Seventh Grader Saves Siblings and Grandmother from House Fire, Earns Title of Honorary Firefighter.
In Petersburg, Virginia, a seventh grader is being hailed as a hometown hero after risking his own safety to save his family from a fast-moving house fire. Four lives were spared that day — and all because 12-year-old Romir Parker’s instincts told him there was no time to waste.
It happened in early June, when an ordinary afternoon suddenly turned into a life-or-death emergency. Romir was upstairs in his bedroom when he heard an unusual noise from downstairs. Curious, he headed toward the sound — only to be met by a wall of thick, black smoke.
Below, his two youngest siblings, ages 1 and 2, were napping on the couch. Without hesitation, Romir ran toward them. Scooping up the 2-year-old in one arm and the 1-year-old in the other, he tucked them close against his chest and sprinted outside to safety.
But he wasn’t done.
Inside the burning home was his grandmother, who needed help to escape. Braving the smoke again, Romir went back inside, found her, and guided her to safety — just minutes before the Petersburg Fire Department arrived. The fire, which had spread quickly, was brought under control within minutes, but officials acknowledged that without Romir’s actions, the outcome could have been tragic.
“I go downstairs, it’s just black smoke all throughout the house,” Romir told the local CBS affiliate. “I grabbed my 2-year-old brother, then I grabbed the 1-year-old, cause the 1-year-old is smaller and I fitted them inside my arms and we ran outside the house.”
Petersburg Fire Chief Wayne Hoover was quick to recognize the boy’s courage. “Even if our crew got there within four minutes, Romir saved his family’s lives,” Hoover said. As a tribute, the city presented Romir with a proclamation honoring his “bravery and presence of mind, well beyond his years,” and the fire department made him an honorary firefighter.
The chief went a step further, telling the young hero that when he turns 18, there’s a place for him in the fire brigade if he ever wants it.
For Romir, the day was less about glory and more about doing what needed to be done. But for his community, his quick thinking is proof that true heroism doesn’t wait for adulthood — sometimes, it comes in the form of a seventh grader with the courage to run toward the flames.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J04-8TU4sJo