At just 7 years old, Mike Hernandez Pinto had already survived cancer. And at 16, Breylin Hernandez Pinto could remember being carried by her father on a journey from Honduras to America, where her family came for a better life less than a decade ago.
But their lives — and the lives of five other family members — were cut short from carbon monoxide poisoning the week before Christmas in a tragedy that left the Fargo-Moorhead community reeling. On Friday, the community gathered virtually and in a local church to pay their respects.
"We want to tell you that you are not alone," said the Rev. Eric Bravo Meija through a translator as he spoke to family and friends at the service and to loved ones back in Honduras. "One day you are going to see them again."
Five caskets stretched across the sanctuary of Lutheran Church of the Good Shepherd in Moorhead. The ceremony was simple, with prayers spoken in Spanish and translated to English. A band from the family's church, Mt. Carmel Church in Moorhead, played somber songs in Spanish. Pictures of the family lined a table; beneath it lay a bouquet of white roses.
Remembered were Belin Hernandez, 37, and Marleny Pinto Orellana, 34, their children Breylin, Mike and 5-year-old Marbely Hernandez Pinto; Belin's brother Elder Noé Hernandez, 37, and the couple's niece, Mariela Pinto Orellana, 19.
"They were hardworking. Their faith was very strong. Their family was very strong. They were so grateful for everything," Gail Ferguson, an educator in Moorhead, said in an interview before the funeral service. "This was a family who wanted to be safe. And they thought they were."
Ferguson said she met Breylin about five years ago when the girl was a fifth-grader. Ferguson, a paraprofessional at the elementary school, said she befriended the shy and sweet girl when she was eating lunch alone.