“The way the principal of Bache-Martin spoke of the children and showed us the kind of children they were, the family that they came from — all that impressed me and I was grateful.”
She was also struck by how many people attended. “That’s why I feel it wasn’t just our family,” she said. “It was the family of Philadelphia in different areas that came out.”
The three-story brick duplex was owned by the Philadelphia Housing Authority, which is the city’s public housing agency and the state’s biggest landlord.
Three sisters — Rosalee McDonald, Virginia Thomas, and Quinsha White — and nine of their children died in the blaze, according to family members. The city last week identified the other victims as Quintien Tate-McDonald, Destiny McDonald, Dekwan Robinson, J’Kwon Robinson, Taniesha Robinson, Tiffany Robinson, Shaniece Wayne, Natasha Wayne, and Janiyah Roberts. Officials did not provide their ages.
Investigators last week confirmed that it started at a Christmas tree, but stopped short of officially saying that it was sparked by a 5-year-old child who survived and reportedly told investigators he had been playing with a lighter.
The blaze had been the deadliest fire in years at a U.S. residential building, but was surpassed days later by a fire in a high-rise in New York City’s Bronx borough that killed 17 people, including several children.
Rev. Waller, who officiated Mondays’ funeral service in Philadelphia, also contrasted the media coverage of this fire and another that killed a father and his two children in Bucks County on Christmas Day, which also resulted from a tree.
“There was a family out in the county that had a fire and they reported it like, ‘Look what happened to them.’ And then they reported this fire like, ‘Look what they did,’” he said. “Maybe they needed to see the larger Philly experience of preachers coming together and funeral directors working together and politicians staying for the whole thing. Maybe they needed to see we are a community.”