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Firefighters move away from the Yarnell Hill Fire near the town of Yarnell, Ariz., June 30. The Arizona blaze has killed 19 firefighters, who belonged to an elite response team, and destroyed hundreds of homes across 2,000 acres. CNS photo/Arizona State Forestry Division handout via Reuters

Catholic parish mourns loss of one of its own in Arizona fire

By  Catholic News Service
  • July 3, 2013

PHOENIX - In Tualatin, Ore., members of Resurrection Parish and Our Lady of the Lake School in Lake Oswego were remembering John Percin Jr., one of 19 firefighters who perished June 30 in an Arizona wildfire.

Mr. Percin's family remains in the parish. The 24-year-old was remembered for his athletic ability and for participating in multiple sports. He graduated from West Linn High in 2007.

"Johnny was a very, very good athlete," said Mark Neil, a member of Resurrection who coached Mr. Percin in CYO grade school basketball. "He was very competitive and very coachable."

Mr. Percin was not tall, but was strong, fast and skilled.

"You knew when it came to crunch time, you wanted the ball in John's hands," Neil said.

The former coach said he has always had a "special spot" in his heart for Mr. Percin, his older brother and their parents, John and Mary.

"At these small Catholic schools, other families become an extension of your own," he said.

The family released a statement saying: "John was a brave and courageous man who never hesitated to put others before himself. He was loved by many, and he will always be remembered. He is an inspiration to us all. Our thoughts and prayers go out to all of his fallen brothers and their families."

As the people of central Arizona mourned the deaths of the firefighters from the Granite Mountain Hotshots, hundreds of other firefighters battled the still-uncontrolled blaze that threatened the small towns of Yarnell and Peeples Valley.

The men from an elite firefighting crew based in Prescott, Ariz. — where they made up a significant portion of the city's 92-employee fire department — were trapped when winds shifted, turning the fast-moving wildfire in their direction.

The 20th member of the crew survived because he was moving the team's truck at the time, local authorities said.
Information on funerals had not been announced as of early July 2.

A planned congressional field hearing at a college gymnasium in Prescott was hastily turned into a memorial service July 2. Prescott Fire Chief Dan Fraijo was among those who talked about the great loss to the town and the wider world.

"Those families lost," Fraijo said, according to The Associated Press. "The Prescott Fire Department lost. The city of Prescott lost. The state of Arizona and the nation lost."

As of July 2, the fire had grown to 3,300 hectares and the towns of Yarnell and Peeples Valley, home to a total of perhaps 1,000 people, were both still evacuated. Two hundred or more structures were thought to have been destroyed, many of them homes.

Fr. Raul Lopez, parochial vicar of St. Mary Mediatrix Mission, the small Catholic quasi-parish in Yarnell, said he's sure his parishioners are "very anxious at this moment." He said he believed the fire had not approached the St. Marys' property yet, but the status of a mission church was unknown. He said the Shrine of St. Joseph is located along Highway 89, just before the town's main commerce area. Some maps showed fire damage close to the town centre. The highway leading to both churches remained closed.

Lopez was emotional about the 19 firefighters who were killed.

"That is the worst. The life," he said.

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