Turkish teen captures hearts of a nation with touching goodbye video from the rubble of earthquake



Death comes at a time when one least expects it: Turkish teen captures hearts of a nation with emotional goodbye video from the rubble before he s pulled alive hours later - as others survive being buried for more than 11 days after huge earthquake

17 year-old girl Aleyna Olmez rescued from the rubbles of collapsed Atabey Apartment in Kayabasi neighbourhood 248 hours after a 7.8 magnitude quake demolished much of southern Turkey and northern Syria

'Death comes at a time when one least expects it': Turkish teen captures hearts of a nation with emotional goodbye video from the rubble before he's pulled alive hours later - as others survive being buried for more than 11 days after huge earthquake

A 17-year-old high school student has captured Turkish hearts after filming a touching farewell message to his loved ones from under the rubble amid this month's terrifying earthquake. Taha Erdem and his family were fast asleep when a 7.8 magnitude quake hit their hometown of Adiyaman in the early hours of Feb. 6. Within 10 seconds their apartment block collapsed and entombed Taha, his mother, father, younger brother and sister under mounds of debris. He found himself alone and trapped, with waves of powerful aftershocks shifting the detritus and squeezing his space amid the mangled mess of concrete and twisted steel. But instead of panicking, Taha pulled out his smartphone and cut a remarkably calm and stoic video in which he bid his friends ad family goodbye, spoke of his regrets, and accepted his seemingly bleak fate with incredible grace.

In this screenshot taken from video, Taha Erdem, 17, records himself using his smartphone as he is trapped under the rubble of a collapsed building

Taha Erdem, 17, centre, his mother Zeliha Erdem, left, and father Ali Erdem pose for a photograph next to the destroyed building where Tahan was trapped after the earthquake of Feb. 6, in Adiyaman, Turkey, Friday, Feb. 17, 2023

Taha Erdem, 17, right, his mother Zeliha Erdem, left, and father Ali Erdem stand next to the debris from a building where Tahan was trapped after the earthquake of Feb. 6, in Adiyaman, Turkey

'I think this is the last video I will ever shoot for you,' he said from the crawl space, his phone shaking in his hand as tremors rocked the collapsed building.

READ MORE: Drone pictures reveal scene of devastation at the ruins of luxury apartment block in Turkey where former Chelsea star Christian Atsu was found dead following earthquake

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'We are still shaking. Death, my friends, comes at a time when one is least expecting it.' says Taha, before reciting a Muslim prayer in Arabic. 'There are many things that I regret. May God forgive me of all my sins. If I get out of here alive today there are many things that I want to do. We are still shaking, yes. My hand isn't shaking, it's just the earthquake.' The teen goes on to recount that he believes his family are dead, along with many others in the city, and that he will soon join them. But Taha was destined to be among some of the first saved from the destroyed building. He was pulled from the rubble two hours later by neighbours and taken to an aunt's home. Ten hours after the quake, his parents and siblings were also saved by local residents who dug at the wreck of the building with their bare hands and whatever tools they could find. His family are now living in a government-provided tent, along with hundreds of thousands of others who survived the disaster that hit southern Turkey and north Syria, killing more than 46,000. The story of the Erdem family is one of many emotional tales of human fortitude to emerge from the widespread disaster area. Though tens of thousands of people have been lost to the quake, inspiring and heartwarming stories of miraculous rescues have shone through the sorrow. Earlier this week, a 17-year-old girl was pulled alive from the rubble of a collapsed building in southern Turkey an eye-watering 248 hours after she was buried in rubble. The scarcely believable rescue of Aleyna Olmez transpired in the southern province of Kahramanmaras, which was close to the epicentre of the 7.8 magnitude quake that erupted last Monday and demolished hundreds of square miles of territory. Experts say that the overwhelming majority of survivors are rescued within 72 hours of the disaster. After three days, the survival rate drops drastically as those buried under mountains of debris succumb to dehydration, asphyxiation or injuries sustained amid the tremor. But the teenager miraculously endured ten whole days of being entombed under tonnes of concrete and twisted metal.

Aleyna Olmez was somehow pulled from the rubble alive after ten days trapped underground Aleyna Olmez is rushed to a medical centre with oxygen, IV drips and a spinal stabilisation device

17 year-old girl Aleyna Olmez rescued from the rubbles of collapsed Atabey Apartment in Kayabasi neighbourhood 248 hours after a 7.8 magnitude quake demolished much of southern Turkey and northern Syria

The teenager miraculously endured ten whole days of being entombed under tonnes of concrete and twisted metal

An aerial view shows a tractor working on removing debris from a collapsed building in the Syrian rebel-held town of Jinderis on February 15, 2023

Her incredible rescue was conducted in an area described by a British aid volunteer as looking like a 'zombie apocalypse', where a potent stench of death hangs in the air. She was barely clinging to life when rescuers found her, and was extracted with an oxygen mask, IV fluids and a spinal stabilisation stretcher. When asked about her ordeal during recovery, Olmez simply said: 'I tried to pass the time on my own.' On Friday, a father was introduced to his newborn daughter for the first time after somehow enduring eleven days trapped under the rubble in Antayka, Turkey. Mustafa Avci, 33, was rescued alongside Mehmet Ali Sakiroglu, 26, on Friday after having spent 261 hours buried beneath layers of debris. Against all the odds, they survived long enough to be found and rescued, and for Avci to meet his baby daughter. Pictures from the hospital show his wife Bilge presenting baby Almile to her father for the first time. Avci is seen kissing his daughter's head, while lying back on a hospital bed - still hooked up to various medical tubes. Incredible footage of his rescue in Hatay Province showed how he was still able to speak on the phone while wrapped in a thermal blanket and wearing a neck brace. In the clip, he is heard speaking excitedly on a mobile phone to his relative.