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As Los Angeles burned, Latino immigrants rushed in to put out fires

Latino immigrants rushed into Altadena, Calif. to help put out fires at houses that firefighters hadn't yet gotten to.
Adrian Florido
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NPR
Latino immigrants rushed into Altadena, Calif. to help put out fires at houses that firefighters hadn't yet gotten to.

Updated January 10, 2025 at 18:07 PM ET

Maria Garcia does not live in the neighborhoods that have been consumed by the massive Eaton Fire in northeast Los Angeles this week. But Garcia, who is an undocumented immigrant from Guatemala, sometimes cleans houses in those neighborhoods, so she knows people who do.

Maria Garcia said she couldn't sleep knowing people's houses were burning. So she gathered her brothers and friends and went into burning areas of Altadena, Calif., to help keep the fires from spreading.
Adrian Florido / NPR
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NPR
Maria Garcia said she couldn't sleep knowing people's houses were burning. So she gathered her brothers and friends and went into burning areas of Altadena, Calif., to help keep the fires from spreading.

She couldn't sleep Tuesday night knowing houses there were burning. So she got out of bed early Wednesday and said to her children: "Let's go help, if we can."

She called her brothers and some friends and they all gathered buckets and hoses and drove into a part of the Altadena community where houses were ablaze. Then they got to work putting out fires.

"Our values and our principles come first, that's what our parents taught us," Garcia said. "They always used to say, help others without concern for who they are or why they need help."

Stephanie Garcia tried to extinguish the flames of a house that had burned to the ground in Altadena, Calif. "I'm doing this because I only imagine how I'd feel if this was my house," she said.
Adrian Florido / NPR
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NPR
Stephanie Garcia tried to extinguish the flames of a house that had burned to the ground in Altadena, Calif. "I'm doing this because I only imagine how I'd feel if this was my house," she said.

She was standing next to the rubble of a destroyed house, dousing the still-flaming pile of debris with a watering hose. Garcia and about 20 other Latino immigrants were rushing to extinguish the flames so they wouldn't spread to the house next door, which had not burned.

As the wildfires consumed entire neighborhoods earlier this week, L.A.'s firefighting resources were strained to the limits. In Altadena, homes and structures burned without firefighters nearby. While many residents obeyed mandatory evacuation orders and official warnings that they risked their lives if they didn't leave burning areas, others stayed behind to try to save their homes. Then there were the crews of Latino immigrants who rushed in from elsewhere to help.

Juan Carlos Pascual Tolentino, an immigrant from Mexico who's lived in neighboring Pasadena for 20 years, drove into Altadena in the truck he uses to work as a gardener. When he came upon Garcia and the others hustling to put out flames, he stopped and unloaded his shovels and hoses. He connected the hoses to the faucets of nearby homes.

Hilda Lopez filled buckets on the lawn of the house next door, which the volunteers were trying to guard against the flames.
Adrian Florido / NPR
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NPR
Hilda Lopez filled buckets on the lawn of the house next door, which the volunteers were trying to guard against the flames.

"You don't need to have legal papers or be a U.S. citizen to help others," he said. "When you support someone, you strengthen your union with them. When you stop and ask if they could use a hand, they'll remember that."

Phil McConville owns the house next door to the one whose flaming ruins the group was focused on extinguishing. Earlier Wednesday, he'd spent four hours trying to keep the fire away from his house. It exhausted him.

"I couldn't see anymore, and I went to wash my eyes out," he said. "And when I came back, there's a whole army of guys just working and working and working, and they've got a line of buckets and they've got all the hoses going."

The volunteers drew water from a neighbor's swimming pool
Adrian Florido / NPR
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NPR
The volunteers drew water from a neighbor's swimming pool

As McConville spoke, the men and women were dipping buckets into the swimming pool in his backyard and taking the water next door. McConville said they likely saved his house.

Israel Garcia was standing on the smouldering pile of debris using a shovel to snuff out embers. He is also from Guatemala, also undocumented.

"I don't know who lives here," he said. "I don't know if they had children. But if they did, I'm thinking about what the children are going to feel when they come back and see that their house is gone. And I ask myself, how would I feel?"

Lorenzo Ramos is from Guatemala and has lived in the U.S. for 11 years. "We saw that people were suffering," he said. "So we came to help. If it happens to us someday, we'll need help too."
Adrian Florido / NPR
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NPR
Lorenzo Ramos is from Guatemala and has lived in the U.S. for 11 years. "We saw that people were suffering," he said. "So we came to help. If it happens to us someday, we'll need help too."

On the street out front, three young men from El Salvador and Guatemala rushed up and peered onto the property.

"It looks like they need help," one of them, Marvin Lopez, 21, said to the others. "Let's ask if they need help."

After conferring, they decided the situation there seemed under control.

Why had they come?

"Because we immigrants who are not from this country, we often need help ourselves," he said. "And that's why we always want to help others."

Copyright 2025 NPR

Adrian Florido
Adrian Florido is a national correspondent for NPR covering race and identity in America.