Dozens of people displaced by the city’s deadliest blaze in recent history returned to their burnt-out Bronx building Sunday morning in the hopes of finding some belongings they could salvage.

Fernando Batiz, 56, went back to look for a Christmas present his sister Maria had bought for their mother.

“She had it all wrapped,” he said. “I miss her.”

Maria Batiz, 58, perished in the blaze clutching her 8-month-old granddaughter.

But Batiz and many others were prevented from getting inside their apartment by the building’s super, who said the stairs were unsafe.

Two families who lived on the first floor of 2363 Prospect Ave and whose apartments sustained minimal damage, were allowed in and loaded their cars with bags and bags of clothing, appliances and anything else they were able to save.

When asked what they were coming back for, they shook their heads and replied, “Everything.”

“I got my Ipad, I am so happy!” one woman yelled as she ran out.

Most tenants escaped the deadly Thursday night inferno with just the clothes on their backs, returning today to see if they could find passports, wallets, pocketbooks or other documents and belongings.

“I don’t have a home now. I am sad for all the losses of life. I do not know what I will do,” said Luz Hernandez, who escaped from her fourth floor apartment with her two children and was trying to retrieve documents and passports today.

Another tenant, Allen Cannon who lived on the fourth floor was at work and got home when the fire started.

“My whole life was in there,” he said. “I have the clothes on my back.”

One tenant, who works as a housing advocate and had just helped someone get an apartment nearby, described his situation as “ironic.”

“My life can’t get any more ironic,” said Mike Morgan, 36. “I just got that guy an apartment now I don’t have one.”

“I got my whole life in there,” he added. “Everything.”