Cape Breton Post

Mexican family gives back at Swissair memorial

‘The people of Nova Scotia gave us so much love’

- BY ANDREW RANKIN

Nobody knew the Navarro family had arrived in Bayswater with a plastic bag full of colourful handmade bookmarks and small, carefully packaged dolls made by Mexican Indigenous women.

Nor did they know that Mariana, her mother Karina and aunt Nydia had also come with a plaque.

Rev. Louis Quennelle, who presided over Sunday’s Swissair memorial service, was let in on the secret at the event.

“That’s when they asked me very shyly if they could make this presentati­on, as if they were asking me a big favour,” said Quennelle. “It was quite a moving moment and it was such a joy to be able to be there for the presentati­on, to witness it. They were the only family from Mexico who were here who suffered a loss in Swissair Flight 111.”

Their presentati­on came after the service moved from the Bayswater Swissair memorial site to the reception at nearby Blandford Community Centre. Joined by her mom and aunt, 23-year-old Mariana Navarro addressed the dozens of emergency responders and residents. From the stage, Mariana, the group’s interprete­r, read every word on the plaque aloud to the people below.

“Nova Scotia: In our darkest, we received nothing but solidarity, respect and love from you,” Mariana said while wiping away tears. “We watched you work hard, walk and sail for days, you took care of us and supported us.

“Today, we can only say to you that we will never forget everything you did for us and we want to say thank you to the Nova Scotia people, every volunteer, firefighte­rs,

policemen, coroner, fishermen, and the entire community.”

The Navarros then presented the plaque to the group.

Mariana was only three years old when her grandmothe­r Yolanda Hernandez de Navarro perished with 228 others aboard Swissair 111 off the coast of Peggys Cove, 20 years ago to the day. Mariana had been to Nova Scotia with her mother and aunt in the tragedy’s immediate aftermath and the trio returned once more to mourn its one-year anniversar­y.

“My mom would always talk about all the love and care we would get just walking down the street and the people of

Nova Scotia gave us so much love without knowing who we were,” said Mariana. “She was really sorry because we couldn’t stop to thank anybody at the time.”

Two months ago they decided to arrive for the 20th anniversar­y memorial service with a plaque and dozens of pieces of handmade Mexican art.

“We wanted to bring something really Mexican. The first person we gave a doll to this morning, she immediatel­y started crying when I told her my grandmothe­r was in the plane. She remembered perfectly, remembered her house moving like an earthquake when the crash happened.”

The Navarros were among a group of about 20 at the service who had lost family in the crash. The anniversar­y event was about their loss and a collective loss still shared by many Nova Scotians. Sunday’s service also paid quiet tribute to what was a Nova Scotia-wide response to an unfathomab­le tragedy. Ordinary residents and emergency responders joined a months-long crash recovery period. Many have not come to terms with the trauma they endured.

Tony Rodgers, a Halifax Regional Search and Rescue volunteer, was among a sampling of emergency responders, including RCMP and EHS, who addressed the gathering.

“Twenty years ago, Nova Scotia Ground Search and Rescue took part in the largest mutual aid ground search and recovery operation in Nova Scotia history,” said Rodgers before reading from a prepared quote. “Our volunteers, along with RCMP, spent 64 days on the ground, a combined 48,780 hours 3,140 person days…

“Some people survive and talk about it, some people survive and go silent, some people survive and create. Everyone deals with unimaginab­le pain in their own way and everyone is entitled to that without judgement.”

But as much as Sunday’s service was about loss, it was also marked with signs of hope and healing.

“I wanted people to have the opportunit­y to come together to share all those feelings and just move on to another phase,” said Quennelle. “The more times we come together and reinforce good things, the things that are bad, disasters are not forgotten but they are opportunit­ies where we might live our lives in appreciati­on of those who lost theirs.”

 ?? ANDREW RANKIN/CHRONICLE HERALD ?? Family members of Swissair crash victims, Karen and Leonard Kleinman, arrived to Sunday’s ceremony in Bayswater from the U.S. From left, Maris Delano, Teri Brown, Traci Hauer and Jerome Hauer.
ANDREW RANKIN/CHRONICLE HERALD Family members of Swissair crash victims, Karen and Leonard Kleinman, arrived to Sunday’s ceremony in Bayswater from the U.S. From left, Maris Delano, Teri Brown, Traci Hauer and Jerome Hauer.

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