LOS ANGELES — Shaw Zhao was worried even before he arrived in Los Angeles last week: His father's neighborhood was in an evacuation zone as deadly wildfires raged in the metropolitan area, and Zhao hadn't heard from the 84-year-old the previous night.
As he made his way from the airport to Zhi-feng Zhao's home in the Altadena neighborhood on Jan. 8, he was stopped by police blockades. So he went to a shelter for evacuees, searching every bed for his father's familiar face to no avail.
The next day, he got into the neighborhood on foot, walking for an hour with his Lyft driver and the man's wife — two strangers who had agreed to help him.
Approaching his father's home, the houses along the entire block were all but gone. A coyote sniffed around the debris where his father's home once stood. When he went to inspect, he was horrified to find his father's remains.
''It was very difficult,'' Zhao said, crying.
Zhi-feng Zhao, who was among at least 25 people killed in one of the most destructive natural disasters in Southern California's history, had come to the United States from China in 1989, his son said, speaking partially in Mandarin.
His father, who was orphaned as a child and grew up in poverty in China, earned a college degree in math and mechanical engineering. After he immigrated to the U.S., he was unable to continue his academic work in his field because of the language barrier and instead worked in the restaurant business, his son said.
Shaw Zhao said he bought the Altadena home for his parents in 2003. His mother, a local Chinese schoolteacher, died from cancer in 2021 during the COVID-19 pandemic when she was afraid to go to the hospital because she didn't want to be isolated from her family.