June 5, 2004, 11:58PM
Woman injured on 9/11 finds little solace in paymentBy
LESLIE EATON New York Times
NEW YORK -- Deborah Mardenfeld had the sad distinction of being
one of the most gravely injured New Yorkers to survive the attacks
of 9/11. Hit by falling debris from the second plane that slammed
into the World Trade Center, she spent more than a year in
hospitals, trying to regain the use of her badly damaged legs.
Now, Mardenfeld has been awarded roughly $8.6 million by the
federal September 11 Victim Compensation Fund, which says it is
among the largest of the 4,127 payments it has agreed to make so far
(they total more than $5 billion).
Mardenfeld, who has just turned 33, has not yet received the
money. And she said that she was not sure what significance the
amount had, except perhaps that she was one of the youngest
survivors; the awards take into account lost future earnings.
"You can't compare suffering," she said.
Guy I. Smiley, the lawyer who represented Mardenfeld without
charge as part of the Trial Lawyers Care program, said he was
pleased with the size of the award. "But it's hard money for her,"
he said. "She'd give it all back in a flash."
Mardenfeld and her fiance, Gregory St. John, said they did not
have firm plans on what to do with the money, except perhaps to buy
a house and invest for the future. "What the money does is provide
opportunities for the future for myself and my family and hopefully
my future family to be," said Mardenfeld, who is looking forward to
having children one day.
In the meantime, she is spending as many as six days a week in
rehabilitation, recovering not just from her original injuries, but
also from subsequent surgeries (four so far this year). "I've
learned to walk I can't tell you how many times," she said.
There have been setbacks; she has been stuck in a wheelchair for
months waiting for a special shoe she needs to walk, she said. But
she is now well enough to resume classes in jewelry making, which
was her hobby before she was injured.
Though she is proud of the success she had achieved at American
Express -- she was on her way to work at the World Financial Center
on Sept. 11 -- she said it was hard to imagine what her path would
be in the future, except that she wants to do some charitable work.
Right now, "her full-time job is to get better, as soon as
possible," St. John said.
She is also fighting to be sure that her injuries do not define
her. "The most important thing for me is to be loved for who I am,
and not because I survived," she said.
That said, she does think her experience has something to teach
others. "The thing I've learned, and that I hope people learn from
me, is never take no for an answer," she said. "Always hope."
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