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12-year-old girl saves little brothers, pets from house fire in southeastern Manitoba

The Neufeld family (left to right): Andreas, Jamie, Emily, Digit the dog, Natalie and Levi, are grateful to all be safe after a fire destroyed their home in La Broquerie, Man., on March 2. (Walther Bernal/CBC - image credit)
The Neufeld family (left to right): Andreas, Jamie, Emily, Digit the dog, Natalie and Levi, are grateful to all be safe after a fire destroyed their home in La Broquerie, Man., on March 2. (Walther Bernal/CBC - image credit)

A Manitoba family is picking up the pieces after losing everything in a house fire, but thanks to the quick thinking of their 12-year-old daughter, all of them are alive.

Emily Neufeld was at their home in La Broquerie, about 55 kilometres southeast of Winnipeg, with her two younger brothers on the afternoon of March 2. They were waiting for their parents to get home from work.

The Grade 7 student had just gotten off the phone with her mom, who was at work in Winnipeg, and was getting ready to start her chores when she noticed a smell coming from the laundry room in the basement of the house and went to check it out.

"I saw my entire bathroom was like already engaged in fire," she told CBC News. "At that point I was super panicked and scared."

Emily said she immediately ran upstairs to get her two brothers — eight-year-old Jamie and four-year-old Levi — and their pets, and get them all out of the house as fast as they could.

"I was just bawling my eyes out, super scared," she said.

While shaking, she called her mom at work and then called 911.

Natalie Neufeld said it was a call that shook her to her core.

"That was the worst time of my life. It was horrible," the mother of three said. "And I was an hour away and I didn't know what to do."

Fire spread quickly

Natalie called a friend to help get the kids out of the cold, and they made sure the neighbour in the other unit of their duplex also got out safely.

Natalie's husband Andreas was on his way home when his wife called to let him know what was happening.

"My heart dropped. It was a very, very tough," he said. "I wanted to be there to help them and I couldn't."

The children, a dog and one cat made it out of the home safely. Unfortunately, Emily's other cat didn't survive.

The family said they were told the fire started with a plug-in wax warmer which had a towel next to it in the downstairs bathroom. The towel ignited and the fire quickly took over.

Submitted by Andreas Neufeld
Submitted by Andreas Neufeld

Andreas said the fire spread so fast that all of the exits from the basement were blocked within minutes.

"The fire was so hot that it melted the glass above the mirror in the washroom … I mean like, off the light fixture," Andreas said.

"That takes some serious heat to melt."

'Lives matter more than things'

Emily credits a babysitting course she took last June with helping her get everyone out safely.

She said the fire safety portion taught her to not worry about any of the material objects in the home, but rather to get everyone out as quickly as possible.

"Not to worry about your stuff, just to worry about lives. Because lives matter more than things. Because things can be replaceable," she said.

Walther Bernal/CBC
Walther Bernal/CBC

She said she is also happy her brothers listened to her and followed her lead so they could get out as quickly as possible.

It's a course her parents are thankful she took.

"That literally saved their lives," Natalie said.

But the 33-year-old still tears up thinking about what could have happened.

"Just thinking what if Emily would have acted differently?" she said.

"My heart hurts because I wasn't there and you know, knowing what Emily had to go through by herself and she still has to go through."

Submitted by Andreas Neufeld
Submitted by Andreas Neufeld

The family said they are also thankful the fire didn't start in the middle of the night because all three of the kids' bedrooms are in the basement.

Everything destroyed

The family went back to the home days later and said it was difficult to walk inside.

Everything is covered in soot, the walls are black, and their toys and prized possessions are either melted or destroyed.

"Horrific," Andreas said. "We could see the storage boxes that had our memories and stuff in it completely melted … everything is basically destroyed."

He said they have already dropped off four tonnes of garbage at the dump.

The four-bedroom duplex was a rental property, and while they do have insurance, it's still going to be a long road ahead.

For now, they are staying with family in La Broquerie, but with 11 people and six pets in the home, it's getting crowded. The three kids are all sharing one small room.

But the family is overwhelmed with the outpouring of support from their community who stepped up with clothes for all of them within 24 hours.

"We came out of that house with nothing … like we didn't even have our own underwear to wear," Natalie said. "So that same evening, I think we even had a truckload of stuff coming already of clothing and, you know, toiletries and stuff like that, which was incredible."

A family friend also set up a GoFundMe to help the family get back on its feet until they are able to get their insurance sorted.