debris4spike: (Lily)
[personal profile] debris4spike
Many of you won't even realise it, but today is the 50th anniversary of the The Aberfan Disaster

One minute's silence was kept at 9.15, the actual time that disaster struck, and Prince Charles came and spoke to the survivors and families, bringing a letter from the Queen.

Events to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Aberfan disaster

50 years ago I was actually attending a Welsh village school.  The layout being very similar to the design of the one that was flattened in South Wales.  I don't remember actually learning about it, but Mum always said that I ran out of school at lunchtime assuring her that I would have lived.  My class was for 4 - 7's and we sat in age order.  So for me as a 5 year old, I was near the area that missed the sludge.

Although I don't actually remeber the event, I have always lived with the fact that I was at school in Wales, at a time when 116 children died in a similar school.

article-2118686-0022F7AA00000258-585_634x422.jpg (634×422)
Aberfan school - with the people trying to find children (and teachers) still alive

_42224528_aber_416.jpg (416×200)
Most of the children were buried together.

May they RIP ... and may those who 50 years on, still have nightmares, be able to find peace.

Date: 2016-10-21 10:07 pm (UTC)
gillo: (sunset scene)
From: [personal profile] gillo
I was in a school in England at the time - Stafford, to be precise, but I had relatives from Tonypandy, Merthyr Tydfil and Bridgend, so it very much hit home. It still brings a tear to my eye.

Date: 2016-10-21 10:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] brunettepet.livejournal.com
What a terrible tragedy.

Date: 2016-10-21 10:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] curiouswombat.livejournal.com
I remember it well. I remember especially how upset my mother was.

We lived in South Wales for a couple of years in the early 60s, my sister was actually born there, about 20 miles from Aberfan. My parents had seriously thought of buying a house quite close to Aberfan except that my grandmother had a stroke and they decided to come back to the island for Mum to care for her. My sister was 6 at the time of the tragedy.

So you can see why my mum was so very shaken as news came onto the radio and television.

Date: 2016-10-22 12:19 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] orangerful.livejournal.com
I had never heard of this, but it is a heartbreaking story. How awful. I'm glad that people still observe that moment of silence though. to think about those who died, never lived, and ways they can keep the world safer.

Date: 2016-10-22 11:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] auntiero.livejournal.com
I had never heard of this either, but it's not surprising as coal disasters discussed in US schools generally tend to focus on those related to the rise of labor unions in the 20th century. It's an awesome and awful disaster in the scope and cause of it (yup, went down the research rabbit hole for a little bit). Controversial mining practices remain today and looking at the fact that water caused this and several other mining disasters, it makes me wonder if anyone has drawn the correlation as it relates to the practice of fracking (huge controversy over this method of obtaining natural gas in the US, particularly in my home state).

May the remaining survivors have peace. May the people in charge continue to learn from this and disasters.

Date: 2016-10-22 03:14 pm (UTC)
ext_15194: floral background with hobbit's journal written diagonally across the front (Default)
From: [identity profile] hobbituk.livejournal.com
I remember Aberfan. Of course, I was nowhere near Wales - I was 8 and lived in London. But I saw the tv pictures and newspapers and heard mum and dad talking about it. It was, I think, the first time I realised that children could die before they grew up...

So sad. And I observed the silence, too.

Edited to add:

Actually, I thought of Aberfan when Dunblane happened. Lots more parents who sent their children to school, where they should be safe and then they didn't come home.
Edited Date: 2016-10-22 08:18 pm (UTC)

Date: 2016-10-24 02:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] spikereader.livejournal.com
I don't remember the disaster but it's a tragedy that has always been part of my life. My uncle was one of the ones who went to help dig as soon as the news travelled up the valley. Whenever we drove to Cardiff when I was little we saw the cemetery on the hillside with the white gravestones. It still brings me to tears.

I kept the minute's silence on Friday, but remembered the bravery and determination of the bereaved and the terribly injured survivors from the two documentaries I watched earlier in the week, as well as all those little lives lost.

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