bronx fire

Hero Stranger Saved Young Girl During Deadly Bronx Blaze, Mom Says

Even as a neighbor was running for his life, he didn't hesitate to offer a helping hand to a mother struggling as she was desperately trying to get her family to safety

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The mother said that the stranger stepped in to help her and her children, just as she was starting to lose hope. NBC New York’s Adam Harding reports.

A mother who was trapped inside the Bronx high-rise fire that killed 17 people and injured dozens more was on the verge of giving up hope that she and her children would be saved — when a complete stranger stepped in to rescue them, in an incredible story of survival.

Fatima Wood said that she and her young children were struggling to make it out of the 19-story building as smoke quickly filled the hallways. The mother and her children were trying to make it down from the ninth floor.

They thought they were stuck.

That's when they finally reached a stairwell, and a neighbor they had never met before stepped in to help.

"Me and that man had bumped into each other, he asked if we needed help bringing the kids down. I said yea, so he grabbed my daughter," Wood said.

That neighbor was Mohamed Keita, who lived toward the top of the building and like so many others, was running down the stairwell trying to evacuate. But even as he was running for his life, he didn't hesitate to offer a hand in the mother's most desperate moment. He said he carried the 3-year-old girl out to safety and got her to an ambulance — before the rest of her family even made it out of the building.

"As soon as I got down, the kid was cold, she didn't have enough clothes. So I took off my jacket and I wrapped her in my jacket," Keita said, before he was able to get the child medical attention.

"I was sitting down, shaking. People were just going through, they couldn't breathe, they were performing CPR, cardiac arrest," he said, visibly shaken. "I've never seen something like it, so I was just shaking the whole time."

Both Keita and the young girl, Kween, were taken to St. Barnabas Hospital, and both are expected to be OK. Both are were out of the hospital Sunday night, Kween reunited with her mother.

"I cried all day, even when we got here (to the hospital) and we finally see her, I was still crying because it's so traumatizing," Wood said. She and another child eventually made it out of the building after getting help from firefighters.

@FDNY
The FDNY responds to an apartment fire on 181st Street in the Bronx that left 32 people with life-threatening injuries, Jan. 9, 2022.
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Hundreds of firefighters responded to the fire, which broke out just before 11 a.m.
@FDNY
Fire Commissioner Daniel Nigro said smoke spread throughout the 19-story building, calling the situation "unprecedented."
News 4 New York
Victims were taken to five different area hospitals.
News 4 New York
Mayor Eric Adams, on only his second weekend in office, said the fire was likely to be the city's worst blaze since the Happyland fire in 1990.
Getty Images
NEW YORK, NY – JANUARY 09: Broken windows and charred bricks mark the exterior of a 19-story residential building after a fire erupted in the morning on January 9, 2022 in the Bronx borough of New York City. Reports indicate over 50 people were injured. (Photo by Scott Heins/Getty Images)
Getty Images
NEW YORK, NY – JANUARY 09: Emergency first responders remain at the scene after an intense fire at a 19-story residential building that erupted in the morning on January 9, 2022 in the Bronx borough of New York City. Reports indicate over 50 people were injured. (Photo by Scott Heins/Getty Images)
Getty Images
NEW YORK, NY – JANUARY 09: Emergency first responders remain at the scene of an intense fire at a 19-story residential building that erupted in the morning on January 9, 2022 in the Bronx borough of New York City. Reports indicate over 50 people were injured. (Photo by Scott Heins/Getty Images)
Getty Images
NEW YORK, NY – JANUARY 09: Broken windows and charred bricks mark the exterior of a 19-story residential building after a fire erupted in the morning on January 9, 2022 in the Bronx borough of New York City. Reports indicate over 50 people were injured. (Photo by Scott Heins/Getty Images)
Getty Images
NEW YORK, NY – JANUARY 09: Emergency first responders remain at the scene after an intense fire at a 19-story residential building that erupted in the morning on January 9, 2022 in the Bronx borough of New York City. Reports indicate over 50 people were injured. (Photo by Scott Heins/Getty Images)
Getty Images
NEW YORK, NY – JANUARY 09: Emergency first responders remain at the scene after an intense fire at a 19-story residential building that erupted in the morning on January 9, 2022 in the Bronx borough of New York City. Reports indicate over 50 people were injured. (Photo by Scott Heins/Getty Images)
Getty Images
NEW YORK, NY – JANUARY 09: Emergency first responders remain at the scene after an intense fire at a 19-story residential building that erupted in the morning on January 9, 2022 in the Bronx borough of New York City. Reports indicate over 50 people were injured. (Photo by Scott Heins/Getty Images)
Getty Images
NEW YORK, NY – JANUARY 09: Emergency first responders remain at the scene after an intense fire at a 19-story residential building that erupted in the morning on January 9, 2022 in the Bronx borough of New York City. Reports indicate over 50 people were injured. (Photo by Scott Heins/Getty Images)

When asked what could have happened, Wood said simply: "Only God knows. It could've been way worse.

As for the man who helped the mother and child in their time of need, Keita wasn't looking to be a hero — just do what is right, and was thankful he was at the right place at the right time to help the mother and young girl.

"I was just trying to do the right thing. Everybody was struggling, lots of people lost their lives, I was just trying to do the right thing," Keita said.

Wood said that she "can't wait to see (Keita), to show him how grateful I am." The two reconnected later Sunday night.

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