Lahaina, Hawaii, resident Jordan Saribay can’t shake the image of his beloved hometown engulfed in flame from his head. But he’s fortunate he and his family escaped the inferno alive, having merely lost items that can be replaced — including his home.

As he evacuated, Saribay saw his own home and the home of his grandmother engulfed in fire. A wall of flame “as tall as the buildings” and debris turn into dangerous projectiles surrounded him at every turn.

“Everything is gone, every single one of our family homes,” Saribay said. “The entire Lahaina Town and the entire subdivision of Lahaina – gone.”

Wind-whipped wildfires scorched the main heart of the Hawaiian island of Maui, reducing homes and businesses in historic Lahaina Town to ashes and forcing people to jump into the ocean to escape the flames and smoky conditions. At least six people have died in the wildfires and several others were injured.

And the flames grew much faster than anyone could have imagined. In a few hours, the wind-driven blaze tore through popular Front Street and decimated a town center that traced its roots to the 1700s and was on the National Register of Historic Places.

Getting out of the danger zone made for a surreal journey of trying to find an unclogged escape route amid blistering heat.

‘While driving through the neighborhood, it looked like a war zone,” Saribay said. “Houses throughout that neighborhood were already on fire. I’m driving through the thickest black smoke, and I don’t know what’s on the other side or what’s in front of me.”

When he made it out, Saribay felt a pang of emotion seeing Lahaina in his rear-view mirror, wondering what would be left to go back to. “Just praying that a miracle happens,’ he said.