MESSAGE
DATE | 2015-03-22 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
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SUBJECT | Subject: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] in the hands of god, we are all...
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http://www.vosizneias.com/198259
I want to say it makes me angry that this catastrophe is being taken advantage of to promote a bad policy with regard to Smoke Detector. The idea that we would all be safe if we all had smoke detectors, or that the family was negligent is bullshit. The vast majority of smoke detectors keep getting turned OFF because they suck. If they were built well, and smartly, they MIGHT be useful in some cases. Let this family grieve. Spot feeding us bullshit.
When we lived in a similar house I used to drill with the kids the means of escape because it was OBVIOUS that once the stairwell becomes engulfed with fire, the ONLY way out was from the second floor.
No modern building should be built without sprinklers... Fire Extinguishers are needed all around the house. And even if you do this all, it will never stop all the fires and all the deaths. This family is guiltless of anything other than having a Shabbos meal, and being killed in a terrible event.
To the ciy they are just a statistic and a campaign ad. But I loved this family. I do love this family and all the other families like them.
Reuvain
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Midwood, NY - Seven siblings from a Syrian Orthodox Jewish family were killed early Saturday when a fire tore through their two-story Brooklyn home after they had gone to bed, a tragedy that authorities believe was caused by a malfunctioning hot plate left on during the Sabbath.
The blaze took the lives of three girls and four boys - ages 5 to 16 - and left their mother and another child in critical condition. Fire officials said the flames would have prevented the mother, who escaped out a window, from trying to rescue her children.
“This is an unbelievable tragedy,” Mayor Bill de Blasio said after touring the charred residence. “Every New Yorker is feeling this pain right now.”
Fire Commissioner Daniel Nigro called it the city’s worst fatal fire in recent memory.
“It’s a tragedy for this family, it’s a tragedy for this community, it’s a tragedy for the city,” he said.
Fire investigators believe a hot plate on a kitchen counter ignited flames that raced up the stairs, Nigro said.
Many religious Jews do not use electricity on the Sabbath, along with refraining from work and observing other prohibitions meant to keep the day holy. As a result, some families may leave them on so they are usable without violating any religious laws or traditions.
The fire broke out shortly after midnight while the children were asleep inside the home in Midwood, a leafy section of Brooklyn known for its low crime and large Orthodox Jewish population.
Firefighters arrived less than four minutes after receiving the call to find the mother, badly burned and distraught, outside and pleading for help. When they broke the door, they encountered a hopeless situation - a raging fire that had already spread through the kitchen, dining room, common hall, stairway leading upstairs and the rear bedrooms.
“Unfortunately, the outcome may have been determined before they arrived,” Nigro said.
After making their way through intense smoke and heat, firefighters found the young victims motionless in three of the four bedrooms in the home, officials said.
“It’s difficult to find one child in a room during a search,” Nigro said. “To find a houseful of seven children that can’t be revived ...”
New York Police Department officials identified the victims as members of the Sassoon family: three girls - 16-year-old Eliane, 11-year-old Rivkah and 6-year-old Sara - and four boys - 12-year-old David, 10-year-old Yeshua, 8-year-old Moshe and 5-year-old Yaakob. All victims are from a nice Syrian Jewish family.
Nigro said authorities believe the father was away at a conference at the time of the fire. Neither his name nor those of the survivors were released.
Fire investigators found a smoke detector in the basement of the home. But none were found elsewhere in the house, Nigro said, adding, “To hear a smoke detector two floors below is asking a lot.”
By Saturday afternoon, the fire department had set up a table on the corner of the block and distributed pamphlets reminding residents they should have smoke detectors.
Karen Rosenblatt said she called 911 early Saturday morning after seeing the flames. Her husband Andrew said he heard a girl’s voice screaming, “Help me!”
Many other neighbors who spoke to reporters declined to give their names, but expressed great sadness over the fire.
The last residential blaze with a similar death toll happened in 2007, when eight children and an adult were killed in a fire in a 100-year-old building in the Bronx where several African immigrant families lived. Fire officials said an overheated space heater cord sparked that blaze.??
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