The children, ages 5 to 16, died early Saturday when flames engulfed the Sassoon family home in the Midwood neighborhood of Brooklyn. Investigators believe a hot plate left on a kitchen counter set off the fire that trapped the children and badly injured their mother and another sibling.
Brooklyn Assemblyman Dov Hikind said the children's remains will be placed aboard an El Al flight to Tel Aviv after Sunday afternoon funeral services.
"Everyone's in utter shock," Hikind said.
The hot plate was left on for the Sabbath, from sundown Friday to sundown Saturday. Many religious Jews refrain from working in all forms including turning on appliances during the Sabbath; some leave them running instead.
Authorities identified the victims as girls Eliane, 16; Rivkah, 11; and Sara, 6; and boys David, 12; Yeshua, 10; Moshe, 8; and Yaakob, 5.
Authorities said their father was at a nearby conference at the time of the fire.
"They were beautiful little children," said a tearful neighbor, Rose Insel, remembering how she rewarded the kids with lollipops after they voluntarily shoveled her walk. "It's unbelievable. It doesn't seem possible."
A neighbor, Karen Rosenblatt, said she called the emergency dispatcher after seeing flames and smoke bellowing from the home. Her husband said he heard "what seemed like a young girl scream, 'Help me! Help me!'" she said.
Firefighters arrived less than four minutes after the emergency call and discovered the badly burned and distraught mother pleading for help. When they broke in the door, firefighters encountered a hopeless situation " a raging fire that already had spread through the kitchen, dining room, common hall, the stairway leading upstairs and the rear bedrooms.
The last residential blaze with a similar death toll happened in 2007, when eight children and an adult were killed in a fire in a 100-year-old building in the Bronx where several African immigrant families lived. Fire officials said an overheated space heater cord sparked that blaze.
