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School, volunteers aid victims of
Blue Hill blaze Kyle de Beausset Lisa Grace Wigfall was a scared kid, just 7 years old when her childhood Dorchester home was engulfed in flames. When she thinks back, she can scarcely recall the details of the incident on Bunswick Street — just the fire, and the fear. “All I remember was my big brother just snatching me off the bed and running down the steps,” she said. Though her memories of the event itself are blurry, she clearly
remembers the assistance her family received after the fire and how
deeply it impacted her. |
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| Nampeera Kayondo, the Building Educated Leaders for Life (BELL) site manager at the William Monroe Trotter School in Dorchester, supervises children in the BELL After School Program as they eat their afternoon snack. (Kyle de Beausset photo) | |||||
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“Without the help my mother had from her family and friends, I’m
sure that my mother couldn’t have made it,” Wigfall said. Decades later, that memory inspired Wigfall — now a teacher at the William Monroe Trotter Elementary School in Grove Hall — to start a fund for the victims of a fire that blazed through a Mattapan triple-decker last November. Sixteen people, including six children, were injured on Nov. 12 after an electrical short in the first floor of a Blue Hill Avenue home quickly escalated into a three-alarm fire. Several published reports estimated damages to the gutted building at $500,000. With the support of the Building Educated Leaders for Life (BELL) After School Program at the Trotter School, Wigfall established the Mattapan Fire Victims Fund, raising hundreds of dollars for the affected families. “I just wanted to do something positive in my community,” Wigfall said, the jubilant voices of students staying after school reverberated through the halls of the Trotter School. “You always here about the wrongs … you never hear about the positive things. There are good people here at the [school],” she said softly. Wigfall is a tutor at the BELL After School Program, which aims
to “dramatically increase the academic achievements, self-esteem and
life opportunities of children living in low-income, urban
communities,” according to the BELL Web site. “Being a witness of the fire, my heart just went out to these
families,” Williams said. “Not having anything but the clothing on
their backs … I was just so hurt [by] what had happened [to] them.
So I volunteered my services to help.” |
Lisa Wigfall (left), Nampeera Kayondo (center) and Theresa Wells (right) sit at the entrance of the William Monroe Trotter School in Dorchester. Led by Wigfall, all three were instrumental in establishing and raising hundreds of dollars for the Mattapan Fire Victims fund. (Kyle de Beausset photo) |
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