"If it wasn't for all these young Muslims, young boys round here - coming from mosques ... people would have [died]. A lot more people would have [died]," she said. The 24 storey Grenfell Tower went up in flames on June 12. Credit:AP "People want to talk about them when they do wrong, and all this sort of thing, when they're doing bad - but when they're doing good ... "They were the first people with bags of water, giving to people and helping people - running and telling people." During the fasting month of Ramadan, Muslims do not eat during daylight, instead staying up late and getting up early to do so.

Another resident told HuffPost UK that young Muslims made the difference for a number of sleeping families, with the blaze breaking out at the west London tower block just after 1.15am. People look on from Latimer Road Station at the smoking 24-storey Grenfell Tower block. Credit:Getty Images "Muslim boys saved people's lives. They ran around knocking on people's doors," she said. "Thank God for Ramadan." HuffPost UK spoke to Khalid Suleman Ahmed, 20, who moved to the eighth floor of Grenfell Tower not long ago. Neighbouring residents look over at the the burning 24-storey Grenfell Tower block in west London. Credit:Getty Images

He said he had stayed up to eat before daylight fasting began about 4.45am. "No fire alarms went off and there were no warning. I was playing PlayStation waiting to eat suhur [the meal that begins the fast] then smelt smoke. "I got up and looked out of my window and saw the seventh floor smoking," he said. "I woke my auntie up, then got clothes on and started knocking on neighbours' doors. Every house opened except two - I saw the other guy later on so only one family unaccounted for. My next door neighbour was fast asleep. "I would be up this late on a Friday night possibly but never a random midweek night unless it was Ramadan.

"There are a lot of Muslims living there and people choose up to stay up and wait so it was certainly a factor for me and others. It probably did save lives. "The whole corridor went black with thick smoke. I didn't think it was serious at all. Me and my auntie thought it was an isolated incident but we'd just evacuate just to be safe. Loading "When we went out and were taken by the firemen to a safer place then we saw that it still hadn't reached our house - 20 minutes or so later our house was gone. "The firefighters were very quick. They immediately started work."