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The Loss of a Generation... At 9.15am on Friday, 21 October 1966, the eyes of the world turned in horror to the tiny coal mining village of Aberfan in Wales, the recall of which name still brings tears to the eyes of people today. With
a roar, many thousands of tons of colliery waste swept down from a
huge spoil-heap on the
western side of Aberfan. This massive breakaway from the tip overwhelmed
two farm cottages on the mountain side and killed their occupants.
It crossed the disused canal and overwhelmed the railway embankment.
It engulfed and destroyed a school and eighteen houses; then came close
another school and other dwellings in the village before it finally
stopped. A deathly silence followed. The story of the 1966 Aberfan disaster is well chronicled in books, poems, websites and even in folk songs. However, nowhere on the Internet is there a comprehensive list of those who lost their lives in the horrendous events of that October morning. This reflected the view of the community of Aberfan who felt that their loss was private to the individual families concerned. The moving memorial in the village is a corporate expression of commemoration of the lives of those who died. In the ensuing 40-plus years, we have lived through the terrible events of 9/11 in the USA, with their London counterpart subsequently. In services of commemoration of those events and others like the 90th anniversary of the end of World War I, one of the most moving parts has been the simple, unembellished reading out of the names of people who died. The events became personal and not abstract moments in history. These pages are sensitive to the historical wishes of the community but 40 years have elapsed and the world has changed. I have listed those who died and included eye-witness accounts and several moving photographs with the objective of making a personal commemoration of 144 people who should not have died. Paul Dicken
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© 2009 Hiraeth - Connecting with the land |