My father was killed in the Turkish Airlines crash in France.
In 1974 I was 10 years old and my American family was living just outside of
Paris where my father was working. I vividly remember rushing to the train
station in Triel-sur-Seine early on Sunday morning, March 3, so that my father
could make his flight to London. He said a quick goodbye and that was the last
time I ever saw my father again.
My father was on his way to London on
British Airways to catch a flight to Africa for business. Because of a British
Airlines strike, he got a last minute flight on Turkish Airlines. On Monday,
March 4, I stayed home from school because I was sick and I clearly remember
reading the front page of the Herald Tribune giving details of the crash, not
realizing at the time that my father was on board. By Monday afternoon, by
father's secretary called my mother several times asking if she had heard from
my father, as he usually called when he arrived at his destination.
My
mother spoke little French so it was very difficult for her to get any
information. I remember her sitting by the phone and crying in frustration
because my father had not called from Africa and she could not get any details
from the airline because they didn't have a complete passenger manifest. Given
the headline in the paper, she was fearing the worst but couldn't get
confirmation.
A couple of days later it was evident that my father was
missing and likely on the ill-fated DC-10. A week after the accident, we went to
the crash site in the forest north of Charles-de-Gaulle airport. The trees were
cleared out for 1000 yards where the plan had come down. There were still small
part of the plane scattered everywhere. I remember looking up into the standing
trees and seeing people's clothes and parts of people belongings. My brother and
I went through piles of people belongings that had been recovered from the site
in hopes of finding someting that belonged to my father. We later identified a
bent and damaged ring that he was wearing. We also found his melted briefcase
handle with his initials visible.
Most of the victims bodies/parts were
placed in a mass grave in Paris. Fortunately my father's body was identified by
dental records and he was buried back in the United States.
In 2001, I
was in Paris on business and I had a free afternoon. I took the train to
Ermonville and then found a taxi driver who helped me find the crash site in the
forest. I could still see the impact area of the plane because of the small
trees in the area. Today there is a granite memorial with the names of the
victims engraved. There are still small pieces of the plane throughout the crash
site. Many of the visitors have taken pieces and placed them at the base of the
monument, along with several human bones that were also found in the
area.
It is a very beautiful and peaceful place but 30 years ago the
events that took place there and the people that were lost had a lasting impact
on hundreds of lives, including my family.
--Michael Chard (son of Gary Chard)
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