Former vaulter killed in Africa blast, another in serious...

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Former vaulter killed in Africa blast, another in serious...

Unread postby rainbowgirl28 » Sat Apr 09, 2005 10:36 am

http://www.mlive.com/news/grpress/index ... 265910.xml

Blast shatters friends' adventure


Saturday, April 09, 2005
By Dave Murray

The Grand Rapids Press


KENTWOOD -- Brothers Alex and Erik Mirandette had spent months touring Africa on motorcycles, delivering medicine to small towns along the way. They recently were joined by two friends, and the foursome planned to go mountain climbing and embark on other adventures.


But the Kentwood men's cross-continent journey and missionary work took a tragic turn Thursday when a nail-packed terrorist's bomb ripped through an Egyptian marketplace.


Alex Mirandette, 18, was killed and his brother Erik, 22, and friends Michiel Kiel, 21, and Kristopher Ross, 22, were seriously injured. The explosion also killed a French woman, the bomber and injured 15 others.


Erik Mirandette was in serious condition in a Cairo hospital. Kiel lost part of his biceps, and Ross sustained injuries to his eyes, Kiel's sister, Julie TenHaaf, said. All suffered burns and lacerations from the bomb.


The four had been inseparable friends since middle school and were looking forward to adventures across Africa, said TenHaaf.


"They grew up together and did everything together," said TenHaaf, of Kentwood, who planned to leave for Africa on Friday night, along with the Mirandettes' parents.


Both Mirandette brothers were star pole vaulters for the East Kentwood High School track team, with Erik crowned state champion in 2000 and Alex earning fifth-place statewide last year.


East Kentwood track coach Dave Emeott said Erik studied at the U.S. Air Force Academy before going on a two-year mission trip in Europe and Africa through Mars Hill Bible Church.


Alex joined his older brother last summer after graduating in May 2004 and again earlier this year when they set out across Africa on their motorcycles for what they called "a trip with purpose." They would deliver medicine for people suffering from AIDS as they explored cities and small towns.


Emeott said the brothers often would update family and friends about their trip via e-mail.


"These are both absolutely wonderful people," Emeott said. "Absolutely the best."


Rockford pole vault coach Kevin Patterson, whose athletes trained with the team from East Kentwood, said the brothers often would talk about their plans for the trip.


"We told them, 'Be careful, because you're dealing with Third-World countries over there,' " he said.


"It's upsetting because these are first-class kids, and they didn't go over there to get involved with politics. Yet they get caught in some bombing. They've never hurt anyone. It just doesn't make sense. You wonder why this would happen to these kids."


TenHaaf said Ross had been touring with the Mirandettes for more than a month. She said her brother had just finished serving four years in the U.S. Army based in Qatar in the Middle East, and caught up with his buddies.


She said the four planned to explore countries and climb Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania.


Egyptian Prime Minister Ahmed Nazief said the explosion may have been carried out by a person working alone, but stressed inquiries are ongoing.


"Initial evidence is that it was an individual act," he said. "The way in which the explosive was prepared was very primitive."


Many of the wounded, who included Egyptians, French and a Turk, suffered severe wounds from nails packed in the bomb, which witnesses said appeared to have been set off by a man on a motorcycle.


A previously unknown militant group, the Al-Ezz Islamic Brigades, claimed responsibility, saying the attack was a message to Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak that Islamic militancy still exists in his country.


"The reason behind choosing a place like al-Azhar district is that it is known to (attract) many tourists," the group said in a statement posted on a known Islamist Web site.


The statement could not be verified.

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Unread postby rainbowgirl28 » Sun Apr 10, 2005 10:07 pm

http://www.detnews.com/2005/metro/0504/ ... 145594.htm

Egypt blast kills teen from Michigan


East Kentwood man delivered medicine with brother and pals also hurt in the attack.


By Darren A. Nichols / The Detroit News


Family and friends of Alex Mirandette of East Kentwood, near Grand Rapids, say they are devastated by his death Thursday in an apparent terrorist bombing at an Egyptian marketplace.


