Santa Fe New Mexican

1,000 bid goodbye to 10 killed in Ariz. flash flood

- By Anita Snow and Clarice Silber

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — To the strains of “Ave Maria,” more than 1,000 people said goodbye Tuesday to 10 members of an extended family who lost their lives in a flash flood while celebratin­g a birthday in Arizona.

The 10 white caskets belonging to three generation­s of a Mexican immigrant family were arranged in two rows facing the altar at St. Patrick Catholic Church in Scottsdale, each one bearing a metal crucifix inside its satin-lined lid.

They died together in mere seconds when a dark torrent of water rushed through a placid swimming hole July 15, killing a grandmothe­r, aunts and uncles, children and grandchild­ren.

Hector Miguel Garnica, 26, was the last family member found and was identified just in time to be included in the funeral Mass.

He and his wife, Maria del Carmen Raya Garcia, were killed as they celebrated her 27th birthday, along with their three small children: Hector Daniel, 7, Mia, 5, and Emily, 3.

The Rev. Eric Tellez remembered the family as hardworkin­g people, with many employed in the restaurant industry preparing food for others, a pursuit the pastor likened to a ministry.

“What is it about this family — that loves to eat and work in places where they feed people?” he asked during an upbeat funeral Mass celebrated in English and Spanish. “It is a vocation of bringing people together.”

Tellez said that amid the sadness, there had been kindness and gratitude, people offering to help pay for the funeral and grieving family members bringing food and water to rescuers searching for their loved ones.

“We can be grateful to God even in the saddest moments of our lives,” the priest said. “The family has taught us that.”

Tellez briefly described each family member, recalling grandmothe­r Selia as a single parent who raised her children alone, and little Mia “who loved to do everyone’s fingernail­s, including her father’s.”

His co-officiant was the Rev. Ed Lucero, a priest in the central Arizona town of Payson close to where the family died, who blessed each of the victims after their bodies were pulled from the water.

At the Mass, several dozen mourners wore white T-shirts printed with a photograph of the couple, along with their three children. “In Loving Memory,” the shirts read.

Also killed was Raya Garcia’s mother, Selia Garcia Castaneda, 57; Raya Garcia’s brother Javier Raya Garcia, 19; her sister Maribel Raya Garcia, 24; Maribel’s daughter Erika Janel Camacho Raya, 2; and Jonatan Leon Villanueva, a grandson of Selia Garcia who would have turned 13 next month.

The group was swept away when a flash flood caused by a thundersto­rm upstream rushed through the swimming area. Authoritie­s have said the family had no warning.

Another flash flood just over a week later trapped 17 hikers in a scenic canyon in southern Arizona.

Rescuers had to pluck some of the hikers, including a 4-year-old boy, from a mountain creek swollen by floodwater­s Sunday. Everyone survived.

Those who knew Hector Garnica have said he was a hardworkin­g family man whose positive demeanor was widely known at the numerous restaurant­s that employed him as a cook over the years.

Maria Raya Garcia was known for her kind manner and dedication to her restaurant kitchen job.

 ?? MATT YORK/THE ASSOCAITED PRESS ?? Hearses carry 10 family members Tuesday from St. Patrick Catholic Church in Scottsdale, Ariz., to the graveyard. They were killed in a flash flood earlier this month while they celebrated a birthday.
MATT YORK/THE ASSOCAITED PRESS Hearses carry 10 family members Tuesday from St. Patrick Catholic Church in Scottsdale, Ariz., to the graveyard. They were killed in a flash flood earlier this month while they celebrated a birthday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States