Residents of West Hartford’s Quaker Green neighborhood were saddened
Monday to learn that Maimuna Anyene, her four young children, and her
husband, were among the 153 passengers and crew killed in Sunday’s crash
of a Dana Air plane in Lagos, Nigeria.
“We’re all very sad. The whole community is very tight knit. I saw
her leave with her husband and all four kids, going to her brother’s
wedding,” said Elyse Fox, who lived next door to Anyene.
Anyene and her children lived on Park Place Circle. Her husband
worked in Nigeria, neighbors said, but returned to West Hartford every
few months and was traveling back to Nigeria with the family to attend
Anyene’s brother’s wedding.
A bouquet of yellow tulips had been left on the front doorstep Monday afternoon.
“I’d see her with her kids, and she seemed like a very nice person,”
said Keith Elis, of 32 Park Place Circle, who also has a preschool-age
child. Elis said that his mother, who babysits for his daughter, knew
Anyene better because the kids would sometimes play together.
“She was always smiling; I don’t know how she did it,” Elis said.
Elis said that word of the family’s death in the crash spread through
the neighborhood Sunday night after a neighbor found Anyene’s name on
the passenger list.
Anyene had lived in her townhouse, in Elmwood’s newly-developed Quaker Green condominium complex, for several years
. According to the Hartford Courant, she was a human resources
manager for United Technologies who worked in the Gold Building in
Hartford.
Residents describe the neighborhood as very community-oriented, where
neighbors immediately reach out to meet newcomers. Anyene’s family
would socialize by the pool, and come to neighborhood parties, they
said.
“I knew her as a neighbor, from being out playing with the kids,”
said Lisa Ohayon, who has a 2-year-old grandchild. “They were going to
be moving, and that alone devastated the neighborhood. Six people gone –
it just doesn’t make sense,” she said.
Lisa Ohayon and her husband John said Anyene’s children were cared
for during the day by an aunt and another family member while Anyene
worked full time. “The twins were so cute, always dressed the same, and
the aunt used to carry them on her back,” Lisa Ohayon said.
Another neighbor, Tagen Gonzalez, believed Anyene’s mother and
perhaps at least one other relative were also on the plane. Gonzalez,
also the mother of a preschooler, said Anyene’s oldest child was just
about four, the twin daughters would have been two in July, and the baby
was about six months old.
“Her kids were always happy. This community is close, and this is surreal,” Fox said.
Gonzalez said that she has already contacted United Technologies and
is hoping to do something to formally honor the memory of the family.
Reports indicate that all 153 people on board the plane were killed
when it crashed into densely-populated neighborhood in Lagos, Nigeria,
on Sunday. An unknown number of people on the ground also perished.
The cause of the crash is under investigation. CNN reported that the
plane was 22 years old. According to the Christian Science Monitor,
Nigerian law bans aircraft older than 20 years of age
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