Waterloo Region Record

Witnesses to subway rescue praise three men who leapt into action

- OLIVIA BOWDEN

TORONTO — Bystanders leapt into action to rescue a blind man who accidental­ly fell onto the subway tracks in Toronto, a witness said Friday.

Julie Caniglia said that a man on her eastbound train jumped to the tracks Thursday afternoon and crossed over to the westbound platform to help the man.

“You just don’t know if there’s another train coming. He didn’t even think about it,” said Caniglia, adding the man had “guts.”

She said she was inside the stopped subway train at Broadview station when she and other passengers heard cries for help. They got out of the train, she said, and looked across to the westbound platform.

“We noticed someone lying on the tracks ... he had hurt himself,” she said.

A man next to her then ran to shut down the power to the tracks, she said. The Toronto Transit Commission driver told the bystander to be careful, as he could get electrocut­ed.

“The (driver) hit buttons to alert the oncoming train to stop and everything just shut down,” she said. “There was a lot of screaming about getting electrocut­ed.”

Two other men, who arrived on the westbound platform, also jumped to help the first bystander pull the man onto the platform, she said. The man who fell looked to be in shock, she added.

“Truly I was trembling. I just sort of walked out in a haze,” she said.

But Caniglia said she wanted others to know who the good Samaritans were, so she posted a photo of them to social media. All three rescuers haven’t been identified. “It was amazing. We all need a bit of positive reinforcem­ent that there’s some great people out there,” she said.

Sheri Hebdon was also on the same train as Caniglia, heading eastbound when she heard the cries for help.

“People’s first instinct was to run and help. It was clear people jumped down to the tracks, even before the power was off,” she said. “It was quite a dire situation.”

Hebdon said it’s nice to see the good in people.

“It can take an extreme moment to bring that out,” she said.

The incident has left Caniglia, a co-owner of the Rashers sandwich shops, concerned about accidental falls onto the tracks.

“I have young kids, what if they accidental­ly tripped? We’re so vulnerable standing there on the platform,” she said.

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