With tears and choppy voices, students and alumni organized batons in their honor and placed candles, photographs and messages written in cardboard where they remembered the math teacher, whom they described as someone “good vibes”, always attentive to the well -being of their students, inside and outside the squad.
A teacher who left his mark
Eduardo Noé García Morales, 55, was a professor of mathematics at High School 327 “Quetzales”, in San Vicente Chicoloapan, State of Mexico. Every afternoon, after finishing his day on that squad, he went to his second job, the Technical Secondary School 53, in Santa Cruz Meyehualco.
From the #SEP We deeply regret the sensitive death of the teacher Eduardo Noé García Morales. Our sincere condolences to family and loved ones.
Rest in peace. pic.twitter.com/ffaavdc3av
– SEP Mexico (@SEP_MX)
SEPTEMBER 11, 2025
The forced path between both works led him to pass under the vial distributor of Concordia, it was there that the tragedy reached it.
According to medical reports, Eduardo Noé still came alive to the IMSS clinic in the Kings, La Paz; However, given the severity of the burns he suffered from the explosion, he died around 8:00 p.m. on that Wednesday.
The news of his death spread rapidly in social networks and messaging groups, where colleagues, students and alumni shared farewell messages.
“Thank you professor for teaching and making us want the subject that you gave with such dedication, for having us patience, making us laugh and advised,” Joana Acosta, former high school of high school 53, generation 2016-2018, who accompanied the message with the image of a white pigeon.
The young woman says that numbers and mathematics were not her own, however, Professor Noah’s classes were peculiar since a funny joke or anecdote could make matter understand.
“He was a big -hearted person, he always approached one and began to joke and was always very gentle and very generous,” said the young woman.
José Miguel, former Mathematics professor’s ex -alumnus, decided not to go to his high school classes at the Unitec Los Reyes and reach high school 53 completely dressed in black as a sign of mourning.
With swollen eyes and visibly affected by the loss, the young man assured that the teacher marked his passed through school.
“I feel sadness, depression for what happened, but hits more because the explosion affected a person I know and wanted as students,” he said.
