Editor's note: This story includes images that some readers may find disturbing.

Sherrine Petit Homme LaFrance was crying on the side of a road when China Laguerre spotted her.

Hurricane Dorian destroyed LaFrance's newly constructed house in Great Abaco Island on the northern edge of the Bahamas the same night she moved in. That was on Sept. 1.

Cheryl Diaz Meyer for NPR

Bodies lay in the debris left by Hurricane Dorian, which decimated Marsh Harbour on Great Abaco Island in the Bahamas on Sept. 6. The Mudd, an immigrant shantytown in Marsh Harbour, was home to about 8,000 Haitians, some of whom have lived in the area for several generations.

She then moved into a hotel offering free shelter in Nassau with her husband and 14-year-old son. But she says they were kicked out when staff found her son talking to guests.

She had nowhere to go. So Laguerre invited her to come stay at the home she shares with her parents and her brother.

"If these people didn't help, I didn't know what we were going to do," says LaFrance. "I just thank God for these people."

Cheryl Diaz Meyer for NPR

Ferrier Petit Homme (left) and Sherrine Petit Homme LaFrance pray every evening with other Dorian evacuees as well as members of the Laguerre family, who welcomed them into their home. This night was particularly painful: Sherrine's 14-year-old son ran away in the morning. He returned two days later.

LaFrance is one of thousands of Haitians who lived in Abaco but were displaced to Nassau after the storm. The government's policy is to keep evacuees off Abaco until power, water and housing is restored.

But life in Nassau is not easy for evacuees: Haitians in the Bahamas — some recent immigrants, others who have lived in the Bahamas for generations — say that they face discrimination by their Bahamanian neighbors and that government officials that has made it harder to access emergency aid, shelter and health care and to find jobs to get back on their feet after the storm. On Oct. 2, Prime Minister Hubert Minnis announced that Haitians in the Bahamas without documentation would be deported.

So some are relying on the kindness of strangers — and Laguerre's home has emerged as the headquarters of an ad hoc Haitian community support network.

Cheryl Diaz Meyer for NPR

From left: Justin Bain, Sherrine Petit Homme LaFrance and Ferrier Petit Homme have little space to sleep in the family home of China and brother Odne Laguerre, who have taken in 10 Haitian evacuees from Abaco.

While volunteering at a local hospital after the storm, Laguerre, 31, met Haitian evacuees who inspired her to open her doors to strangers.

"I feel sorry because it could've been me," she says.

Laguerre was born and raised in the Bahamas, but her parents are of Haitian descent. Despite not having enough money to pay their water bill, they have taken in 10 Haitian evacuees from four different families. They pool together what resources they can to grocery shop and cook for everybody in their compound.

Cheryl Diaz Meyer for NPR

Bobson Timothee, 23, right, looks in on his mother, Lacieuse. who spends most of her time in bed.

"I wouldn't say the floor is comfortable because it's just cement," she says. "We just let them put a sheet on the floor, and they sleep on the ground like that."

The families are still working through the physical and psychological effects of the storm. Lacieuse Timothee of Treasure Cay spent two days buried beneath debris before her sons found her. At the Laguerre home, she spends most of her time in bed. She says she is partially paralyzed, and the injuries around her feet have begun to turn black.

Laguerre and her parents do not have enough room in their home to keep welcoming guests. But they help those in need however they can. Recently, Laguerre referred a young mother to a friend's house so she wouldn't be left on the street with her child.

Cheryl Diaz Meyer for NPR

Abaco evacuee and Haitian immigrant to the Bahamas Micilia Etienne, 59, listens to news from Haiti while she and her family take shelter in China Laguerre's home.

"I am not employed, but by the goodness of my heart — and I believe in God — this is God's work here I am doing," she says.

For now, LaFrance's family is living off the small amount of money that their relatives send from Haiti. They're unsure when things will start to look up.

"You can't even sleep. You have nightmares. You feel like you're still in the storm," says LaFrance, more than a month after Hurricane Dorian made landfall. "If you see a little rain, you think the storm is coming again."

Cheryl Diaz Meyer for NPR

The border patrol rounds up undocumented Haitian immigrants in Nassau on Sept. 30. Two days later, Prime Minister Hubert Minnis announced that Haitians in the Bahamas without documentation would be deported.

Copyright 2019 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.