Denver, CO – Frum Jew Credited For Saving A Fisherman

    12

    Denver, CO – Denver resident Ari Hoffman was not expecting to hear screams for help when he and a friend embarked on a camping trip near the Green Mountain Reservoir near Heeney.

    Join our WhatsApp group

    Subscribe to our Daily Roundup Email


    On a morning in early April, the two friends drove up from Denver to enjoy a leisurely day of hiking. They parked their car near the Green Mountain Dam and got ready to begin their hike — that was, until they heard a voice below.

    “It was really faint, but we heard someone yelling ‘I broke my leg’ over and over,” said Hoffman. “We thought it was coming from the other side of the reservoir so we drove over the dam …”

    As rain began to fall, the two men searched for the source of the voice only to discover it was coming from directly below where they had originally parked.

    They immediately returned to their previous location and began yelling down the embankment of the reservoir toward the voice.

    “We started climbing down the embankment and saw this guy laying there with his leg buried in the snow in an attempt to reduce the swelling,” Hoffman said.

    The man was attempting to climb down the dam when he slipped and injured his leg.

    Alone in a remote area, the man was approaching hypothermia as the weather took worsened, and his desperate cries for help were the only tools he had to help save himself.

    “We didn’t have a lot of emergency experience but we tried to stay calm and take care of him in the best way we could,” said Hoffman. Their first order of business was calling 911.

    “We also put a sleeping bag and fleece around him because he was only in jeans and a T-shirt, and it was beginning to snow,” Hoffman added.

    Given the remoteness of the area, it took a little more than 20 minutes for Summit County Ambulance crews to arrive and evaluate the fisherman’s injuries. Crews from Lake Dillon Fire-Rescue, Summit County Rescue Group, and the Summit County Sheriff’s Office also responded to the scene to help transport the man to safety.

    In order to pull the man up from the embankment, emergency responders utilized an uphaul system and stokes basket to safely get the injured man into the ambulance.

    According to Tony Steele with Summit County Ambulance, the two men that found the fisherman did everything appropriately, and he was calm and in stable condition when medical personnel arrived.

    “The fact that these two guys were in the area and able to hear the man’s screams is remarkable,” said Brandon Williams with Lake Dillon Fire-Rescue. “The area they were in is not heavily traveled and it was really lucky they were there at the right time.”

    Some may call it luck, some may call it a coincidence, but those who responded to the scene all agree that had the two men not been passing through the area and heard the man’s cries for help the outcome would have been vastly different.

    “As an Orthodox Jew, I consider this whole story to be one of divine intervention,” said Hoffman. “To see the look in this guy’s eyes when he saw us coming to help him … you could tell he had the biggest feeling of relief.”

    Mr. Ari Hoffman, spoke to VIN News from his home in Denver briefly this afternoon. Though in a rush to prepare for Shabbos, he told us that his hiking partner, whom he would only identify as “Don”, deserves much of the credit.

    Hoffman also told VIN News that, as an avid hiker, he had many other location options on the day in question—but was drawn to the fateful location for some reason, a reason he attributes to hashgachah pratis.

    The rescued man has since invited Mr. Hoffman and his friend Don to a steak dinner—and Hoffman believes the man will be pleasantly surprised when informed that a kosher restaurant is the only option. Hoffman had his ski mask on at the time of rescue, rendering his yarmulkah and his Jewishness unnoticed.


    Listen to the VINnews podcast on:

    iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon

    Follow VINnews for Breaking News Updates


    Connect with VINnews

    Join our WhatsApp group


    12 Comments
    Most Voted
    Newest Oldest
    Inline Feedbacks
    View all comments
    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    I wonder if when Chazal say that one who saves one person is like he saved an entire world also applies to non-jews. Either way those two people did a remarkable thing and Kol HaKovod to them

    .
    .
    15 years ago

    who ever said that the fisherman was a NON JEW??

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    I don’t know what rescuing a non-jew is considered, but definitely chalek elokei mima’al…

    reb Yehuda
    reb Yehuda
    15 years ago

    Will this make cover of the post?. Answer: no…. Cockroaches!!!! Liberal media!!!!!!!!!

    hunkydorey
    hunkydorey
    15 years ago

    Why does this always have to be a jew and non jew issue?

    How would you feel if you were in danger and some goy says to you oh your a jew…And then moves on and lets you sit there and die?

    How would you feel?

    It’s amazing how we question the RIGHT and NORMAL decisions that a human being made.

    Christopher

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    Sometimes, lumdus gets the worst of us:

    Uh, efshar he was an Amelki and this was an avaira.

    Or, maybe they risked their own lives for a stam akum or . . .

    What an awesome kiddush Hashem!!

    Ari is a person near and dear to me, and this was the first that I heard about this. To know him is to love him! What a zechus to be in such a place to save a human life!

    Ari, if you’re reading this, Ashrecha from an artist formally known as an “assistant” rabbi who loves you dearly! Figure it out. And a million mazel tovs to Josh.

    Koner
    Koner
    15 years ago

    Hey Ari, Way to go!!! Shwing…..

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    what a nice refreshing story for a change. Mr. Hoffamn Kol Hakoved, and to the denver jews.

    miami yid  2
    miami yid 2
    15 years ago

    what a huge kiddush hashem

    great story very refeshing story its great to hear good things from time to time.. VOS keep up the great work

    have a good shabbos

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    Chris, This isn’t an issue about if he was a jew or not. Everyone here is proud that a jew has saved another humans life.

    Raiza
    Raiza
    15 years ago

    Way to go Dod! First step for tikun olam and saving the world! We are very proud and impressed.

    Oy Gevald
    Oy Gevald
    15 years ago

    Mazel Tov on a super Kiddush Hashem!