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'Really Is A Miracle': Fairview Girl, 13, Who Plunged 5 Stories Now Alert, Breathing, Aware

UPDATE: A 13-year-old girl who jumped from the roof of a five-story apartment building in Fairview last week has emerged from a medically-induced coma, multiple sources confirmed on Tuesday.

The 13-year-old Fairview girl is "a fighter" and is continuing to improve at Hackensack University Medical Center.

The 13-year-old Fairview girl is "a fighter" and is continuing to improve at Hackensack University Medical Center.

Photo Credit: HACKENSACK UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER / INSET: Contributed
The Day Apartment building in Fairview is five stories high.

The Day Apartment building in Fairview is five stories high.

Photo Credit: Jerry DeMarco

“She’s alert, breathing on her own and aware of her surroundings -- getting better and better each day,” a law enforcement veteran told Daily Voice shortly after noon on Feb. 21.

“It really is a miracle,” he said. “There’s no other way to put it.”

Just six days earlier, the distressed youngster went to the roof of the brick building on Day Avenue as classmates headed home from Lincoln School just two doors down.

She dropped her jacket and cell phone to the sidewalk, then dangled herself over the ledge and let go.

A video shot from the street -- and posted online -- showed the girl’s feet hitting a fourth-floor window sill, knocking her head over heels.

She landed feet first after the flip, suffering massive fractures and severe trauma, and was taken to Hackensack University Medical Center.

Loved ones prayed and hoped against what all admitted were impossible odds. Meanwhile, other children and many adults inexplicably shared the horrific video through social media.

SEE: Fairview Girl, 13, Clings To Life As Horrifying Video Of Apartment Building Plunge Spreads

Then came news of her recovery.

Doctors removed the child's breathing tube over the weekend, sources told Daily Voice on Tuesday. 

"She's kept improving ever since," one said.

The girl isn't out of the woods yet, another said, but there's genuine cause for optimism thanks to the care she's received from the experts and staff at HUMC, as well as her own fortitude.

"She's a fighter," a source said. "Hopefully she'll see that and tackle whatever led to this head-on."

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