Home Christian News Candice Gulley, Survivor of Wreck That Killed 8: ‘I’m Not Strong. My...

Candice Gulley, Survivor of Wreck That Killed 8: ‘I’m Not Strong. My God Is’

Candice Gulley
Lee County Sheriff's deputies release doves following a prayer vigil for the eight Alabama children that died in a June 19 crash on I-65 for the eight Alabama children that died in a June 19 crash on I-65 at Church of the Highlands in Auburn, Ala., on Thursday, July 15, 2021. (Jake Crandall/The Montgomery Advertiser via AP)

AUBURN, Ala. (AP) — A girls home director who was driving a van that crashed in Alabama, killing two of her own children, two nephews and four other youths, wept Thursday at a remembrance where she said religious faith has sustained her since the wreck.

Standing before a crowd of hundreds, Candice Gulley, the only person to survive in the van, cried as she said each of the young victims was a “blessing to my life.”

“They were my children whether they shared my blood or they didn’t,” Gulley said in her first public comments about the wreck. “To be around these kids was to be around encouragers … They sought out people who were sad and they encouraged them,” she said.

Tears and laughter filled the Church of the Highlands in Auburn for the memorial service, as speakers remembered the eight children. The crowd at the service included young women who had grown up at the girl’s home and the law enforcement officers and rescue workers who responded to the deadly crash.

The van from the youth home for for abused or neglected children was part of a fiery multi-vehicle crash June 19 on a wet interstate that also killed a Tennessee man and his baby in another vehicle. The pileup was the most devastating blow from a tropical depression that claimed 13 lives in Alabama as it caused flash floods and spurred tornadoes that destroyed dozens of homes.

Expressing thanks for support she’s received from across the country in the weeks since the crash, Gulley said she did not have the strength to get through the ordeal on her own.

“I’m not strong. My God is,” she said. “I have lost my children here on Earth but they were immediately in our savior’s presence.”

Gulley had taken the group to the Alabama coast for an annual trip sponsored by the girls ranch, which cares for abused and neglected girls and is located about 60 miles (nearly 100 kilometers) northeast of Montgomery. The van was returning to the Tallapoosa County Girls Ranch when it wrecked during a tropical storm last month.

The van was carrying eight children ages 3 to 17 when the crash occurred about 35 miles (55 kilometers) south of Montgomery on Interstate 65.