Advocate for people with autism killed in fire along with her son
Early morning blaze claims the lives of Feda and Muhammed Almaliti, according to friends
FREMONT >> Feda Almaliti, a mother of three and a tireless advocate for people with autism and their families, who helped shift the health care landscape in California, died early Saturday along with her son, Muhammed, after a fire tore through their Fremont home, a close friend said.
As of Saturday afternoon, authorities had not confirmed the deaths to this news organization, but people close to her said a family member informed them of the news.
Jill Escher, the president of the National Council on Severe Autism, said Saturday that Almaliti had a “huge personality” that she used to put everyone around her at ease, even while facing her own challenges of raising a son severely affected by autism.
“She’s just sassy, funny, brash, unfiltered,” Escher said.
Almaliti ser ved with Escher as vice president on the council, as well as vice president of the Autism Society of the San Francisco Bay Area.
“She just was this very positive force to the world. She had this amazing personality, when she was in the room you felt it. You just felt the sun was shining a little brighter and the day was a little better, because you had been with Feda that day,” Escher said while crying over the loss of her friend and colleague.
“Everyone felt like that about her. She’s irreplaceable.”
All day Saturday, an outpouring of love and grief was taking place online as people shared memories of Almaliti, her indomitable spirit and her dedication to
Muhammed, her 15-yearold son.
Shortly before 2 a. m. Saturday, a fire erupted at the family’s home on Serra Place in the city’s Sundale neighborhood.
Fremont Fire Department Battalion Chief Will Krings said that when crews arrived, they found a “wellinvolved structure fire,” and the first firefighters began “an aggressive interior fire attack and search.”
The single-alarm fire was controlled within 20 minutes but destroyed the twostory home, Fremont fire Battalion Chief Kyle Adams said.
The cause of the fire is under investigation.
Almaliti was a trailblazer, friends said. She sued Kaiser Permanente for failing to provide behavior treatment for her son, becoming one of the first parents of an autistic child to successfully challenge medical providers and insurance companies, they said.
Her push for comprehensive care for austic children, such as speech therapy and occupational therapy, helped change California law. She was part of a core group of parents and advocates behind SB946, a bill authored by then-state Sen. Darrell Steinberg which went into law in 2012 and requires insurance companies to cover treatment for autism.
“Feda has this magic that she could move people with her stories,” said Karen Fessel, a mother of an autistic child who worked alongside Almaliti on SB946.
She also gave a voice to the parents struggling during the coronavirus shutdown.
In a heart-renching interview with NPR in May, Almaliti discussed the toll the coronavirus pandemic had on people with severe autism and their families, which she first detailed in an opinion article for STAT. She described her son as “an energetic, loving boy who doesn’t understand what’s going on right now.”
“Mu,” she told NPR, was incredibly confused because his school, the shopping mall and parks — his favorite places to go — were all closed because of the virus. Almaliti became emotional when talking about how the isolation was impacting students and young people with autism.
“They’re doing the best they can every day. … But I don’t know how to accurately convey, it’s really hard. … It’s really hard because I almost feel like nobody hears us. Because my son doesn’t really talk. He doesn’t talk. And I’m supposed to be his voice. And no one’s listening to what’s going on for our families,” she said. “You know, no one gets that we are just as vulnerable as coronavirus people. The coronavirus is going to come and go. Autism is here to stay.”
Escher said A lmaliti would always throw herself fully into projects and ideas to help others on local, state and national scale, but also would make time for friends and parents who needed her help.
“That’s hard because we already have so much on our plates and we’re already overwhelmed and busy. A nd she a lways found it within herself to go the extra mile for other people,” Escher said. “There’s just not enough good things to say about her and not enough to say about what an immeasurable loss this is for our community.”