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Hero in Our Life: with seconds from an oncoming train, one man risked everything to save a woman he'd never met
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Lisa Donath was running late. Heading down the sidewalk toward her subway stop in Manhattan's Washington Heights neighbor- hood, she decided to skip her usual espresso. By the time she got to the platform, Donath felt faint-maybe it hadn't been a good idea to give blood the night before, she thought. She leaned heavily against a post close to the tracks. Several yards away, Ismael "Mel" Feneque, 43, and his girlfriend, Melina Gonzalez, found a spot close to where the front of the train would stop.
When he heard the scream, followed by someone yelling, "Oh, my God, she fell in!" Feneque didn't hesitate. Yanking off the bag he had slung across his six-three frame, he jumped down to the tracks and ran some 40 feet toward the body sprawled facedown on the rails. "No! Not you!" his girlfriend screamed after him. She was right to be alarmed. By the time Feneque reached Donath, he could "feel the vibration on the tracks and see the light coming into the tunnel," he remembers. "The train was maybe 20 seconds from the station." In that instant, Feneque gave himself a mission: I'm going to get her out, and then I'm going to get myself out, ASAP. I'm not going to let myself get killed here.
Feneque, a former high school wrestler who trains at a gym to stay in shape, grabbed Donath under her armpits. She was deadweight. "It was hard to lift her. She was just out," he says. But he managed to raise her the four feet to the platform so that bystanders could grab her arms and drag her away from the edge. That's where Donath briefly regained consciousness, felt herself being pulled along the ground, and saw someone else holding her purse. "I thought I'd been mugged," she says. She remembers the woman who held her hand and a man who gave his shirt to help stop the blood pouring from her head. And, she says, "I remember trying to talk and I couldn't, and that's when I realized how much pain I was in." The impact of her fall had been absorbed by her face-she'd lost teeth and suffered a broken eye socket, a broken jaw, and cuts all over her head.
But as the train closed in, Feneque wasn't finished. He still had to grab and hoist up a man and a teenager who'd hopped down to the tracks and then use all the strength he had left to lift himself onto the platform. He did so just seconds before the train barreled past him and came to a stop.
Feneque says there's no point in wondering why he was on the platform-at a different time from when he usually rides and at a station a considerable distance from his apartment-at the moment Donath needed help. "Whether it was pure coincidence or sent from above, who's to say? All I know is I was there and I'd do it again," he says. "I have a daughter. And I said to myself, I'm going to help this person. She could be anybody's daughter."
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Photos courtesy of Photographed by Rudy Archuleta / Redux
Original Source: Reader’s Digest
