnessing the moment the kids embraced her son was a special moment she said she needed.

"My whole country is at such a point of devastation and everything we were seeing," she said. "This made me feel really loved and cared about."

(©2019 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company, contributed to this report.)

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