Los Angeles Times

At funeral, grief and anger over deadly N.Y. fire

Community hopes the tragedy will bring attention to the plight of immigrant families.

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NEW YORK — A Bronx community gathered Sunday to pay its final respects to loved ones, a week after a fire filled a high-rise apartment building with thick, suffocatin­g smoke that killed 17 people, including eight children.

The mass funeral capped a week of prayers and mourning within a closeknit community hailing from West Africa, most with connection­s to the tiny country of Gambia.

Amid the mourning, there was also frustratio­n and anger as family, friends and neighbors of the dead tried to make sense of the tragedy.

“This is a sad situation. But everything comes from God. Tragedies always happen, we just thank Allah that we can all come together,” said Haji Dukuray, the uncle of Haja Dukuray, who died with three of her children and her husband.

The dead ranged in age from 2 to 50. Entire families were killed, including a family of five. Others would leave behind orphaned children.

There were 15 caskets in all that lined the front of the prayer hall. Some were no bigger than small coffee tables, containing the bodies of the youngest victims.

“One week they were with us ... now they’re gone,” said Musa Kabba, the imam at the Masjid-UrRahmah, the mosque where many of the deceased had prayed.

Burial services were held last week for two children at a mosque in Harlem.

After Sunday’s services in New York City, 11 caskets were to be transporte­d to a cemetery in New Jersey for burial. Four of the victims were expected to be repatriate­d to Gambia, as requested by their families, a Gambian government official attending the service said.

After the fire, family members had been anxious to lay their loved ones to rest to honor Islamic tradition, which calls for burial as soon after death as possible. But complicati­ons over identifyin­g the victims delayed their release to funeral homes.

All of the dead collapsed and died after being overcome by smoke while trying to descend down the stairway, which acted as a flue for the heavy smoke.

The funeral was held at the Islamic Cultural Center, two miles from the 19-story apartment building where New York City’s deadliest fire in three decades unfolded.

Parts of the service were delivered in Soninke, a language spoken in Gambia and other parts of West Africa.

Hundreds filled the mosque and many hundreds more thronged tents outside or huddled in the cold to pay their respects. The services were shown on jumbo screens outside and in other rooms of the mosque.

Because of the magnitude of the tragedy, funeral organizers insisted on a public funeral to bring attention to the plight of immigrant families across New York City.

“There’s outcry. There’s injustice. There’s neglect,” said Sheikh Musa Drammeh, who was among those leading the response to the tragedy.

Officials blamed a faulty space heater in a third-floor apartment for the blaze, which spewed plumes of suffocatin­g smoke that quickly rose through the stairwell of the building.

Some residents said that space heaters were sometimes needed to supplement heating in the building and that repairs weren’t always timely.

“We want the world to know that they died because they lived in the Bronx,” Drammeh said. “If they lived in Midtown Manhattan, they would not have died. Why? Because they wouldn’t need to use space heaters. This is a public outcry. Therefore, there has to be responsibi­lity from the elected officials to change the conditions that causes death every single day.”

New York City Mayor Eric Adams, U.S. Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Lt. Gov. Brian Benjamin, as well as two officials representi­ng the Gambian government, attended the funeral.

“When tragedies occur, we come together,” Schumer said.

“I am here to express the pain all New Yorkers are experienci­ng,” Adams later added.

New York Atty. Gen. Letitia James vowed to investigat­e, saying that “there were conditions in that building that should have been corrected.”

The investigat­ion into the fire is ongoing.

Much of the focus centers on the catastroph­ic spread of the smoke from the apartment.

The fire itself was contained to one unit and an adjoining hallway, but investigat­ors said the door to the apartment and a stairway door many floors up had been left open, creating a flue that allowed smoke to quickly spread throughout the building.

New York City fire codes generally require doors at larger apartment developmen­ts to be spring-loaded and slam shut automatica­lly.

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