Tuesday, January 28, 2014

DAY 6 OF QUEBEC RECOVERY OF THE 22 DEAD YET

JEWISH KING JESUS IS COMING AT THE RAPTURE FOR US IN THE CLOUDS-DON'T MISS IT FOR THE WORLD.THE BIBLE TAKEN LITERALLY- WHEN THE PLAIN SENSE MAKES GOOD SENSE-SEEK NO OTHER SENSE-LEST YOU END UP IN NONSENSE.

AS OF JAN 27,14.ITS STILL 10 DEAD AND 22 STILL BEING DUGOUT OR FROZE OUT. SEE WHAT TODAY BRINGS.ITS 9:30AM ON JAN 28TH AND 14 HAVE BEEN RECOVERED.18 STILL IN THE BUILDING.ITS 1:20PM JAN 28,14 AND 16 BODIES RECOVERED-16 REMAINING.

STORIES FROM THE 5 PAST DAYS
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/01/day-5-of-recovery-of-quebecers-in-death.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/01/10-of-32-confirmed-dead-in-quebec-fire.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/01/possible-cigarette-in-room-started.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/01/5-confirmed-dead-30-still-looking-for.html 
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/01/possible-33-dead-in-montreal-senoirs.html 

Quebec fire: The dead and the missing, so far

Mourners are only beginning to tell their stories of those missing or known to be gone in the tragic L’Isle-Verte blaze.

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Gerard Ouellet ,92, and wife Giselle, 90.
Gerard Ouellet ,92, and wife Giselle, 90.
Thirty-two people are dead or missing in the wake of the L’Isle-Verte fire; 10 bodies have been foun, but the names of just three have been made public. Little is publicly known about one, 89-year-old Louis-Philippe Roy, but about two, more can be said:
Juliette Saindon
Juliette Saindon, 95, was known to staff at Résidence du Havre as someone who loved to chat.
She always had a smile on her face, said Aubin Rioux, who worked at the home for two years.
Ever since she fell and broke her hip, Saindon used a wheelchair. She needed a long stick to reach the emergency button to summon staff.Workers at the home said she loved to chat, about the weather and her activities of the day, “anything,” said Rioux.
Marie-Lauréat Dubé
Marie-Blanche Boucher, 71, said her aunt Marie-Lauréat Dubé had a son who lives in L’Isle-Verte, and other children in Rivière-du-Loup.Boucher said her aunt, who was “83 or 84,” lived at the residence for about four years; Boucher would visit occasionally, and said she found the home well-run:“These are things that are very hard to live through,” she said.“When there’s a fire and you know there’s people inside that are burning, it breaks your heart. And when it’s so close, it’s even worse.”Among those still listed as missing are the following:
Angéline Guichard
Angéline Guichard’s son Joseph Marie Fraser will always remember his mother as a leader and dedicated worker, hardened by years spent raising 12 children on a farm on the tiny island of Île Verte.“Everything she did, she gave her 100 per cent,” said Fraser, of his 88-year-old mother.Joseph Marie said his mother spent almost her entire life on Île Verte. She spent 65 “very happy years” with her husband, and moved into Résidence du Havre six years ago following his death.She loved to play cards, said Joseph Marie, adding her greatest joy was her massive family: 12 children, about 30 grandchildren and 30 great-grandchildren.
Marie-Jeanne Saindon
Marie-Jeanne Saindon was just three months shy of her 100th birthday when she died in the fire at the facility where she was “proud” to be the oldest resident.Her grandson, Claude Saindon, said she was determined to make it to the big day in April and was going to celebrate with a grand party organized by her family.“She was a determined woman, very kind and very generous,” said Saindon. “Even at 99, her memory was very sharp — I would say sharper than mine.”Marie-Jeanne, who had one son, four grandchildren and six great-grandchildren, had been a widow for 40 years. Born in L’Isle-Verte, she had only been living at the residence for three weeks.
Gérard and Giselle Ouellet
The couple had spent their life working the land and raising 14 children on the small island nearby for which the town is named. Gérard, 92, was reluctant to give up their home, but Giselle, 90, was happy for the break from chores.“We felt safer having them there,” said Marie-Claude Ouellet, the wife of one of their sons, Philippe Ouellet. “They had all the care they needed; the doctors were there.”As a result of a recently broken hip and her age, Giselle needed help to get in and out of bed — assistance that her husband was no longer able to provide.
Claude Fraser
It was his upbringing by the water on the island of Île Verte that inspired Claude Fraser to become a sailor, said his sister, Agnès.He worked for the Coast Guard for 37 years, which included frequent travels to the Arctic.“He had a big heart,” said Agnès. “He was a very hard worker.”Fraser married late in life, to a widow, but he had no children of his own. He moved into the residence five years ago and “he liked it. He was a person who would talk with anyone,” said Agnès.
Paul-Étienne Michaud
Paul-Étienne Michaud spent decades working the land on his farm on the outskirts of L’Isle-Verte, where he and his wife, who predeceased him by over 20 years, raised seven children. Even after he sold the farm to his son, Jean-André, he still worked outdoors almost every day, until his move to Résidence du Havre in 1997, where Jean-André said he was the very first resident.“He liked his room because it faced the road and he could see the boats on the water,” said his son. “He mainly kept to himself.”
Jacqueline Belanger
Jacqueline Belanger was a talker, said her younger brother, Raymond. They spoke on the phone at least two or three times a week.“She could talk your ear off,” he said, laughing. “I guess you could say I was her confidant.”The 90-year-old Belanger, who had three sons and two daughters, one of whom predeceased her, was born in L’Isle-Verte and married the town’s butter maker. Raymond said she had said recently that “she was ready to go,” while adding, “But it’s terrible the way she went.”

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