Mirandette, 18, was killed and his brother Erik, 22, and friends Michael Kiel, 21, and Kristopher Ross, 22, were seriously injured in the blast. The explosion also killed a French woman, the bomber and 15 others.


Each of the Michigan natives had been traveling through Africa on a mission delivering medicine in small towns.


Alex and Erik Mirandette were pole vaulters at East Kentwood High School.


Alex finished fifth at last season's Division 1 final, while Erik was the state's champion in 2000.


Their high school track coach, Dave Emeott, said he became close to both young men during the last eight years.


"Obviously they were great athletes, but beyond that, they were great people," Emeott said. "It's just as tough as losing one of my own children. ... They are, through and through, just good kids."


Kevin Patterson, pole vault coach at nearby Rockford High School, said he got to know Erik in 1999 when he vaulted 13 feet, 6 inches in a conference meet. He later met Alex.


"We just feel a deep sense of loss in our vaulting family," Patterson said.


"They were outstanding kids from an outstanding family. I didn't know their mom and dad very well, but you didn't have to know (them) because you can tell those kids had been raised correctly," he said.


Despite competing against each other, pole vaulters typically are a tight-knit group of track athletes, he said. Alex and Erik even helped Patterson make an instructional pole vault DVD.


"They were hard-working, giving and they would do anything you want them to do and more," Patterson said.


East Kentwood Mayor Richard Root said he didn't know the young people involved, but he was aware of their outstanding reputation. Root said the incident has hit the community hard.


"We are all extremely saddened, especially with young people who were extremely talented," Root said.


Egyptian authorities are investigating whether a suicide bomber carried out the attack in a packed Cairo market, officials said Saturday. Three injured American tourists were in stable condition, Tourism Ministry spokeswoman Hala al-Khatib said. Kiel has lost part of his biceps, and Ross sustained injuries to his eyes, according to the Grand Rapids Press.


A Frenchman remained in critical, yet stable, condition.


The Associated Press contributed to this report. You can reach Darren A. Nichols at (734) 462-2190 or dnichols@detnews.com.

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Unread postby rainbowgirl28 » Sun Apr 10, 2005 10:16 pm

http://www.wzzm13.com/news/news_article ... ryid=38540

Father pays tribute to the Mirandette sons


Throughout the weekend, there have been special tributes to Alex and Erik Mirandette and their two friends who were involved in a terrorist attack in Egypt.

On Sunday, Mars Hill Bible Church paid a special tribute to Alex and Erik who were members of their church. Erik lived in Africa for almost two years doing humanitarian work with Mars Hill partner organizations.

After his work ended, Erik, his brother Alex and his two friends, 22-year old Kris Ross and 21-year old Mike Kiel took a four-month long motorcycle trip through Africa.

But on Thursday, a bomb exploded as they walked through a Cairo marketplace. "The bomb went of directly behind him. That was a nail bomb about the size of a bucket. Erik survived and Alex did not."

Kris and Mike were also injured.

Rick Mirandette spoke with us about their sons' work. "Erik had left the airforce academy two years ago to do some missions and outreach, medical alliance help through Mars Hill. And they had just completed that and were doing a trip through Africa. I strive to be worthy of my sons in their heart, courage and sacrificial attitude. They're amazing kids."

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Unread postby rainbowgirl28 » Sun Apr 10, 2005 10:18 pm

http://www.mlive.com/news/grpress/index ... 225670.xml

Families of bomb victims head to Egypt


Sunday, April 10, 2005
By Barton Deiters

The Grand Rapids Press


KENTWOOD -- The families of four young friends caught in a terrorist bomb attack in Egypt are heading overseas to retrieve their injured loved ones, along with the body of a young man who was killed in Thursday's blast.


Alex Mirandette, 18, was killed and his brother Erik, 22, and friends Michiel Ten Haaf, 21, and Kristopher Ross, 22, were seriously injured when a nail-packed bomb ripped through an Egyptian marketplace.


