
SATRUPHOLM, Germany — A joyous Easter egg hunt turned into heartbreak Sunday when ferocious winds felled a massive century-old beech tree, crushing three lives—including a 10-month-old girl—in a wooded area near this quiet northern German town.
The disaster struck around 11 a.m. during an outdoor gathering organized by the nearby Mutter-Kind-Heim Satrupholm, a state-funded residential facility supporting pregnant women, new mothers, and young children in need. About 50 participants from the home scattered through the woods hunting for colorful eggs when the 30-meter (100-foot) tree suddenly gave way, pinning four people beneath its heavy canopy, according to Schleswig-Holstein police.
Among the victims were a 21-year-old woman and her infant daughter, who succumbed later at a hospital despite desperate medical efforts. A 16-year-old girl also perished at the scene. An 18-year-old woman suffered severe injuries and was airlifted by helicopter to a trauma center, where she remains in critical condition. First responders worked frantically amid gusts topping 70 km/h (43 mph), battling the elements to free those trapped.
The facility, part of Germany’s child welfare network, provides crucial aid to vulnerable families facing housing instability, postpartum challenges, or social services intervention. Its website describes the Easter event as a “family-friendly tradition” to foster joy and community. In the wake of the tragedy, grief counselors rushed to the site, and the home activated emergency psychological support for survivors and staff.
Harrowing images from Bild showed Easter eggs strewn across the debris-strewn ground, with two victims draped in white sheets—a stark contrast to the holiday’s promise of renewal. The German Weather Service had issued a high-wind warning for the region hours earlier, urging caution outdoors. Investigators now probe whether the tree’s location, in a popular recreational wood, met safety standards, with early reports noting its advanced age and exposure to storm-prone conditions.
Local mayor Klaus-Peter Boysen called it “an unimaginable loss for our community,” vowing a thorough review. As families mourn, the incident underscores nature’s fury amid Europe’s unseasonably wild spring weather, which has already spawned floods and outages across the continent.
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