The Swissair disaster’s ‘bright’ legacy: Friendships as enduring as the sorrow
FOX POINT, N.S. — Photographs of a cherubic toddler and bright-eyed young woman sit atop Bob Conrad’s well-worn piano, their smiling faces looking out to the site where the veteran fisherman raced 20 years ago as tragedy unfolded in the distance outside his front window.
The pictures are mixed in with photos of Conrad’s two daughters and mementoes he has received over the years from families touched by his efforts to recover anything he could the night Swissair Flight 111 plunged into St. Margaret’s Bay, killing all 229 people on board.
For Conrad, they are daily reminders of friendships forged in the aftermath of the air disaster and the unexpected joy that can grow out of such sorrow.
“You know, something like that event was just so significant at the time and still is and it’s a wonderful thing that we were able to maintain connections and grow those relationships,” he said in his living room overlooking the bay’s glistening waters in Fox Point, N.S.


