Plaque symbol of enduring pain from tragedy
Greg Risling
COSTA MESA -- The plaque dedicated at Southcoast Early Childhood Learning
Center Saturday afternoon was more than words etched in granite.
The plaque symbolized confronting an immense loss, enduring the ensuing
pain and mending broken hearts. Although the plaque measured 18 inches by
a foot, the support of the community was enormous. Hundreds rallied
around teachers and parents who were devastated by an unforeseeable
event.
On Saturday afternoon, the community came once again to a site where in
May they had left stacks of cards and gardens of flowers.
They prayed for Sierra Soto. They prayed for Brandon Wiener.
Both children were killed on May 3 when 40-year-old Steven Allan Abrams
plowed his car into the day-care center playground. Four-year-old Sierra
and 3-year-old Brandon were fatally injured. Police said the motorist
purposely gunned his car toward the school because he wanted to “execute”
innocent children.
It has been some time since the tragedy, and the plaque remembering the
two tots has been sitting in a classroom.
But no one has forgotten. More than 100 people attended the ceremony
where the plaque was unveiled.
“It was one of the worst events that has happened in our city,” said
Police Chief Dave Snowden. “The plaque dedication is a way of turning a
very unhappy situation into something positive.”
With plastic chairs placed in a semicircle, attendees wept when both
mothers of the slain children unfastened a green, velvet veil that
covered the plaque. Placed on a concrete wall that was built to shield
the playground from any further misfortune, the plaque has the children’s
two favorite symbols near their names.
For Sierra, a shooting star. For Brandon, a teddy bear.
Cindy Soto and Pam Wiener were choked with tears as they spoke of their
children. It was a moment befitting for their anguish. It was also a time
to thank all of those who have supported them in their times of need.
“I’d like to thank the community for the overwhelming support during the
most difficult time of my life,” said Pam Wiener. “I miss Brandon more
than words can say.”
For the Wieners it has been especially difficult coping with the loss of
their son because they have a 2-year-old daughter enrolled at the
day-care center. Initially, they thought about pulling her out of
classes. But with the amount of assistance they have received from
friends and strangers, they have remained very close to the school’s
staff.
“It is very hard for us to come here,” said Brandon’s father, Aaron
Wiener. “I still can’t believe it happened. With the outpouring we have
received, we eventually thought there wasn’t a better place to be for our
daughter.”
Cindy Soto also reflected on her child’s short life and how the tragic
circumstances have prompted her to seek better safety standards at
day-care centers across the state.
“She was my light and my joy and my reason for being here,” she said.
“This has been emotionally taxing, but I feel like God has his hand in
it. It was something that was meant to be.”
Maybe most moving was a poem written by Mike Pope, who lives next door to
the child-care center. Pope heard the car crash last May, followed by
piercing screams. He jumped over a fence and helped one of the more
seriously injured children. He left the boy for a moment and helped lift
the car up with other neighbors as paramedics grabbed the tiny kids.
Pope didn’t know any of the children before the attack, but has come to
embrace them as if they were his own. He was affected enough by the
incident that he began teaching kindergarten at the school.
“I feel a love and bond that will never be broken with all involved that
day,” he wrote in his poem. “For all we fought to save the children,
Jesus would have wanted it that way.
“My prayers are with you always, I’m your friend for evermore. ‘Cause you
see I’m Mike your neighbor and I live just next door.”
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