San Antonio Express-News

Hundreds at funeral in Bronx mosque pay respects to victims of apartment fire

- By Bobcaina Calvan

NEW YORK — The caskets were brought one by one — all 15 of them — on a frigid winter day, as hundreds of mourners filled a Bronx mosque Sunday to bid farewell to those who died exactly a week ago trying to escape their smoke-filled apartment building.

Many hundreds more huddled outside, peering into the mosque’s windows or watching on big-screen television­s, to pay their respects after New York City’s deadliest fire in three decades.

“One week they were with us. … Now they’re gone,” said Musa Kabba, the imam at the Masjidur-rahmah mosque, where many of the dead had prayed. “Last Sunday it happened, and today we are about to bury these families. It is hard.”

Seventeen people died in the fire, which authoritie­s said was sparked by a faulty space heater in a third-floor apartment. Among the dead were eight children as young as 2, whose tiny caskets underscore­d the day’s loss.

All who lost their lives collapsed and were overcome by smoke while trying to descend the building’s stairwell.

Sunday’s mass funeral at the Islamic Cultural Center capped a week of prayers and mourning within a close-knit community hailing from West Africa, most with connection­s to the small country of Gambia — where four of the victims would be buried, officials said. Eleven of the victims were transporte­d to a cemetery in New Jersey.

Earlier in the week, burial services were held for two children at a mosque in Harlem.

“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.

Men and women alike wept as the eight children and nine adults were given final rites before their caskets were returned to the hearses.

Ibrahim Saho’s reddened eyes welled with tears as he rattled off the family names of the dead. “A lot of people, too many people,” he said, dabbing tears.

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

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

Some residents said space heaters were sometimes needed to supplement the building’s heat and that apartment repairs weren’t always done in a timely fashion — if at all.

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.

“We want the world to know that they died because they lived in the Bronx,” Drammeh asserted. “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 Attorney General Letitia James vowed to investigat­e, saying “there were conditions in that building that should have been corrected.”

An investigat­ion into the fire is ongoing.

 ?? Yuki Iwamura / Associated Press ?? Caskets sit on the floor during a mass funeral at the Islamic Cultural Center in New York City for victims of an apartment building fire that occurred a week earlier. Seventeen people died in the fire, including eight children as young as 2.
Yuki Iwamura / Associated Press Caskets sit on the floor during a mass funeral at the Islamic Cultural Center in New York City for victims of an apartment building fire that occurred a week earlier. Seventeen people died in the fire, including eight children as young as 2.

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