NEW JERSEY (VINnews/Sandy Eller) – A 49 year old Ecuadorian grocery worker who died in the devastating attack on a kosher store in Jersey City is being remembered as an honorary member of the Jewish community and a hero today, paying the ultimate price while saving the life of a Chasidic resident.

Miguel Douglas Rodriguez had just returned from vacation, starting his shift at Jersey City Kosher Market at noon on December 10th.

Just over half an hour later, Chaim Deutch and his 24 year old cousin Moshe Deutch entered the store and, within moments, gunshots rang out. Seeing his cousin gunned down before his eyes, an injured Chaim Deutch ran for the back door finding Rodriguez steps ahead of him. Rodriguez held the door for Deutch to leave the store first, a selfless act that proved fatal.

“Miguel got shot at the door,” said Chaim Fried, who heard the story while visiting Deutch at Jersey City Medical Center. “He was going to run out, but Miguel got shot before he could escape. He was shot and he fell to the ground.”

Usher Meir Ferencz, whose sister in law Leah Mindel Ferencz was also killed in the bloody ramapage, said that Rodriguez had earned a reputation as a highly valued employee in the store that Mrs. Ferencz owned with her husband Moshe Dovid.

“Moshe would say that Douglas was a gift from Hashem from the day he walked into the store,” Ferencz told VIN News. “He trusted him with everything, the cooking, the cleaning, the organizing, even the cash register because his honesty was so obvious. That’s just the way he was.”

Ferencz said that he has been stopped by multiple non- Jewish Jersey City residents who have cried with him about the tragic loss of life that devastated multiple communities.

“They told me how everyone got along and that there were never any bad feelings about color, race or religion,” said Ferencz.

That same sense of amity was evident in the kosher grocery, where the Ferenczes and their customers considered Rodriguez to be a good friend. According to The New York Times (https://nyti.ms/2Ef6e9Y), Rodriguez was known for his ready smile, often showing customers pictures of his family.

“He knew everybody by their name,” said Mark Schwartz, who frequented the grocery often. “He was a wonderful guy.”

Schwartz said that Rodriguez would prepare his lunch for him and always remembered his favorite snacks.

“He was so happy to be here,” said Schwartz. “He had big dreams.”

Rodriguez had been employed in his native Ecuador as a financial manager at Seguros Bolivar, an insurance company that went bankrupt in 2014. After a two year job search proved fruitless, Rodriguez, his wife Maria Freire and his 11 year old daughter moved to Harrison, New Jersey.

“He had the hope of getting an office job or a bank job but language barriers made it difficult for him to work in these areas,” said Rodriguez’s brother, William Rodriguez Barzola.

In an interview with Univision (http://bit.ly/34dCwN6), a tearful Freire recounted how she and her husband had known each other since they were 16 and that they struggled for years in their quest to become parents. They gave their 11 year old daughter Amy the middle name, Milagros, which means miracles.

“Ten years waiting for my daughter until the Lord blessed us,” said Freire. “Now he won’t be able to be with her. He wanted to see her graduate from school, get married, have children…”

A Go Fund Me (http://bit.ly/36suTDU) campaign launched on Wednesday to cover the cost of a planned burial in Ecuador and to support Rodriguez’s widow and daughter met more than half of its $60,000 goal in a single day. Members of the Jewish community were among the more than 750 donors to the fundraiser, including one that said, “The Jewish Community has always loved him and are very sorry for his loss. We will never forget him” and another written in Spanish bearing the words, “The color of our skin, our race, our religion and our country of origin may be different, but our humanity is ONE.”

That unity was also evident on Thursday night at an interfaith candlelight vigil held at New Jersey City University.

Borough Park resident Yosef Rapaport who attended the vigil said that there wasn’t a dry in the room when Jersey City resident Chesky Deutsch told Freire that she and her daughter would always be part of the local Jewish community.

“He told her how Douglas cared for every child in the community, all of whom loved him in return and how even while Moshe Ferencz was sitting shiva for his wife he told everyone ‘Do not forget Douglas,’’’ said Rapaport. “He told her that his children were in the school next door to the grocery and that the bullets that killed her husband were actually meant for his children.”