'I'm not going to let my child die': Woman runs into burning home to save son
CBC
A woman in Kensington, P.E.I., fought through flames inside her family's burning bungalow Wednesday night to save her youngest son.
Latoya Martin and her husband Christie Young were asleep when the fire started after midnight, and woke to the sound of beeping, heavy billowing smoke and flames. They escaped the house with two of their children and six other relatives, but then realized their 12-year-old son Josiah had been left behind.
"We started to count them and then we realized the youngest son was still in the house," Young said. As soon as he spoke, his wife dashed in the house, with Young right behind her.
"My first attempt, the flames were so hot I ran back out," Martin said. "I tried to go in again and I ran back out, and I say 'Lord, I'm not going to let my child die in here, I'll have to die with him. So I ran through the flames." She found him in the living room and dragged him outside.
"That was scary, that — I don't wish that on anybody," she said. "I could feel the heat on my skin, but I didn't get burned at all."
The boy suffered minor burns on one ear and arm, she said.
Martin's pregnant sister Alexandria Williams, whose first child is due on Monday, had to escape through a window with her boyfriend. She landed, barefoot, in the snow outside.
"It was a miracle. A miracle. Because I couldn't see us getting out of there alive," Williams said. "I thought I was going to die. Honestly, the smoke alone was enough to kill you. My throat started to close up. I started to panic." She credits her boyfriend with helping her get out.
The family alerted neighbours to call 911 by knocking on doors. Fire services arrived quickly, and a few family members went to hospital to be checked over for minor scrapes and burns as well as smoke inhalation, but the family said everyone is OK.
They spent the rest of the night next door, where Martin's mother lives.
The cause of the fire is unknown.
Canadian Red Cross volunteers are helping the family of 11 with emergency lodging and other essentials. They had no tenants' insurance.
The family said they are thankful for the community support of food, clothes and money.
"It's amazing to see that people [are] willing to help people like us," Young said, noting the family's passports and work permits were lost in the fire.