Single mother of 2 young children loses everything in house fire


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MAGNA — A woman and her two young children lost nearly everything they own when their home caught on fire Monday night.

Careena Juhasz lived with her father, her 4-year-old son Kyler, and her 11-month-old daughter Sophia at a duplex on 2637 S. 9080 West.

Juhasz said she planned to cook some food for herself at approximately 11 p.m. Monday.

"I had put a pan on the stove to cook, I went to heat it up and went back to the bedroom to get some socks, and I knew something was wrong when the color was different in my house," Juhasz said. "I turned and looked and my kitchen was engulfed in flames."

She said she grabbed her cellphone and her son and left the house. Her daughter was staying with a family member.

"Get everyone out," Juhasz said. "I went for my son first, woke up my dad, was screaming outside to get anyone inside to put out the fire."

Some of her neighbors woke up and heard her screams.

"I saw her open her door and this smoke come out, just barrel out of the top of the door, and then I just saw flash, glow, it was just bright," Elizabeth Robertson said.

Robertson's husband and another neighbor grabbed their fire extinguishers.

"By the time the fire trucks got here, it was mostly black smoke," Juhasz said.

She said when firefighters cleared the scene, there wasn't much left for her to take.

"All of my belongings, all my kids' belongings, gone," Juhasz said. "I can't save any of it."

Careena Juhasz tells KSL-TV that she lost everything in a fire that apparently started in her kitchen in her Magna home on Monday.
Careena Juhasz tells KSL-TV that she lost everything in a fire that apparently started in her kitchen in her Magna home on Monday. (Photo: Shelby Lofton, KSL-TV)

Bicycles were burned, baby clothes were covered in ash and bedding smelled like smoke.

"This is where I basically raised my little one," she said. "I was pregnant here with her. She grew up in this house, she has health issues so it's been a rollercoaster for sure."

Juhasz and her neighbors dug through her soot-covered belongings while she tried to keep her children comforted.

They're being sheltered by the American Red Cross for the next few days.

"(Her son) woke up this morning super confused, 'Mommy, where are we?' I explained to him, 'We can't go home, son. That's not home anymore,'" Juhasz said.

She said she was grateful for her friends who ran toward the flames.

A woman and her two young children lost nearly everything they own when their home caught on fire Monday night.
A woman and her two young children lost nearly everything they own when their home caught on fire Monday night. (Photo: Shelby Lofton, KSL-TV)

"I will forever miss them," Juhasz said.

They'll no longer be neighbors, but they are bonded by what happened.

"Things can be replaced, but souls can't be," Robertson said.

Juhasz is working on finding new housing for her family.

You can donate to help her family rebuild through this GoFundMe*.

*KSL.com does not assure that the money deposited to the account will be applied for the benefit of the persons named as beneficiaries. If you are considering a deposit to the account, you should consult your own advisors and otherwise proceed at your own risk.

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Shelby Lofton, KSLShelby Lofton
Shelby is a KSL reporter and a proud graduate of the University of Missouri School of Journalism. Shelby was born and raised in Los Angeles, California and spent three years reporting at Kentucky's WKYT before coming to Utah.
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