Quake’s ‘Miracle Child’ grows up

? The “Miracle Children” are children no more.

The 14 newborns provided inspiration and hope to a devastated capital when they were rescued after days buried in the rubble of Mexico City’s 1985 earthquake. This week, they are turning 18, a happy denouement to a tragic tale and perhaps a quieter sort of inspiration.

They bear wounds and scars and live in a very different country than the one wracked by the 8.1-magnitude temblor on Sept. 19, 1985.

Jesus Antonio Castillo was 4 days old and lying in an incubator in Juarez General Hospital awaiting a checkup for hepatitis when the quake struck at 7:19 a.m. Nine days later, rescue workers had lost hope finding survivors and were bringing bulldozers to clear the rubble.

“My father told them, ‘Hold off until day 10. My baby is waiting to be discovered,”‘ Castillo said Monday as he celebrated his 18th birthday.

He was found wedged underneath a crumpled ceiling column where he had spend the past 235 hours. Castillo was the last of 16 newborns rescued from the remains of Juarez General and a second hospital leveled by the quake.

Two of the newborns pulled from the rubble later died — one of them a girl whose weak wailing led rescuers to Castillo, trapped just 8 inches away, but too feeble to cry.

“I think about her sometimes. She died, but she saved me,” Castillo said during an interview in his kitchen, his wife and grandmother by his side and his golden cocker spaniel peeking out from under a nearby bed.

Castillo married his high school sweetheart last year. He drives trucks for a building materials company, and he and his wife live in a two-room cinderblock home.

Jesus Antonio Castillo, 18, shows a photo of himself at 2 years old at his home in Mexico City. Castillo was the last of the 16 Miracle

Perched on the city’s southernmost outskirts, theirs is a neighborhood that’s greener than most, dotted with small parks and vacant lots where families grow undersized stalks of corn. Ask anyone around: They all know the tale of “God’s child, little Jesus Antonio.”

Castillo didn’t open his eyes until nine days after he was rescued and he spent three months in intensive care before regaining enough strength to go home.

“When we first went to see him, he was in very grave condition,” said Castillo’s grandmother, 63-year-old Catalina Morales. “He couldn’t see, couldn’t make a sound, almost couldn’t breathe. His legs, his arms, all of his little body was crushed.”

The quake left Castillo with jagged but small scars from head to toe and a golf-ball-size indentation in his back where falling debris punctured one of his lungs.

Castillo, who has been telling journalists his story every Sept. 19 since he was old enough to speak, said he was “famous for sad reasons.”

“I feel fortunate to have turned 18 and to be an adult,” he said. “But I feel fortunate to have every day of my life.”