After
searching for 10 years, Mike Maroney was finally reunited with LeShay
Brown, the 3-year-old he rescued during Hurricane Katrina.
The Air Force veteran who spent 10 years looking for a little girl he saved during Hurricane Katrina met the now 13-year-old this week, in a long-awaited reunion.
Master Sgt. Mike Maroney and LeShay Brown, who was 3 when Maroney first met her, came face to face on Wednesday’s episode of The Real.
The last time Maroney saw LeShay, she was in his helicopter after he
rescued her family from the hurricane. LeShay had her arms wrapped
around Maroney’s neck in a giant hug, with a smile that the dad of two
says he could never forget. “Ten years is a long time, but when she
smiled, I knew it was her,” Maroney tells Yahoo Parenting about seeing
LeShay this week. “This is a moment I’ve been waiting a decade for. It
was like the wait of 10 years — and the weight of 10 years — was lifted.
I felt lighter.
Earlier
this year, Maroney’s search for LeShay — and the original photo of the
hug they shared — went viral, with the hashtag #FindKatrinaGirl. Last
month, LeShay was finally identified. Maroney says he had originally
planned a quiet reunion near LeShay’s home in Mississippi, but “so many
people thought this moment was for America, that we need this
happiness,” that he agreed to a televised reunion. When he arrived at
the set of The Real, Maroney says he, LeShay, and her mother,
Shawntrell Brown, were all backstage, but he was in a separate dressing
room. “I was pacing back and forth, I was nervous, I was excited,” he
says. “Think about the night before your wedding — those jitters and
excitement and ‘I can’t wait to see them’ feeling — that’s how it felt.”
Before he was taken out on stage, Maroney says, The Real ran
a video showing scenes from Katrina, which made him surprisingly
emotional. “It was like being right back there,” he says. “I got a
little choked up. That’s a side I usually don’t share with people, and I
keep a lot of stuff inside — I have a lot of memories I’d rather not
think about — so they all started bubbling up.”
Still,
when LeShay finally came on stage, Maroney says he felt nothing but
joy. “I need something bigger — some supercalifragilisticexpialidocious
kind of word — to explain the happiness I felt,” he says. “LeShay
represents New Orleans and humanity, and if this family can get through
it then there is hope, and that’s what we all need more of in the world
right now.”
While
he’s thrilled to finally have his 10-year search come a happy
conclusion, Maroney says this success story has a greater message. “This
doesn’t have to do with me, I just happen to be the person who
requested to see her smile again,” he explains. “This is about this
family’s resiliency. For me, that’s what this moment is — it’s sharing
hope with the world. And if I can leave the world a little bit better
with hope, then I’m running with it.”
When
Maroney was finally able to talk to LeShay and Shawntrell in person, he
says he was eager to tell them how much LeShay meant to him. “They
didn’t know how important her smile and that hug was to me,” he says.
“We had talked on the phone, but I wanted to tell them in person, and so
I saved that. I told her that her small gesture of a hug and a smile,
she had no idea what it did. I think she rescued me more than I rescued
her.”
For
her part, LeShay told Maroney she didn’t remember anything about
Hurricane Katrina, “which I think is a blessing,” Maroney says. “Her
family is just touched that somebody cared about them. They were
thinking ‘why would somebody worry or be concerned about us?’ and I
thought ‘Why not? You are great people.’”
Maroney
expects that his family will be in touch with LeShay’s for a long time.
In fact, he’s bringing his sons, 11 and 13, to visit her family this
weekend. His plans for the weekend? “I’m going to teach LeShay how to
swim.”

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