The four were all graduates of East Kentwood High School and members of mega-congregation Mars Hill Bible Church in Grandville. Their trip to the Middle East was a combination of missionary work, sightseeing and adventuring, according to Nikki Ross, Kristopher's 18-year-old sister.


"They were always looking for adventure," said Ross, a Michigan State University student. "I've always looked at them as role models and heroes."


The teen would say nothing of her brother's condition or of the status of the others in Egypt. She said Saturday afternoon that there was no word on when the families would return.


On Friday, Erik Mirandette was in serious condition in a Cairo hospital. Ten Haaf lost part of his biceps, and Ross sustained injuries to his eyes, according to Julie Ten Haaf, Michiel's sister. She said they all suffered burns and cuts.


As of Saturday, the U.S. State Department had yet to confirm the identities of victims or release details of the incident, the Associated Press reported. The rudimentary 7-pound bomb packed with nails exploded in Khan al-Khalili tourist bazaar, also killing a French woman and an unidentified third person, who investigators have said probably was a suicide bomber.


A previously unknown alleged terrorist group has claimed responsibility for the attack, according to the AP.


The friends from Kentwood had spent months traveling by motorcycle around Africa and also planned to deliver medicine to impoverished areas, according to family friends.

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Unread postby mcminkz05 » Sun Apr 10, 2005 10:50 pm

I knew Alex.... :dazed: thats horrible hearing about something like that happening to anyone, let alone someone you knew.. :deadrose:
What have you done today to get better?

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Unread postby rainbowgirl28 » Thu May 10, 2007 10:30 am

http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/n ... 54,00.html

Landing on his feet
A bomb almost killed Air Force's Erik Mirandette, but it didn't take away his determination
Evan Semon © The Rocky

Erik Mirandette returned to the Air Force Academy in June, 14 months after the attack in Egypt. Despite his injuries, Mirandette says he's "never jumped higher" competing in the pole vault.
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Landing on his feet
By Clay Latimer, Rocky Mountain News
May 9, 2007
AIR FORCE ACADEMY - Wandering through an ancient Egyptian marketplace two years ago with his brother and two friends, Erik Mirandette couldn't help but marvel at his good fortune.
Only a few days earlier, the Air Force Academy cadet had finished the adventure of a lifetime - a 9,000-mile, four-month motorcycle journey that started in Cape Town, ended in Cairo and twisted through jungle, desert, war and stunning landscape in 11 African countries.

In a few months, Mirandette, always looking for his next adventure, would be returning to the academy, where he was a pole vaulter and aspiring astronaut.

And now, in his final hours in Cairo, the Grand Rapids, Mich., native with the winning smile and easy charm was caught up in the camaraderie of the moment, chatting and joking with his boyhood buddies as they turned up and down unfamiliar streets and congested alleys, searching for souvenirs. As dusk fell, on April 7, 2005, he turned to his brother Alex, 18, smiling.

Then horror struck.

In a flash, Mirandette was lifted off his feet by a nail-packed bomb and hurled 20 feet into an alley, his left arm hanging by threads of flesh.

Smoke and blood engulfed the air; alarms shrieked; survivors stumbled down the scorched street, sidestepping the dead and dying and dismembered limbs.

"In the heat of the moment - I thought maybe it was just a dream. Then I looked at my body," Mirandette said. "My clothes are ripped off. My skin is gone. The nerves in my leg are severed. My eardrums are blown out.

"There are about 50 nails sticking out of my head. Hundreds of nails sticking out of my leg. I said to myself, 'This is a bomb, someone did this.' And I thought to myself: 'My life will never be the same after today.' "

Within hours, Alex died in a Cairo hospital. Erik barely survived, was airlifted to a U.S. military hospital in Germany, underwent the first of dozens of surgeries, returned to Grand Rapids and retreated deep within himself, worried he'd never walk - or care - again.

