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‘I can’t believe this happened’: Girl, 13, dies in ‘freak’ hammock accident
By Michael E. Miller, Washington Post
May. 18, 2016 5:11 pm
Peri Sagun's name seemed to capture almost everything about her.
Peri means "fairy" in Turkish, and sure enough, the 13-year-old was as small as a pixie but with boundless energy, a brilliant mind and a bright smile. She bounced up and down when excited and loved family trips to Disney World.
Yet, the girl with the fairy tale name would not have the chance to live out her own dreams.
On Saturday, Sagun died in a 'freak' hammock accident outside her family's home in Des Moines.
Sagun and her 16-year-old sister, Eren, had strung a hammock between a tree and a 5-foot-tall brick light post. Eren was sitting in the hammock sometime just before noon when Peri jumped in as well. The extra weight suddenly caused the light post to collapse, according to local television station KCCI, which cited a police report.
The bricks struck Peri in the head. Her sister ran into the house, yelling for their father, who tried to perform CPR on his daughter.
An ambulance rushed Peri to a hospital four miles away but it was too late. She died at 12:52 p.m.
Although solid brick, the 2-foot-wide square light post was only placed several inches in the ground and had no reinforcement, the Des Moines Register reported. A city official told the newspaper that there are no laws regulating decorative structures such as the light post, nor are permits required for their construction.
The bizarre accident has left the family reeling, according to one relative.
'This weekend one of heavens angels was taken from us way too soon, in a complete freak accident,' Stephanie McCabe wrote on Facebook. 'Peri was the sweetest girl you would have ever met in your entire life. . . My heart is broken.'
The deadly accident also has shocked Des Moines, particularly St. Augustin Catholic School, where Sagun was an honor student.
'The students we're in shock really ... and the faculty, too,' principal Nancy Dowdle told KCCI.
'There's not one teacher I know who wouldn't, if something happened to a child, wouldn't just try to take their place because, you know, you've lived your life,' said Sagun's teacher, Pat Hogan, fighting back tears.
Hogan said she had known Sagun since she entered kindergarten at the school, and that Peri was a model student.
'She was so rule-bound, I mean you just want a whole class like that that never turns sideways, and that's how she was,' Hogan told KCCI, adding that Peri was a talented writer and avid tennis player.
'She was a child that no one ever said anything bad about or she never said anything mean to,' Hogan said. 'She was just a very kind girl.'
Peri's family has not yet commented publicly on her death. But an obituary describes the 13-year-old as a 'radiant blessing.'
'She was the amazing and beautiful best friend and little sister to Eren and an amazing role model and big sister to [her little brother] Devin,' the obituary states. She loved tennis and volleyball, and was 'excited about the summer workouts and improving her jump serve.'
The obituary says that she was named after the word for 'fairy' in her father's native language, and that the name suited her.
'Peri ... was truly magical and exemplified the meaning of her name in many ways,' according to the obituary. 'She was lighthearted, care free, and her glowing personality could light up a room. She dreamed about sunshine, college, and a career as an interior designer. She passionately enjoyed listening to music, especially One Direction, reading, art, nature, family reunions at Disney World, being on a beach or tubing behind a boat in Florida (the more bounce, the better!), experiencing the world, and she will forever and always be remembered laughing with her friends and family. Her bounce up-and-down joy when she was excited (without moving hardly a muscle!) is what will forever make us smile when we think of her, but her energy, smile, and caring for those close to her will be what is most remembered.'
Peri will be buried Friday at St. Augustin Catholic Church.
She will rest in the shadow of her school, where she was set to graduate from eighth grade on May 25.

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