Friday, June 19, 2026
ADVT 
National

One woman's attempt to save London attack victims

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Jun, 2021 09:56 AM
  • One woman's attempt to save London attack victims

Miranda Campbell and her family were driving home Sunday night when they pulled up to a line of cars stopped at a green light.

Drivers were coming out of their vehicles, talking on their cellphones.

Maybe it's a car crash, she thought, but there weren’t any damaged vehicles.

Then she saw the injured on the ground.

"You should go out there and help," her husband told her.

Campbell, a nurse practitioner in London, Ont., was scared and confused.

"There were no ambulances, no police, just bystanders on their phones pacing," she said.

When she opened the car door, the full thrust of the scene hit her.

"I’m trying to figure out what the hell happened, people were screaming and crying – it was chaos," she said.

She recognized a local chiropractor who was trying to help. She saw a woman standing over an older woman on the ground, unsure what to do.

Campbell got down, checked for a pulse, but couldn’t find one. She didn’t want to move the injured woman in case of a spinal injury.

She noticed the woman’s traditional Muslim clothing was in tatters, leaving her exposed.

“I just covered her up, I wanted to give her dignity,” Campbell said.

Then she began chest compressions and didn’t stop until a paramedic arrived and took over.

Next to her a police officer was giving chest compressions to a younger woman. Campbell took her pulse. Nothing.

"There’s children, there’s children,” someone yelled.

She noticed a young boy on the ground.

"He was facing the whole thing: He saw his mom’s body laying there, his grandma’s body,” she said.

Then more screams.

"There’s another child!" someone yelled.

She saw a purple scrunchy on the sidewalk and a bunch of shoes.

"Their shoes were scattered all over the grass, all over the sidewalk,” Campbell said.

She looked closer at the shoes.

"All these tire tracks on them," she said. "I saw the tire tracks that came up on the sidewalk, and up onto the grass, and then back out on the street again."

By then a slew of first responders had arrived.

Campbell got back into her car, where her husband and their two teenage sons were waiting, and the family went home.

But she couldn't stop thinking about the boy.

"I was praying all night that one of those adults would survive so that little, little boy is not going to be left alone," Campbell said.

"He looked so scared and shaking and helpless on the ground covered up with a blanket – I can't get that out of my head – I just wanted to give him a hug."

She also kept thinking about the older woman she tried to help.

"When I saw her traditional clothing, I thought 'I really hope this is not race related," Campbell said.

"The next day when I found out, it just made me feel 100 times worse."

Police said four members of a Muslim family were killed on Sunday when a man driving a black Dodge Ram smashed into them on a sidewalk as they waited to cross an intersection in the northwest end of the city. Police believe it was a targeted anti-Muslim hate crime.

Relatives identified the victims as Salman Afzaal, 46, his wife Madiha Salman, 44, daughter Yumna Salman, 15, and her 74-year-old grandmother. The couple's nine-year-old boy, Fayez, was seriously injured and remains in hospital.

"What the hell kind of world are we living in?" Campbell said.

Racism had been top of mind for her family. Campbell is Indigenous and her husband is Jamaican.

She said she had been talking to her children, who are biracial, about how to deal with racism, especially in the wake of the discovery of what is believed to be the unmarked graves of 215 children at a former residential school in Kamloops, B.C.

"I tell my kids 'you're gonna experience racism all the time and it's the way that you handle it is how you're going to learn,'" Campbell said.

"You can't help what other people think, but you can teach yourself not to treat other people badly."

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
View this post on Instagram
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Darpan Magazine (@darpanmagazine)

 

MORE National ARTICLES

No 'magic bullet' for toxic social media: LeBlanc

No 'magic bullet' for toxic social media: LeBlanc
LeBlanc told a virtual conference on democracy Wednesday if there were a simple answer, many other western democracies would have already passed such laws.

No 'magic bullet' for toxic social media: LeBlanc

Border traffic into Canada remains low: StatCan

Border traffic into Canada remains low: StatCan
The agency says the number of U.S. travellers who crossed into Canada by car in September is down 94 per cent, to a total of 64,700 trips, compared to the same time last year.

Border traffic into Canada remains low: StatCan

Better data needed to address COVID-19: Njoo

Better data needed to address COVID-19: Njoo
Having this detailed data will help delineate and then address the problem of inequality in health care, said Njoo.

Better data needed to address COVID-19: Njoo

Window shrinks for cryptocurrency work: BoC's Lane

Window shrinks for cryptocurrency work: BoC's Lane
COVID-19 has meant more people are shopping online, and foot traffic for brick-and-mortar storefronts hasn't caught up to pre-pandemic levels for many small and medium-sized businesses.

Window shrinks for cryptocurrency work: BoC's Lane

Man pleads guilty to four murders in Penticton

Man pleads guilty to four murders in Penticton
The court heard the 69-year-old man killed Rudi Winter, Barry and Susan Wonch, and Darlene Knippelberg on April 15, 2019, shooting each of them multiple times.

Man pleads guilty to four murders in Penticton

WATCH: NEW MEDICAL SCHOOL FOR SURREY? | TRUDEAU TO KEEP BORDER CLOSED

WATCH: NEW MEDICAL SCHOOL FOR SURREY? | TRUDEAU TO KEEP BORDER CLOSED
WATCH: NDP leader and Health minister Adrian Dix announce a new medical school in the City of Surrey if they return in power after 2020 election. Trudeau to continue US-Canada Border closures for the foreseeable future.

WATCH: NEW MEDICAL SCHOOL FOR SURREY? | TRUDEAU TO KEEP BORDER CLOSED