"I died in Egypt," he said. "It took a few months to figure out why I wanted to live, why I should choose to continue to fight. Until I figured that out, I wasn't a good guy to be around. I was fighting people for no reason. I was nasty."

Gradually, his physical wounds mended, his mental scars faded and Mirandette returned to the academy in June, 14 months after the day his life changed forever.

Today, the 24-year-old junior is on the dean's list, recorded a rare perfect score on the academy's physical fitness exam and is soaring again in the pole vault.

"I've never jumped higher," said Mirandette, who finished eighth in the Mountain West Conference indoor championships and second at the Service Academy championships.

What makes Mirandette's accomplishment more remarkable is his left arm; the explosion ripped out 65 percent of his triceps, leaving a jagged crevice where muscle and ligaments once had been.

The scar is a glaring reminder of that spring day in Cairo - and of next spring, when he hopes to join the war against terror as an agent with the Air Force Office of Special Investigations.

"It's disgustingly ironic," he said. "We'd survived all these dangerous places. Then the most brutal and horrible thing that could possibly happen unfolds right in front of our eyes. And it kills my brother.

"How could this be? There hadn't been a terrorist attack in Egypt in nine years. If I can save someone else from the horror I experienced . . ."

Bond of brothers

Handsome, athletic, tough, quick with a laugh - that was the Erik Mirandette who grew up in a middle-class neighborhood in Grand Rapids. Because their parents were divorced when they were young, Erik and Alex turned to one another for companionship and kicks, transforming the backyard of their mom's white-frame home into a haven for adventurous hijinks.

"We were bonded in a way that wouldn't happen in other circumstances," Erik said. "We always had each other."

Mirandette graduated to scuba diving, sky diving, rock climbing, boxing, motorcycles - but the pole vault was his passion.

"It was perfect for him. It was dangerous," his father, Rick, said.

But Mirandette was more than an adrenaline junkie. As a high school junior, his uncle dared him and a group of friends to do one push-up that day, two the next day, three the day after that . . . for a year.

"During the first three months, I kept forgetting," said Mirandette, who taped a sign - "Push-ups" - on his bedroom ceiling as a reminder. "Every now and then I'd have a busy day and go to sleep, and then wake up at about 2 o'clock in the morning and go: 'Oh, no, I forgot to do my push-ups.'

"More than anything, I wanted to see if I could do it. The difference between 100 and 300 push-ups isn't much. It just hurts the same longer."

As he warmed up for the 2000 Michigan state track and field championships, Mirandette took a fall and blew out an ankle, seemingly ending his medal hopes.

"The coaches said he couldn't continue. But somehow he pulled it together," Rick Mirandette said.

Mirandette cleared 14 feet, 6 inches, claimed his gold medal and limped home. A few hours later, he knocked off 235 push-ups - on his left foot.

"He wasn't going to let anything stop him," his father said.

The push-up challenge had become a metaphor for Mirandette, a test of iron discipline. On Labor Day 2000, he ripped off 366 in a row in 7 1/2 minutes.

"Growing up, I wasn't the fastest, I wasn't the strongest, I wasn't the smartest," he said. "I was really quite average. I realized at a very young age - probably about the seventh grade - that there were a lot of kids a lot better than me. But I had one thing on them: I could always work harder. It became a part of me."

Ready to fight terror

Marching up "Warrior Ramp" in summer 2001, his first day at the academy, Mirandette's dream of becoming an astronaut appeared to be taking off.

"If I could live in in any other era, maybe it would be the age of exploration. Going places that had never before been discovered, like Magellan," he said.

Less than a month into his first semester, however, terrorists flew hijacked airlines into the World Trade Center and Pentagon on Sept. 11, the bloodiest day on American soil since the Civil War.

"I was very excited to graduate and go fight terrorists," he said.

Mirandette thrived in the academy's old-fashioned culture of sacrifice and hard work, getting good grades, grinding away in the pole vault, assisting the student council, studying and drilling in the shadow of war.

