Jan. 1st, 2005

kuangning: (carefree)
The entry is no more than a mention in passing, two lines halfway down the page in a litany of disasters.

For the record, the entry reads:


19890411 (...) Two ships about 200 Km (125 Mi) apart sank shortly after issuing distress calls during a brutal storm, all 39 seamen aboard the ships were presumed dead - 23 dead for the Captain Torres - see disaster 19890499;

19890499 (...) Two ships about 200 Km (125 Mi) apart sank shortly after issuing distress calls during a brutal storm, all 39 seamen aboard the ships were presumed dead - 23 dead for the Captain Torres - see disaster 1989411;


Just the facts, all of them true. But the facts are only where the story truly begins. The wreck remained an obscure local tragedy for only five or six months. Then, a man called Silver Donald Cameron happened to travel around Cape Breton Island. During a stop in a community there, he spoke to a local priest, and learned that several people from New Caledonia, home to most of the Captain Torres' crew, had come to town. They were planning a memorial service at the site of the wreck. He also heard the story of how, after the ship lost power, one ingenious radio operator managed, somehow, to connect to home, and how many of the crew members were able to make a last call to their families and loved ones, halfway around the world. One version of the story says that all of the crewmen were able to make calls except the ship's captain himself.

Silver Donald, in true storyteller style, recounted the tale in his book Wind, Whales and Whiskey. He was then interviewed by Peter Gzowski on CBC Radio's Morningside, and a female listener heard the story there.  She, in turn, retold the story to her brother, musician James Keelaghan, and James, who also found the story compelling, wrote a song, named after the ship - The Captain Torres. The song is remarkably simple, even bleak, with all the emotion borne by the lyrics intoned by the low, deep voice. The refrain of "la mer ne pardonne pas" -- literally, "the sea does not forgive" -- is echoed by voices that sound like the moan of wind over water. Keelaghan's beautiful lyrics are given below.

y'all have seen these, yeah? )


________________________

Sources:

EM-DAT : the OFDA/CRED International Disasters Data Base
EM-DAT Emergency Disasters Data Base
http://www.cred.be/emdat/profiles/techno/rawdata/canada.txt

Silver Donald Cameron. Wind, Whales, and Whiskey.
Toronto, ON, Canada: Macmillan Canada, 1991.


Note: I'm awaiting final permission from Mr. Schuller, Keelaghan's manager, on the lyrics. Should that not be forthcoming, I will remove them, but Mr. Keelaghan is fairly permissive about lyrics and even song clip distribution, so I don't anticipate a problem.

See the writeup in its original home here.

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