8 kids, 1 adult killed in Bronx blaze

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8 kids, 1 adult killed in Bronx blaze
BY HERBERT LOWE


A pair of twin infants, their mother and six other children died in a tragic overnight house fire that swept through a four-story brick structure blocks from Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, officials said Thursday.

Fire marshals have interviewed a woman who lived on the first floor and said she awoke to flames near her bed, according to the Fire Department.

The woman, who was not identified, told the marshals that she ran out of the building with a 5-year-old child and returned to the building with other adults in an unsuccessful attempt to extinguish the fire, according to fire officials.

Neighbors quickly gathered at the site and tried to catch children as a frantic mother dropped them from windows, witnesses and officials said.


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8 kids, 1 adult killed in Bronx blaze - Newsday.com
 
Saw that news!! so SAD!!!!

I think

Mother was spoken phone with her husband.. so He last heard of her while blaze house Then She and some her children died ! :(:(:(
 
Yes, she told her hubby abt the fire. He told her go upstairs. He called 911 but too late.
 
Saw this terrible tragedy on the national news earlier--indeed it's sad, my thoughts and prayers go out to this family.








~RR
 
Ooooh, That is happened when this man killed them. Now I unterstand....
Yesterday i am watching to tv about news. news showed me happened about Fire in NYC. I thought someone had itself wrong with fire at home.
Oh shit!!.. I am very sorry about that
 
Ooooh, That is happened when this man killed them. Now I unterstand....
Yesterday i am watching to tv about news. news showed me happened about Fire in NYC. I thought someone had itself wrong with fire at home.
Oh shit!!.. I am very sorry about that
The man didnt kill them. The heater went sparking on the carpet and bed and blanket that how it caught on fire.
 
5 siblings together and 3 siblings together!! sigh. The news showed the kids name on it. 4 of them are brothers with a baby sister. 1 older with baby twin sisters. It was unbelievable. Whats more. They took the fire alarm battery out, two of them. So thats why they didnt get alarm to get out.

Now, the firemen give out free batteries and fire alarms to the neighborhood to save their life after they saw what happen.
 
5 siblings together and 3 siblings together!! sigh. The news showed the kids name on it. 4 of them are brothers with a baby sister. 1 older with baby twin sisters. It was unbelievable. Whats more. They took the fire alarm battery out, two of them. So thats why they didnt get alarm to get out.

Now, the firemen give out free batteries and fire alarms to the neighborhood to save their life after they saw what happen.[/QUOTE]

oh really?
i'm suprise when they give away free batteries and fire alarms
 
5 siblings together and 3 siblings together!! sigh. The news showed the kids name on it. 4 of them are brothers with a baby sister. 1 older with baby twin sisters. It was unbelievable. Whats more. They took the fire alarm battery out, two of them. So thats why they didnt get alarm to get out.

Now, the firemen give out free batteries and fire alarms to the neighborhood to save their life after they saw what happen.[/QUOTE]

oh really?
i'm suprise when they give away free batteries and fire alarms
The fire departments here have done that for years.

They also do free fire inspections and help families make fire escape plans.
 
do they pass out the free deaf fire alarms??

cuz i might cannot afford it..
I don't know. Each fire department in each town is different. I don't know if they have that kind of alarm at your fire department. You need to ask them.
 
Update!!

9th child dies in Bronx fire
The Associated Press


After fire blazed through his Bronx home, killing his wife and three of his children, Mamadou Soumare had only his 7-year-old daughter left. On Saturday, word came that she too had lost her battle for life.

Asimi Soumare became the 10th victim of the devastating fire, said a family spokesman, Sheikh Moussa Drammeh.

The little girl died late Friday, as the bodies of other victims were being prepared for their funeral Monday: Asimi's twin baby sisters, 4-year-old brother and mother, as well as five others _ children of Manthia and Moussa Magassa who shared the three-story brick home with the Soumare family.

The blaze was New York City's deadliest since the 1990 Happy Land fire that killed 87 people in the Bronx.