But he grew weary of the daily grind and dropped out during his sophomore year, seeking adventure and spiritual solace in 2003 as a relief worker with a missionary group in Morocco.

"Erik's like a lion in a cage sometimes," Rick Mirandette said.

Arrest ends mission

At 6-foot and 165 pounds, with blue eyes and square shoulders, Mirandette was an obvious outsider in Morocco, where he studied Arabic before plunging into his new job.

"I pick up languages pretty quickly," he said. "And I'm a social guy. I got to know a lot of people."

Mirandette eventually traveled to a garbage dump near Melilla, a gathering spot for thousands of refugees hoping to cross Spain's heavily guarded border into Europe. Watching as they sifted through trash for morsels of food, he agreed to deliver food, water, and eventually medical supplies to the camp - a crime in Morocco.

The mission ended when Mirandette was arrested for the fourth time as a Moroccan soldier pointed his gun at his head.

After nearly two years, as Christmas approached in 2004, it was almost time to go home. But first . . . a final adventure with his brother, Alex, a pole vaulter who had claimed his school's award for superior achievement and leadership just months before, an honor Erik had won three years earlier.

No warning in Cairo

Buddies since middle school, Erik, Alex, Michael Kiel, 21, and Kristopher Ross, 22 started their four-month ride up the continent on dirt bikes, stopping to donate time at churches, orphanages and AIDS clinics along the way. Danger became routine as they bounced along remote roads.

In the Democratic Republic of Congo, an angry mob and rebel soldiers toting AK-47 rifles surrounded the group, demanding money.

In a remote stretch of western Tanzania, Alex's bike broke down at dusk in a jungle where lions hunt for food. In the next village, they rode into the aftermath of a multiple murder.

"The hardship came with the beauty," Erik said.

Arriving in Cairo on April 5, exhausted but exhilarated, Erik and Alex called home, where they planned to celebrate Alex's 19th birthday in two weeks.

Next on the schedule: sightseeing.

On the first day they visited the great pyramids of Giza; on the second, they toured the Cairo Museum in the morning, then took a taxi to the Khan el-Khalili marketplace, their last stop in the city.

Approaching from the opposite direction was an 18-year-old man, carrying a green bucket containing 20 kilos of TNT and nails.

"He saw four young, strong, white, blond, blue-eyed Americans," Erik said. "We were the perfect target."

The man walked between the Mirandette brothers and pulled out a barbecue lighter. The explosion blew out windows, killed two people and injured 15.

"There was no warning whatsoever," Erik said. "It was utter hell. The smell, the sound of moaning, of people coming in and out of consciousness. The walls were all red. I'm breathing this moist smoke, moist from blood. The bomber's body parts were all over. It was worse than the worst I could imagine - far worse."

A backpack saved Erik's life, shielding his spine and organs. Alex absorbed the brunt of the blast, which ruptured his spleen, severed a carotid artery and blew him backward into the street - though the magnitude of his injuries wasn't immediately evident.

"He was the first person on the first ambulance," Erik said. "We thought he was going to be OK. We thought I was going to be the one to go, actually.

"I slipped into shock before the second ambulance came. I lost so much blood. I barely had enough to keep my heart beating."

Close to death

During the next several days, Mirandette battled fever, infection, lung failure and severe shock - a moment when his resolve almost failed him.

"My heart stopped beating like a normal heart," he said. "It felt like I had a hummingbird in my chest. I stopped being able to breathe. I'm watching this light above me and it gets really bright and then it gets really dim and then it gets really bright. I realized: 'I'm dying right now.'

"I said: 'Not yet, not yet, not yet.' I focused on trying to stop it, trying to hold my breath. I keep breathing, and then my breath got a little bigger. I reached out with my right hand and got a blanket from a corpse next to me and covered myself. Gradually, the lights came back into focus."

It wasn't until he awoke in the hospital ward early the next morning and spoke to his parents on the phone that Mirandette learned Alex was dead.

"I'm so sorry . . . so sorry," he said to them. "I did the best I could."

