A barnacle-covered piece of metal that washed up at Réunion, a small island off Madagascar, may have finally brought some closure to the families of the 239 people on board flight MH370.
The Malaysian Airlines flight vanished into thin air somewhere over the Indian Ocean in March 2014. Since then, the victims’ loved ones have endured 515 days of uncertainty.
The plane debris – part of an aircraft wing section – discovered on Wednesday last week was confirmed to be part of the Boeing 777.
In the week since the part was found, we can only imagine the families of the 239 people on board – including six Australians – were trying not to get their hopes up that they will finally have some answers.
They have been through this roller coaster before, with previous reported sightings of debris, pings from black boxes and massive underwater searches.
They have lived through all manner of theories being bandied around in media outlets all around the world – from reports the plane was hijacked by a terrorist group or cyber-terrorists, brought down by a suicidal pilot, or that it landed in a remote area.
We can’t begin to imagine the magnitude of the pain the families have endured over the past 500-odd days of waiting. The uncertainty. The devastation.
Because how do you grieve properly and fully when you have no closure?
How do you go about daily life with so many unanswered questions?
How do you remember your loved ones when you can picture countless different ways in which they may have spent their final moments – or hold out hope that they are still alive, somewhere out there.
Top Comments
"Because how do you grieve properly and fully when you have no closure" Really??
What bullshit!
There is never any "CLOSURE".....EVER!
There is no such thing as "CLOSURE" when you have lost a loved one!
NEVER EVER!!