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The
Pamir
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The worst
was to be feared upon hearing the Morse code message "
..all
sails lost
..list of forty-five degrees
in danger
of sinking." When the British coastal radio station, Portishead
Radio, received this message at 16:01 hours, on the 21st of September
1957, it became utterly clear to the recipient that many brave
sailors were fighting for their lives. The eighty-six men on board
the training sailing ship "Pamir", which was also carrying
freight, were the senders of the message. The location of the
ship was in the middle of a hurricane in the Atlantic, five hundred
nautical miles southwest of the Azores, a group of islands. The
condition of the ship was desperate.
The Pamir,
a 305-foot sailing ship built in 1905 by the Hamburg shipyard
Blohm and Voss, was sturdily built to transport bulk cargo and
to endure harsh weather conditions. At the outset of this particular
journey, weather conditions did not appear dangerous. As she had
done many times before, the "Pamir" transported a load
of 7780 tons of barley from Buenos Aires. The transport of grain,
however, was not the only task the ship had to endure. Of the
crew's eighty-six men, only thirty-five were fully trained, experienced
sailors. The remainders were cadets, as the Pamir also functioned
as a training ship for the Merchant Navy.
Although Captain
Johannes Diebitsch knew beforehand that weather conditions at
sea were not perfect, he gave command to set sail from the Argentinean
port. The experienced Diebitsch was confident in his decision,
as he had already sailed in storms in far smaller ships. After
all, what could happen to such a large ship?
This consequential
lack of judgment was later described in the Luebeck Maritime Court
as "human error." Unfortunately, this was not the only
bad decision that led to disaster. The barley that was to be transported
was not packed properly in sacks, but rather pumped into the hull
as bulk goods. The consequence was the fact that if the ship were
to heel, the cargo could easily slide and shift the center of
gravity of the ship.
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The Pamir
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Unfortunately,
this is exactly what happened. During the storm, the ship was
listing to the starboard side, and the survivors later reported
that the Pamir was already tilted thirty degrees on the morning
of her last day. The men could only brace themselves, as they
probably knew their fate. The storm ripped some of the ship's
sails to pieces, and Captain Diebitsch had the remaining sails
torn down. Helpless attempts were made to have the ships cargo
stowed differently, yet the course of the catastrophe did not
end, and the ship did not right itself again.
In the hours
that followed, the ship fell onto its side. At this point the
SOS radio message was released and the last broken message to
come through said "
..mast broken." Most of the
men gave up on the Pamir. Some crawled to the hull, attempting
to somehow hold on, and others managed to climb into three lifeboats.
Unfortunately, many began to die.
When, three
days later, the US rescue ship "Saxon," entered those
waters, the rescuers at first found only wooden wreckage and many
empty lifejackets.
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Many people
who had been wearing lifejackets fell victim to sharks. Only five
men survived in a small lifeboat. There were also men who were
wearing lifejackets who were found drifting on top of the water.
These men had drowned. Unfortunately, the lifejackets had not
stabilized the heads of the shipwrecked people above water. What
should have saved lives, brought only death. It is this absurd
fact that provided motivation for the businessman Jost Bernhardt
to examine the design of the lifejackets meticulously. Bernhardt
set out to develop new and better lifejackets, those that deserve
their name.
The catastrophe
of the Pamir marked the end of the windjammer epoch. Since then,
the German Navy maintains only one training sailing ship, the
'Gorch Fock." Always when this sailing ship first docks in
Hamburg, the crew immediately visits St. Katherine's church. There,
the sailors traditionally lie a wreath at a plaque, where lie
the names of the eighty dead from the Pamir.
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