Mirandette was flown from Cairo to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center and was stabilized.

On April 21, as his parents prepared to bury his brother, Mirandette was flown to a Grand Rapids hospital and placed in a critical care unit.

Kiel, recovering from third-degree burns and multiple puncture wounds, and Ross, recovering at home from perforated ear drums and blurred vision, gathered by his bedside.

In May, Mirandette received a call from the White House, inviting him to greet President Bush at Gerald R. Ford International Airport in Grand Rapids.

But as summer approached, the haze that had engulfed Mirandette since the explosion in Cairo was only beginning to clear.

For months, Mirandette struggled to lift his left foot. He was chronically exhausted from insomnia and pain. His weight dropped to 135 pounds. He underwent one surgery after another, many to remove shrapnel; even now, 35 nails remain in his body.

But through all the long nights, Mirandette dreamed of returning to the academy.

"They told me there was no chance at all for me to meet the physical requirements. That really made me mad," Mirandette said. "When I could stand, I stood. When I could walk, I started to walk. When I could run, I started to run. I started to do regular push-ups, then one-armed push-ups. I never stopped."

But his long recovery was far from over. Bent by grief, he drifted through classes at a local college, weekend parties, desultory days at his mother's home.

"I wanted my brother," he said.

At a Grand Rapids bar one night, Mirandette and Ross impulsively decided to move to Hawaii; within weeks, they found themselves on Kauai, working, surfing and living a life of laid-back leisure.

It was there, during spring 2006, that Mirandette started writing The Only Road North, a 300-page account of his African experience.

"It was my catharsis, my opportunity to free myself from this burden," he said.

Fourteen months after he was blown into the air, the force literally ripping off his clothes, Mirandette slipped into a dark-blue dress uniform and returned to the Air Force Academy. Greeting him were grateful - and incredulous - friends.

"Our hope was that he would have a healthy life and maybe come back to the Air Force Academy - although I didn't even think that was a realistic shot," Air Force track coach Ralph Lindeman said. "I would've never dreamed he'd resume his athletic career. But pole vaulters are kind of crazy. They're willing to get inverted on a pole 18 feet high. They're the kind of guys who'll jump out of airplanes, get on motorcycles and go across Africa."

Added Craig Harmon, Mirandette's immediate supervising officer at the academy: "Often it comes down to the individual and their own desire and will to succeed. He's a case study in that . . . (And) he brings to the table something that nobody else has - real world experience. He's grown up very fast."

'Sense of calling'

At first blush, the atmosphere seems almost serene today at the academy, a dramatic contrast to the chaotic days after 9/11, when America's service academies went to maximum alert.

But the war has taken a toll. Fifty- three West Point grads have been killed in Iraq and Afghanistan. A year ago, applications at the Naval Academy, West Point and the Air Force Academy reached five-year lows.

Mirandette, though, has embraced his fresh start at military life. He now studies political science/international relations instead of physics, immerses himself in studies of terrorism and counts down the days until he returns to the battlefront.

"I've got questions I'm never going to be OK with," he said. "I'll live the rest of my life scarred inside and outside. But I've got a sense of calling. I want to prevent attacks on other good people.

"Call it romantic. Call it idealistic. But I tell you, it's worth getting up in the morning for. It keeps me going."

Taking flight

Before returning to the Air Force Academy in June, Erik Mirandette's best pole vault in a college meet was 14 feet, 9 1/2 inches, in 2003. Since returning, his top effort is 15-7 3/4.

• Mirandette: "Sixty-five percent of my triceps is gone. But I work the 35 percent I have left really hard. Your heart and work ethic are never going to leave you. If you push hard enough for long enough. . . ."

About the book

• The Only Road North:

9,000 Miles of Dirt and Dreams.

• By: Erik Mirandette.

• Publisher: Zondervan.

• Book signing: June 1 in Colorado Springs, Barnes & Noble Booksellers, 1565 Briargate, 719-266-9960.


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