In addition to charred ground and bent titanium, the aftermath of an aviation accident is characterized by an abrupt, terrible stillness that reverberates throughout the lives of those left behind. The world is forced to hold onto the most brittle of pieces in the stunned silence that follows the flames going out: a last, incomplete text message; a boarding pass stuffed in a coat pocket; a name printed in a standard font on a passenger manifest that has abruptly turned into a historical record. Once commonplace, these objects are now revered reminders of a life that was headed toward an unattainable goal.
The sadness is reflected in the silence of the arrival hall at airports all around the nation. Friends and family wait still, staring at computerized display boards that flash with aircraft numbers and city names. As they wait for the word “Landed,” which will never come, they gaze at the area where the status should change. The board’s digital illumination appears to get colder with each minute that goes by. The most tenacious human emotion, hope, slowly and painfully erodes with each ignored phone call that ends up in a voicemail that was recorded during a happier period. Somewhere in a debris field, a cell phone’s cyclic “ring-ring” becomes the most lonely sound in the cosmos, a signal looking for a link that is no longer there.
The attention turns to the skilled individuals entrusted with penetrating the center of the destruction in the immediate aftermath of the impact. Teams of rescue and recovery workers navigate the debris with a heavy, deliberate precision. Knowing that every object they retrieve—a engagement band, a child’s stuffed animal, a burnt briefcase—represents the complete destruction of someone’s personal world, they make their way through a maze of jagged metal and scorched soil. This labor is a terrible, unavoidable obligation to bring home what is left; there is no joy in it. The neighborhood starts to react outside the cordoned-off perimeter in the only way it knows how. Blood is donated by volunteers in long, silent lines; vigils are held with candles lit against the approaching darkness; and prayers are spoken in a dozen different languages. These are tiny, fleeting human gestures that seem insignificant in comparison to the enormous severity of the loss, but they are the only means of overcoming the abrupt emptiness.
Behind the scenes, a different kind of work starts while the families struggle with the physical reality of the “empty chair.” Men and women who are fluent in the languages of metallurgy and aerodynamics, known as aviation investigators, descend on the scene to start the laborious task of reconstructing the last few minutes of the flight. Theirs is a clinical, icy search for the truth. Interrogating the flight data recorders and cockpit voice recorders—the “black boxes” that contain the ghost of the aircraft’s last moments—will take months or even years. Every maintenance log is examined for a missing bolt or a hairline fracture, every radar trace is plotted, and every word exchanged between pilots is examined for the smallest indication of weariness or mechanical difficulty.
Finding the “why” behind the “what” is the goal of this investigation. When the answers do come in the shape of a painstakingly footnoted report, the sadness won’t be lessened. The void created by a voice being hushed cannot be filled by a technical explanation of a sensor malfunction or a pilot’s spatial disorientation. These responses, however, are essential because they give the catastrophe a meaning and a form that goes beyond simple chaos. Safety is a blood-bought product in the aviation industry. Most likely, every significant safety rule in existence today was penned in the wake of an earlier catastrophe. Engineering defects will be fixed, systems will be reevaluated, and pilot training will be revised. Because of the lessons learnt from this particular destruction, lives will be silently saved somewhere else in the world on a future journey through choppy skies. This is the industry’s hefty paradox: the careful study of the dead is the foundation for the security of the living.
However, the statistics of a government report never capture the tragedy’s impact on the victims’ mothers, fathers, spouses, and kids. They do not consider the incident to be a “statistical anomaly” or a “case study.” It’s a really intimate topography of absence. It’s the graduation pictures that will never be taken, the birthday that will go by without a phone call, and the futures that were brutally cut off in midair. The families are left in the ruins of their own life, but the world goes on—the airport boards are replaced, the news cycle changes to the next story, and the debris is finally cleaned. They bear the burden of a story that ended far too soon, navigating the long years of “what if” and “if only.”
The philosophy and theology that surround such incidents frequently find it difficult to establish themselves. The subject of how we handle the remains of the dead reflects how we value the life that once inhabited the body, regardless of whether one looks at the conventional burial ceremonies or the contemporary option of cremation. The traditional customs that stress the body’s return to the ground as a last act of stewardship and respect provide comfort to some. Some perceive the fire as a healing power that allows the spirit to be freed from the bodily trauma caused by the impact. The fundamental element of the experience, however, is the same regardless of the ritual selected: the human urge to pay respect to the deceased and to find some sort of purpose in the wake of the unexplained.
Ultimately, an airplane mishap serves as a reminder of our extreme susceptibility and our amazing interdependence. Despite being a species that has mastered flight and defied gravity, we are nonetheless constrained by the precarious laws of our own death. Every time we buckle up, we contribute to a global covenant of safety by entrusting our lives to strangers in cockpits and mechanics in hangars. The effects of breaking that vow extend well beyond the crash scene. They are felt in every heart that has ever feared the dark, in every home where a visitor was anticipated. Only the long, painful passage of time and the enduring force of memory may heal the fragments of the families, while the pieces of a downed plane are eventually gathered and investigated. Even though their voices have been muted, the narrative of their lives lives on in the hearts of those who remember their names, guaranteeing that they will never be completely forgotten even if they never touched down.