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Friends and family mourn northeast philly plane crash victim, dominique were burke

Dominique was hired by family and friends on Thursday morning in a private service in the city in the city to honor the devoted mother, who recently died of severe burns in the aircraft crash of the northeast philadel philadel.

Burke, called the family offer “Pooda”, was 34 years old. She died on April 27 after she had spent almost three months at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital in Center City.

“Dominique was a violent woman of trust, warmth and creativity,” wrote her family in a program that was distributed to mourners. “She appreciated her family, including those who have taken up all her life.”

Was Burke on January 31 on a family trip to the Roosevelt Mall when a medical jet fell off on the Cottman Avenue and flames the car in which it was dragged.

She drove with her fiance, 37-year-old Steven third, who died at the scene. Druitt 9-year-old son, Ramse's Raziel third Vazquez, escaped the car with severe burns. The boy remains in a combustion unit for children in a hospital in Boston.

The mother of the third, Alberta Brown, wore her son's high school class ring at the funeral of his fiance.

Mayor Cherelle L. Parker, fire brigade commissioner Jeffrey Thompson and other city officials arrived early to show their respect when friends and family streamed in the Tindley Temple United Methodist Church in the South Broad Street near Fitzwater Street.

Inside, in front of the slides, a white coffin sat, which was decorated with white daisies, cloves and the breath of the baby. A few angel wings made from white feathers climbed over it on stage. A reproduction of Leonard Cohen's “Hallelujah” played as the mourners in the church benches.

“Dominique was lively and yet inviting, courageous and daring. She worked hard and resilient,” was the program of the service.

Was Burke is the eighth death of the crash and the second from Philadelphia. All six people on board the aircraft, including an 11-year-old girl. The cremes of the six victims – all Mexican citizens – were returned to relatives in Mexico city last month. The girl was on her way home after he had undergone a spinal disease at Shriner's Children's Philadelphia.

At least 24 people on the ground were injured and more than a dozen houses were damaged when the plane exploded in a huge fireball and sent flames and rubble into neighboring houses.

They were Burke and three were high school favorites. She visited the Philadelphia High School for girls in the Logan district of the city. Three Jr. von Mount Airy completed the Murrell Dobbins High School.

Both worked in the culinary industry. The couple shared a youthful son, Dominick Goods, a second year at the Charter High School at the IMHOTEP Institute.

Dominick's high school football team also visited the uniforms of her red panther. Dominick is a team failure and his father often bragged about his games.

The teenager who lost his two parents in the plane crash was in advance. He was wearing everything white.

He was on a school trip to Africa when his mother died. It was his father's wish that his son went on the Ghana trip. Before his death, Jr. had created a Gofundme account to collect money to send it.

Were Burke also had a 7-year-old daughter, and she loved the son of Drouitten Jr., Ramses, as her own.

She loved spoiling her children and taking them to the beach, cruises and other countries when traveling to the beach.

“It showed them the beauty of the world and passed their love for traveling and eating,” was the program of the service.

In the High Point Cafe in West Mount Airy, where she worked as a daily jaws for a decade, she worked for a decade was recalled by her colleagues on social media for their “friendly smile, a beautiful spirit and heart full of love” on social media.

She was also a fighter “to the end,” said the post of the café.

Note from the publisher: This is a development and is updated.

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