With survivors’ voices silent, the Halifax Explosion is now a second-hand story.
HALIFAX — As people gather to mark the anniversary of one of Canada’s worst human-made disasters, largely absent will be those who survived its fury.
It was 101 years ago Thursday that two wartime ships collided in Halifax harbour, sparking a fiery blast that obliterated a large section of the waterfront city and killed almost 2,000 people.
A service at Fort Needham Memorial Park in the city’s north end will include a moment of silence at 9:04 a.m. — the exact moment the relief ship Imo and the French munitions ship, Mont Blanc, exploded on Dec. 6, 1917.
The park’s memorial bells will ring out and prayers will be said, but experts who have studied the Halifax Explosion say the voices of its survivors are no longer able to tell the stories of the disaster that maimed 9,000, disfigured a city and reverberated throughout the region.