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Deadly fire kills five children in Pittsburgh home
By Samuel Davidson
16 June 2007
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Early Tuesday morning, June 12, a deadly fire swept through
a three-story home in a poverty-stricken neighborhood of Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, killing five children, aged three to seven.
All of the victims were found on the second floor of the 107-year-old
woodframe building. Two of the children were declared dead on
the scene and three others were rushed to the nearest hospital,
some three miles away. One child was pronounced dead on arrival
at the hospital and the other two died in the emergency room,
explained Stephanie Waite, a hospital spokeswoman.
I can still hear those children screaming in my head,
said Jamar Samuel who rescued two eight-year-olds from the fire.
Samuel was attending a candlelight vigil for the victims of the
fire when he spoke to the WSWS of the tragedy.

I was visiting with some friends down the street,
said Samuel, when I realized the house was on fire. I ran
over and got the two kids out, but when I tried to get to the
others the ceiling over the stairs was falling down.
I have kids of
my own, and I just keep hearing them screaming for help.
The dead children were identified as Dezekiah Holyfield, 3;
Cedano Holyfield, 4; Daekia Holyfield, 7; Azquel Rankin, 5; and
Andre Rankin, 6. The five children were from two different families.
Three of the childrenDezekiah, Cedano and Daekia, along
with their mother, 25-year-old Shakita Marie Manghamlived
in the home. Azquel and André, who lived nearby, had been
dropped off by their mother, 25-year-old Furrah Love, the evening
before. The two eight-year-old boys who survived the fire are
Huedon Chambliss and Jevon Irwin, one from each family.
The deadly fire broke out at 1:20 a.m. Many neighbors and 911
records confirm the speed with which it consumed the century-old
home. Fire officials believe it was caused by the children playing
with matches.
The first 911 call was placed at 1:23 a.m., and police responded
within one minute. Firefighters were reported to have responded
in four minutes. Neither force, however, was able to save the
screaming children.
According to Pittsburgh
Fire Chief Mike Huss, flames were shooting from all three floors
of the old woodframe building when the firefighters arrived. The
fire also spread to houses on either side, one of which was vacant
and badly damaged from the flames.
Our firefighters, theyre hurting today because
they didnt have a chance to make that rescue, Huss
said. Its very difficult. We take these types of tragedies
personally. Were frustrated we couldnt get in to save
those children.
They seemed like real nice children, said Willie
Mae Murphy, who lives a few houses down from the fire. One
of them seemed like she was grown, the way she could take care
of the younger ones, better than I could. This is a real tragedy,
everyone feels real sad. I didnt know the mother, I would
see her coming and going. She was doing the best she could with
what she had.
The seven children had been left in the home by their mothers,
who told police they had gone out for the evening and left the
children with a 17-year-old babysitter. The police are presently
searching for the babysitter.
As in other cases where house fires have claimed the lives
of young children, authorities and the media are looking for a
means to make criminals out of the victims rather than to expose
the social conditions that underlie these horrible tragedies.
Already, the media has reported that the government is looking
into several potential charges in connection with the childrens
deaths. The first article on the fire, posted on the Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette web site, mentioned several times that arson
investigators had been called to the scene. Readers were left
with the impression that the fire was a criminal act, with the
possibility that the parents could have caused it. Only at the
very end of the article was it stated that arson investigators
are brought in to investigate all fatal fires.
In another report, the police have stated they are looking
into whether the children were locked in the second floor bedroom
where the five children were found dead. KDKA News reported that
the police are investigating whether or not the mothers will be
charged for leaving the children alone without adult supervision.
Several articles have focused on the search for the babysitter.
An AP story picked up by the television networks was headlined
5 kids die in fire; cops search for babysitter. A
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette article carried the headline Baby-sitter
still a mystery in fire that killed five children, and the
New York Times ran an articlePolice Probe Fire
That Killed 5 Kidsstating that the babysitter may
not exist at all.
The police have made clear that they plan to arrest the babysitter
if she is found, or if the two mothers are lying about her, the
mothers themselves. The police told the media they are waiting
for the funerals to take place before they move forward
on their investigation.
The rush to criminalize parents after tragedies of this nature
has served as a convenient diversion from the underlying causes
for tragic fire-deaths of this nature: grinding poverty and the
destruction of social programs that place working class families
in impossible situations.