On Saturday morning at Francisco's funeral home in East Harlem, the bodies of the dead were ritually washed and wrapped in white cotton in preparation for the Muslim funeral.

The Magassa children were to be buried in Millstone, N.J., and Soumare's family in their native Mali, in West Africa.

"I don't know what I'm going to do. I love my wife," Soumare said hours after the death of 42-year-old Fatoumata, 4-year-old Djibril and the 7-month-old twins, Sise and Harouna.

For the next two days, he visited Asimi, who died at Lincoln Medical Center of complications from smoke inhalation, said Ellen Borakove, spokeswoman for the city medical examiner.

Late Wednesday evening there, the fire decimated the house that was home to 22 West African immigrants _ five adults and 17 children.

Naralee Magassa, a 22-year-old member of the family, was asleep with her 5-year-old daughter when a space heater in the house's garden-level apartment sparked the fire. She tried to douse it with pots of water before alerting anyone.

As firefighters braved their way through the flames and thick smoke, some residents escaped, a few were rescued and two children were tossed out the window into the arms of neighbors below by another woman in the house. She then jumped, breaking her legs but surviving.

The other children inside were doomed, trapped on the upper floors and choked by the rising smoke; two babies died in their cribs. The medical examiner identified the five Magassa children as Bilaly, 1; his sister, Diaba, 3; brother Abudubucary, 5; Mahamadou, 8; and Bandiougou, 11.

The last time Samoure heard his wife's voice, she was screaming amid the fire after frantically calling him on his cell phone while he was driving his livery cab.

The woman who leaped out the window, Assia Magassa _ Moussa's 23-year-old second wife _ was at Lincoln Medical Center on Saturday with broken legs. Their 5-year-old daughter, Hatouma, was in stable condition there, and three of their other children also survived.

According to Mali's Muslim traditions, a man may have more than one wife.

Another of Moussa's children, a 6-year-old girl, remained in critical condition at Jacobi Medical Center. And a 15-year-old son, Madimakan, suffered only minor injuries after jumping out a window.

On Saturday, their charred, empty home on Woodycrest Avenue stood like a fresh wound amid the neat row houses in the working-class neighborhood of immigrants from Africa and the Caribbean who live alongside American-born New Yorkers.

Despite the loss of their children, Soumare and Moussa Magassa were holding up well, said Drammeh, principal of the private, K-8 Islamic Leadership School attended by three of the Magassa boys, including 8-year-old Mahamadou, who died.

Drammeh said the two fathers are men "who can really handle this situation. They're strong in terms of whatever God decides for them."

New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer and Lt. Gov. David Paterson planned to visit with the families on Sunday morning at the Islamic Cultural Center, the Bronx mosque where the funeral is to be held, said spokeswoman Christine Anderson.

The center is pooling donations for the needs of the survivors through the newly set up Magassa Soumare Family Fund, which topped $20,000 two days after the fire.

Drammeh and his wife, Shireena, also are setting up a scholarship fund in honor of the victims. Drammeh said he hopes those who receive the money, whether they are in Mali or the U.S., can carry on the legacy of the children who died.

A huge mound of stuffed animals grew each day at the center of a makeshift memorial to the victims on Woodycrest Avenue.

Scribbled on a cardboard tacked to a nearby iron fence was the message: "You are all God's little angels in heaven. We love you, rest in peace. Nyame nhyira hom. Amen."

The last few words mean "God bless" in an ancient West African language.

In the close-knit neighborhood, people were helping each other _ even on the street.

On the sidewalk next to the burned-out house, neighbor Elizabeth Matos has been serving hot tea and crackers every day to warm up anyone passing by in the frigid weather.

She explained why she did it: "Today for them, tomorrow for me."
 
More


NEW YORK -- After fire blazed through his Bronx home, killing his wife and three of his children, Mamadou Soumare had only his 7-year-old daughter left. On Saturday, word came that she too had lost her battle for life.

Asimi Soumare became the 10th victim of the devastating fire, a family spokesman, Sheikh Moussa Drammeh, said on Saturday.

