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The following was written by Stephen Kimber, author of the book Flight 111. It was published probably in the Halifax Daily News where he used to write a weekly column although I am not certain about the source. I had previously posted an excerpt from this in another thread but wanted to post it in its entirety. Seeking sense Retracing Swissair tragedy reveals little, and a lot By Stephen Kimber May 2, 1999. I looked around at the airplane full of strangers: eating, reading, talking, sleeping, watching an inflight movie. It was 10:31 p.m., Halifax time, eight months to the day, hour and minute since Swissair Flight 111 crashed into the waters off Peggy's Cove. No one around me seemed to notice. Or care. I was writing a book about the crash. There were some interviews I needed to do in Switzerland. It had seemed logical - to me anyway - to take the same flight from New York to Geneva the passengers of Flight 111 had taken. To see an MD-11 up close. To observe the flight attendants going about their routines as they had the night of Sept. 2, 1998. For myself, I also wanted to try and make some sense - if there was any to be made - of the senselessness of it all. "Would you care for some champagne, sir?" the flight attendant asked as the plane taxied into position for takeoff. Taking notice It's funny what you notice when you notice. Usually on a flight, I find my seat and bury myself in a book, avoiding even eye contact with fellow travellers. Tonight, I watched them board. Two hundred or more. Backpackers, businesspeople. Young, old. Speaking a smorgasbord of languages I didn't understand. As the plane rumbled toward Runway 13R, the one used by Flight 111, the flight attendants passed out menus. At 8:18 p.m. New York time - exactly the same time as Flight 111 - Swissair Flight 139, as it was now benignly known, finally thundered down that runway and up into the night sky. As the plane circled out over Long Island, the woman seated next to me and I exchanged forgettable pleasantries, and then she began to read the paperback she'd bought for the flight. It was called The Notebook. I wrote in my notebook. I didn't know who she was or why she was going to Geneva. She knew the same about me. If this plane went down ... Would our families wonder - forever and for naught - what we said to each other in our final moments? Would they somehow become friends for no better reason than the serendipity of an airline seating plan - and an airline accident? I should have called home. Before we took off. I'd meant to. Listening to the families of those who'd died on Flight 111, I'd been struck by the helplessness of their pain at some last missed connection, at having said something - or not - they could now never change. I'd intended to call. But I hadn't. I was too busy making notes for my book. What if? The flight's first hour was remarkably unremarkable. Wine? This is your captain speaking. First course. Thank you for flying Swissair. Second course. Anything we can do to make your flight more enjoyable? Dessert. After dinner, we could watch an inflight movie - a weepy, Hollywood flick called Stepmom - on small video screens that dropped down from the ceiling. One movie, no choice. On Sept. 2, 1998, there'd been plenty of choice. Seventeen movies. From Titanic to As Good As it Gets. Business-class passengers could select a movie and watch it on a private screen that popped out of their chair's armrest. Some say that that's what killed Swissair Flight 111's 229 passengers: a sophisticated in-flight entertainment system with too many choices and too many wires and ... by the time I board this flight, the system had long since been disconnected. As Stepmom's plot unfolded on the screen, I couldn't help but keep glancing down at my watch as the minutes ticked inexorably toward 10:31 p.m. ADT. And then it was over. In the end, the moment was strange, surreal. No one else even noticed it. This flight continued on to Geneva. That one did not. We are all captives of those moments that change everything. We can't know when - or how, or even if - they will happen to us, or someone close to us. We can only try to live our lives understanding that they might. Tough lesson If there is any sense in the senselessness of the crash of Flight 111, it may simply be that. We must live our lives as if they could end in the next instant. But it is a hard lesson to learn. I meant to call home. As soon as I landed. I didn't. Someone was there to meet me at the airport. We got to talking. I was tired. There was so much to do. And so little time. Besides, it was too early in the morning to call Halifax. And then, later, when I remembered again, it was too late in the day to call. There would always be tomorrow. In this case, it turned out there was. But the next time? Like the moment, the sense I'd briefly thought I'd made of the senselessness of it all passed too. | |||
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This was interesting to read. I have read Mr. Kimber's book, which is OK, and has helped me better to understand what happened on the night that my sister died in Flight 111. I find that 4 years plus after the accident, that I am still filled with constant thoughts about it, and what happened, and why it happened. I am still thirsty for information about the flight, and want to know everything. In a way, knowledge helps in dealing with the loss. The frustration of not knowing things certainly adds to the pain. I feel frustrated that others get to know the contents of the investigation report before I do. | ||||
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Ivy My deepest sympathy for the loss of your sister. I too share your concerns that family members are not allowed to see the draft report. Mark and I are trying to pursue it through available legal channels. It isn't just a matter of not being told of its contents but also that we are being denied the ability to comment or express our concerns regarding the draft. At any rate I think it is very unjust that family members are not permitted to see it. I just hope that the draft is consistent with the final report that we and the public are allowed to see. The lack of openness during this investigation has me very concerned. | ||||
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