KRYONERI, Greece — Diomataris Glakousakis watched in horror as scorching flames engulfed a forest near his home.
“This is a punishment,” the 53-year-old farmer from the suburban town of Kryoneri, just outside the Greek capital Athens, told NBC News. “This is man’s fault.”
Glakousakis said he had never lived through anything like it before.
Sweaty and exhausted from a long night, Glakousakis had defied mandatory evacuation orders alongside about a dozen men to stay and protect their homes using olive branches, buckets of water and household fire extinguishers.
Next to Glakousakis' land, two priests stood on the rooftop of a monastery desperately spraying garden hoses around the building's perimeter.
“We didn’t have help from anyone,” Glakousakis said. “Only God helped us. Only God.”
Raging wildfires have ripped through parts of Greece for six straight days, forcing thousands to flee as the blazes threatened entire towns and burned down homes, shops and vast areas of land in their path.
An unprecedented heatwave — Greece’s worst in three decades — sent temperatures soaring over the past week as firefighters worked tirelessly to extinguish the uncontrollable flames.
Greece has also deployed the army to battle the fires and several countries including France, Egypt, Switzerland and Spain have sent help.
For the third straight day, thousands of people were evacuated from the large, forested Greek island of Evia, just east of Athens, on Sunday. Residents and tourists watched from the ferry in terror as the blazes lit up the sky in a bright, fiery red.
More than 570 firefighters were working to contain the blaze in Evia, authorities said.
Fires that threatened the northern suburbs of Athens have now died down, but their ferocity has left a trail of destruction that residents fear will take years to recover from.
“A forest of 100, 200 years was lost in a single night,” Glakousakis said. “It will take years to grow back. It’s sad.”
Kryoneri’s chief volunteer firefighter told NBC News that they were “surrounded” by the flames, and struggled to keep up with containment efforts despite planes and helicopters circling to drop water on the blaze.
With the fire department overwhelmed, armies of volunteers on motorbikes darted between flare ups in the northern suburbs outside Athens, arriving with buckets of water often before fire trucks could be re-directed.
The Associated Press reported that a volunteer firefighter was killed in Athens on Friday after suffering a head injury from a falling electricity pole, while at least 20 people have been treated in hospitals since the fires erupted.
Authorities are investigating what caused the blazes, with three people arrested Friday in different areas on suspicion of starting blazes, according to the AP.
Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis on Saturday expressed his “deep sadness” for the firefighter’s death.
“When this nightmarish summer has passed, we will turn all our attention to repairing the damage as fast as possible, and in restoring our natural environment again,” Mitsotakis said.
Mitsotakis this week blamed climate change for the devastating fires, urging people who had reservations about it to “come and see the intensity of the phenomena.”
Greek and European officials have blamed climate change for the large number of fires that burned through southern Europe in recent days, from Italy to the Balkans, Greece and Turkey.