The monster Bronx fire that took the lives of nine people had claimed its 10th victim. Authorities told NewsChannel 4 the blaze was the deadliest in 17 years.

Asimi died Friday night at Lincoln Hospital after laying in critical condition for nearly two days, hospital officials said. The city medical examiner said the cause was complications from smoke inhalation.

Hasimy is the fourth Soumare sibling to die. Their mother, Fatoumata Sourmare, 42, also died in the blaze, NewsChannel 4 reported.

A funeral for the victims was initially set for Monday in the Bronx, though it is unknown whether the death of Hasimy will result in a postponement, according to NewsChannel 4.

Five victims will be buried in New Jersey on Monday, and the other five will be flown to Mali for burial.

Moussa Magassa and Mamadou Soumare met with Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Abdoulaye Diop, Mali's ambassador to the United States, for a prayer service a day after the tragedy that stunned family members in western Africa and the South Bronx.

Magassa had just flown back to New York from a business trip to his homeland -- a visit that was interrupted by word of the heartbreaking blaze. Soumare, after a frantic cell phone call from his wife as he drove a cab through Harlem, had watched helplessly from the street as the flames consumed his family, killing his spouse and four children.

Like many immigrants, Magassa and Soumare "came to the United States to pursue the great American dream," Bloomberg said after their meeting. "And (they) now find themselves sharing a great American tragedy with us."

The closely-knit community of Mali immigrants was providing emotional and financial support for the families, turning out for Friday's prayer service and collecting more than $21,000 in assistance, said Cheick Sidi Diarra, Mali ambassador to the United Nations.

A taxi driver group was also collecting donations, and New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner volunteered to cover the cost of the funerals. The blaze occurred just blocks from Yankee Stadium.

Because the victims were Muslim, the bodies must be buried according to Islamic funeral traditions. The body is supposed to be laid to rest with the face pointing toward the Islamic holy city of Mecca. If local laws require a casket, Muslims may use one, though many would prefer to bury the body without a casket.

Magassa declined to speak with the media, although he lingered after Friday's service to speak with several Muslim clerics. One of them, Sheik Moussa Drammeh, said Magassa's faith was sustaining him through the nightmarish days. Imam Mousa Kabba, who spoke at the prayer service, told Magassa that his pain was shared by many.

"I told him that we are crying for him, New York is crying for him, and America is crying for him," Kabba said.

As Magassa left the mosque, he was swarmed by reporters and sped away in a car without talking.

Twenty-two relatives, including 17 children, lived in the three-story brick home where the fire was ignited by a space heater in the basement. The fast-moving blaze trapped its victims on the upper floors, and some children were thrown to rescuers through broken glass in upstairs windows.

The condition of a 5-year-old girl slipped Friday from stable to critical at Lincoln Hospital, where a 24-year-old woman who survived the blaze was listed in stable condition. A 7-year-old girl survivor remained in critical condition Friday at Jacobi Medical Center.

Soumare's wife, 42-year-old Fatoumata, will return to her native country for burial along with her 4-year-old son Dgibril, 7-month-old twins Sisi and Harouma and Asimi. Magassa lost four sons and a daughter, ranging in age from 1 to 11 years old.

The exact relationship between Moussa Magassa and Mamadou Soumare was not clear. Relatives and neighbors have said they were half-brothers, while others said they were friends but considered themselves spiritual brothers. Magassa had two wives in the home.

Neighbors and family members described an idyllic life at the house, which was a focal point for the city's Mali community. The young cousins were often seen playing together in the yard or in the street outside their home in the Highbridge section of the Bronx.

Bloomberg said the city had also offered financial and other assistance to the families in the aftermath of the city's deadliest blaze since 87 people were killed by an arson fire inside the Happy Land social club in 1990.

Early Friday, a single candle flickered on the stone stairs outside the front door of the burned-out home -- a remnant of an impromptu Thursday night vigil. The family van, debris across its roof, was still parked in the driveway. A makeshift memorial of flowers, notes and stuffed animals had appeared near the corner bodega.
 
How sad that the little girl died too. :(
 
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