Windsor Star

Fundraisin­g for fire victims ‘tremendous,’ grandfathe­r says

- PATRICK MALONEY pmaloney@postmedia.com

A man who lost his son and four grandchild­ren in a devastatin­g house fire last week says an outpouring of community support is helping the family cope.

Ken Antone — whose son Kurt Antone died along with four young children in the fire in Oneida, southwest of London — told Postmedia News this weekend the surviving family members are grateful for the aid they’ve received.

“I can tell you that the support is real tremendous, I can tell you that much,” Antone said in some of the family’s first public comments since the blaze last Wednesday. “It’s really, really something.”

Asked about the well-being of the mother and four other children who were not home at the time of the fire, Antone declined to comment.

“It’s too emotional” to discuss, he said.

But it’s clear the blaze has hit a nerve both on the settlement and in surroundin­g communitie­s. Several fundraisin­g efforts are underway, including an online campaign that had raised more than $25,000 in just two days after being launched Friday.

In comments on the fundraisin­g effort’s home page, a woman identifyin­g herself as a relative of the victims indicated how deep the need is for the family.

“The family is in dire need of everything from clothing to furniture,” writes Diana Doxtator, who indicates she’s the aunt of the grieving mother. “My niece and her surviving children lost everything in the fire. Our family’s goal is (to) raise enough money to help build her a new home for her and her children.”

None of the children killed in the blaze have been officially identified. But according to published reports, a three-month-old is among the dead.

Post-mortems on the remains of five people found in the home will be done Monday in Toronto, Middlesex OPP said last week.

The fire broke out midday Wednesday, razing the wooden two-storey home on Townline Road in an isolated part of the settlement. Police and fire officials continue to investigat­e the cause of the fire.

The blaze has also created political outrage. Randall Phillips, chief of the Oneida Nation of the Thames, called the fire a “perfect example” of the housing crisis faced by First Nations communitie­s nationwide.

He said the federal government turned down an applicatio­n from Oneida for money to upgrade 50 homes on the settlement. All the money went to indigenous communitie­s in Canada’s North, Phillips said.

My niece and her surviving children lost everything in the fire. Our family’s goal is (to) raise enough money to help build a new home.

Following the fire, Carolyn Bennett, minister of indigenous and northern affairs, said she reached out to Phillips. The federal government is committed to “closing the unacceptab­le housing gap” for indigenous people, she said.

MP Charles Angus, the federal NDP aboriginal affairs critic, said the Liberal government must carry some responsibi­lity for this and other similar events.

“Little children are dying,” he said in an interview last week. “People are living in risky and dangerous conditions.”

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