(Click on image to ENLARGE) The following article appeared in the Syracuse Online / Post Standard:
Syracuse, NY: Joseph Levy didn’t notice the truck in front of him last week Thursday morning until concrete and dust from the pedestrian bridge over Interstate 690 [Syracuse-area highway] rained down on his car. “It was like an explosion,” said Levy, a volunteer EMT from Brooklyn.
The truck in the right lane continued down the highway a bit. Levin pulled over.
In his rearview mirror he could only see dust.
Levy grabbed his medical bag, got out of his car and walked into the cloud. Inside, he found a sport utility vehicle against the guardrail, its engine running and smoking.
He reached into the car, shut off the engine and saw seven people in need.
“It was an unbelievable scene,” he said.
In the front, Alan Zimmer was complaining about the pain, Levin said. He had an open leg fracture, Levy said.
In the passenger seat was Jennifer Zimmer, unconscious and bleeding from the hand and leg.
Right smack between them sat a large chunk of concrete, Levin said.
Behind them were a small child and the child’s grandfather. In the third row were the grandmother and two more children.
The children were crying and the grandparents were asking: What happened? The adults were in shock.
Levin opened a side door and moved into the middle row of seats with the grandfather and child and began to work.
“For five to 10 minutes, it was just me and seven patients,” he said.
Levy is a property manager by profession and makes a trip to Buffalo twice a month. He was driving back to Brooklyn on Thursday when the lift on the back of a flatbed Mack truck smacked Crosswalk No. 2, a pedestrian bridge over I-690 west of the state fairgrounds.
Levy became known in news reports as an anonymous good Samaritan, the first on the scene to give medical aid.
In the SUV, he was stopping bleeding and calming everyone in the car.
“Everyone’s alive,” he told them.
At the window appeared Dr. Mike Loeb, a medical resident on his way home. He asked if he could help.
Levy asked if Loeb was a medical doctor, and on hearing that he was, Levin told him to grab some gloves from the medical bag and get to work.
Loeb worked on the father while Levin worked on the mother, who had regained consciousness.
The father was removed first, Levy said. Then several firefighters rolled the concrete chunk out of the car.
To get the mother out, the roof of the vehicle had to be cut off. Levin covered the woman to protect her from debris.
“That’s when I finally got out of the car, when they got the roof off,” he said.
Troopers took him to an air-conditioned car and gave him a bottle of water, he said. He left about 12:45 p.m. and continued on his drive.
Levy has been an EMT for 16 years with Hatzolah volunteer ambulance service in Brooklyn. On Sept. 11, 2001, he was on duty transporting victims of the World Trade Center to the hospital.
Levy was waiting for the next patient when the towers collapsed. He and another EMT were covered with debris and had to be dug out, he said.
Even after that experience, he said he has never been to anything like the crash Thursday.
“Everything is meant to be for a reason,” he said. “I believe I was there for a reason.”
(Photo Credit: YW-88)
13 Responses
let’s hear more Kiddushei Hashem like this!!
Amein. A wondeful kiddush Hashem.
The truest kiddush Hashem will be when the sight of torah observant Jews will elicit a reflexive reaction of “Of course. He’s an Orthodox jew, What else do you expect?”
May we be zocheh to the Geulah Shleima soon.
Yossel Levy is a holy Jew. He has done Chessed with the living & the dead.
Great Job!!!
Yossi Levy is a Tzaddik. Everyone who know him, knows that he is a person that lives only to do chessed for others.
Dear Yeshiva World,
I would suggest putting in a section for Kiddushei Hashem. This will encourage people to talk about the incredible acts of good deeds which Am Yisrael do and sanctify the name of Hashem. It will be another step to our Geula Bimhera Beyamenu.
Deleted.
another reason to learn emt, you never know where you can be helpfull in time of need.
To #7: whether what you’re saying is loshon hora or motzay shem rah it doesn’t make a difference; if you have nothing nice to say don’t say anything.
To #8: I fail to follow your logic; while I believe everyone should know CPR & first aid, why should people take an EMT course -which are medical professionals who -on the basic level are trained more or less for the purpose of working on an ambulance!
to #9: EMT includes CPR & first aid, and getting a patient’s medical history as an EMT can help alot.
#7 -Why? Would you rather it was a picture of you up there?
#7. S’yag L’chacma Sh’teka! Did he pose for this picture? Should he, in the future, be asked to pose, it would only be menchlech.
To way up north,
Obviously you are a layman, but a CPR & first aid course (even one of these short ones like AHA & ARC) teach some sort of patient assessment. This would include getting a history.
EMT courses are for people who either want a career in EMS or want to work on a paid or volunteer ambulance service. It is not for people who just want to know what to do in an emergency!