Ms. Weir, who was also at the candlelight vigil and has a mother
living nearby, commented, There are a lot of people in this
type of environment. I saw the children; they played with my grandchild.
They were good kids. But there are a lot of young single mothers
these days and there need to be government programs to teach them
how to raise a family and how to deal with problems. There is
some help out there, but most people dont know how to get
it, and when they do, they make them jump through hoops for it.
You have so many homeless people and so many homes that
are vacant. Why cant the city hire people to remodel these
homes and let the homeless live in them, and give them the support
they need? The school down the street is closed; it could be used
and turned into something for the children.
But of course all of this takes money and the politicians
have money for war, but not for the people in this country.
While the circumstances surrounding the fire are not yet clear,
it is evident that the young mothers faced difficult choices.
Affordable childcare does not exist for working class women on
a low income. Decent, affordable housing is also out of reach
for large sections of the American population.
As poverty levels continue to rise, in Pittsburgh and throughout
the country, the government has carried out continuous cuts in
social programs, leaving a growing working-poor population on
its own to fend for itself. Under these conditionswhere
poverty is not understood as a social problem, and instead is
treated as a personal choiceit is much easier to blame the
victims.
Social conditions in Pittsburgh and the Lincoln-Larimer
neighborhood
According to the US Census Bureau, nearly one third of all
families with single parents and children under 18 in the Lincoln-Larimer
area of Pittsburgh live below the poverty level. For black female
heads of households, that number increases to 50 percent. Close
to a third of such families are living at less than half the official
poverty rate.
The Lincoln-Larimer section of Pittsburgh is one of the most
impoverished and isolated neighborhoods of the city. On every
block, there are numerous boarded-up homes and vacant lots. On
the block of the fire, there is at least one vacant home and three
vacant lots.
While the city of Pittsburgh has a diverse population, the
Lincoln-Larimer neighborhood is one of the most segregated, with
an almost all-black population. Of the 350 students in the local
primary school, 342 are African-American, 7 are multiracial and
there is 1 Hispanic child. There are no white students.
Last year, due to cuts in public education, 230 intermediate
age students were added to Lincoln Elementary School, transforming
it into a kindergarten through eighth-grade school, although the
middle school students are taught in a different building. All
but three of these students are African-American.
Census information shows that 90 percent of the children live
in poverty, with many families living in extreme poverty, or on
less than half the official poverty rate, which presently stands
at a woefully low $18,850 for a family of four.
The City of Pittsburgh, Allegheny County and the state of Pennsylvania
have spent hundreds of millions of dollars building two new sports
stadiums and a convention center, and are now in the process of
building a new hockey arena. A tunnel is being constructed under
the Allegheny River to provide trolley service to the stadiums
and a casino that is being built, adding hundreds of millions
more to taxpayer bills.
Meanwhile, entire communities such as Lincoln-Larimer have
been left isolated and impoverished. There are no recreation centers,
swimming pools or senior citizens centers in the neighborhood.
Driving around, this reporter did not see any playgrounds, a gym
or basketball courts. Most of the children played on the sidewalks,
streets or the vacant lots. There are no supermarkets or department
stores, only a few corner stores. The Veterans Administration
hospital has been closed and there are no other city, county,
state or federal agencies in the area.
Marcus Stewart, who
works at the YWCA in the neighboring Homewood section of the city,
visited the house along with more than 50 neighbors and friends
Tuesday evening. Marcus spoke to the WSWS about his feelings on
the fire deaths.
I knew the mother who lived here and her kids. Nobody
should have to lose their kids, especially this many.
There is nothing for young people to do. When I was growing
up, there were summer job programs and field trips. Now there
is nothing. Around here, there is nothing but negative things
for the kids to see.
The politicians dont care about us. There should
be a football field, baseball field, something for the kids to
do. Instead there is nothing but vacant lots and boarded-up homes.
The place looks like a junk yard.
See Also:
Mother, three children perish
in Detroit house fire
[22 May 2007]
New York City fire tragedy
kills eight children, one adult
[9 March 2007]
Deadly House fire in Petersburg,
Virginia; the human cost of social inequality
[1 February 2007]
US: Chicago fire kills
six children
[5 September 2006]
US: Five Children
killed in Philadelphia house fire
[14 June 2005]
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