Teenager healing after accident that killed mom (AP) — The first prayers over, Rabbi Yaakov Fisch smiled, bowed his head and spoke with a soft voice. On Sept. 13, 2013, just after sundown on Yom Kippur in the Hebrew year 5774, the synagogue experienced a great tragedy, the rabbi said during this year's Yom Kippur service. Under the fluorescent lights, Orly felt the room spin, and then she felt the loneliness, and then she felt like nothing would be the same. Orthodox Jews closely follow the Jewish law, and that means they cannot work after the sun sets on Friday or on holy days. Florida Highway Patrol found that his eyesight was bad, and he should've been able to stop with 34 feet to spare. Law officers gave Fortunato a traffic ticket for the crash that injured Orly and killed her mother. After Esther Ohayon's death, transportation officials installed camera sensors that automatically detect when someone approaches. Another Yom Kippur, Esther posted on Facebook, without her husband singing the holiday tunes she loved. The last thing Orly remembers her mom doing was a ritual that set aside money to give to charity after the holiday ended. Teens from the Etz Chaim synagogue came to her hospital room. Blessed are You, God, who heals all flesh and acts wondrously. The days in the hospital bed, in the wheelchair, on crutches, she thanked God her body still worked. Sunday meant grits, eggs and orange juice. Orly continues the tradition, lighting candles now for both her dad and her mom. [...] she could walk. Look across Jacksonville, she said, Reform Jews, Conservative Jews, Orthodox Jews and Hasidic Jews all come together during the year and vowed to observe more laws in honor of Orly and her mother. To be happy on the anniversary of her mom's death, Orly really had to search. On Yom Kippur this year, like every week on Sabbath, a group surrounded Orly as she walked in the footsteps of where her mom died.