How plays and memorials help us process tragedies like Swissair Flight 111
CBC
A new play about the crash of Swissair Flight 111 off the coast of Nova Scotia shows a province attempting to make peace with a tragedy that happened 25 years ago, artists and experts say.
Downed Hearts, by playwright Catherine Banks, was inspired by the tragic 1998 crash near Peggys Cove, N.S. It portrays a fisherman who was traumatized by a rescue that quickly became a recovery operation on grim seas following a fictional plane crash.
People will gather Sunday to hold a ceremony at the Swissair Flight 111 Memorial near Peggys Cove honouring the 229 people who died in the crash, and the countless people who took to the dark waters that night to help, only to find horrific scenes of death and damage that stayed with them for years.
Lachlan MacKinnon, an associate professor of history at Cape Breton University, studies public memorials and sees ties between how Nova Scotians mark the crash and remember mining disasters in the province.
"I think it's ultimately about community. And I think when communities experience something together, whether that's something traumatic, as in the story of the Swissair crash, or something celebratory, the natural instinct is to come together and commemorate or memorialize those kinds of stories," he says.
He says remembering the tragic event in a public memorial can help people heal. The Springhill, N.S., memorials to men killed in coal mining disasters in the town have brought the community together to reckon with what happened and plan a way forward, he says.
MacKinnon compares the Swissair memorial, which overlooks the ocean crash site, to the 1992 Westray mining accident that killed 26 miners.
"You can stand there and see the sight, but the tragedy happened underground. And so is that true for the Swissair event. You're looking over the water and the monument is telling you what happened in this place. And not only telling what happened in this place, but signalling this matters, and still matters, to the people who live there."
Zach Faye plays Aaron, the fisherman at the centre of Downed Hearts.
"Aaron is one of the fishermen who goes out to respond to an airline disaster that happens just off shore, I think hoping to be part of a rescue operation, but quickly realizing it's not a rescue mission," he says during a break in rehearsals. "The disaster just becomes one thing too much. He sort of implodes."
The play was staged at Ship's Company Theatre in Parrsboro, N.S., with Eastern Front Theatre.
Faye says Aaron's journey mirrors many real-life stories of those who took to the water that dark night. It's his community that helps him begin to heal.
"The love of the island and the people in his life is really the only thing that steers him back. One of the key things we talked about in putting the play together is Aaron isn't OK by the end of the play. He hasn't healed by the end of the play. But he finally reaches a point where he can begin to heal."
For director Samantha Wilson, working on the play changed how she saw things. Her new home along St. Margerets Bay overlooks the accident site, though she didn't know that at first.