The Day the World Came to Town

Twenty years ago, on Tuesday, 11 September 2001, thousands of people were stranded when 38 planes were forced to land at Gander, Newfoundland. The locals rose to the challenge.

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Twenty years ago, on Tuesday, 11 September 2001, thousands of people were stranded when 38 planes were forced to land at Gander, Newfoundland. The locals rose to the challenge.

Halfway between Frankfurt and New YorkCity, Captain Reinhard Knoth switched his plane's radio to a frequency shared by all pilots. He was listening to the casual banter between planes when a pilot for KLM broke in.“There’s something happening in New York,” the captain declared excitedly. “An accident.”

A pilot for Lufthansa for 30 years, Knoth had made this transatlantic run many times. He tuned his radio to the BBC, which was broadcasting fromNew York. The announcer reported an explosion at the World Trade Center, possibly caused by an airplane cras-hing into the North Tower.

He looked over at his co-pilot and flight engineer to make sure they had heard this as well. As they talked, the BBC broadcast caught their attention again. “… another explosion …a second plane has hit the WorldTrade Center!

”It was 9:03 a.m. in New York. Knothbounced from one radio frequency to another, scavenging bits of information. One fact was certain: Even with a gun to his head, no airline pilot would crash his plane into the Trade Center.

Knoth knew someone else must have been flying those planes. By 9:15 a.m., all airports in the New York City area had been shut down. Knoth sent an urgent message to Lufthansa asking for guidance. Should he turn around? He wondered about the 355 passengers aboard his plane, LufthansaFlight 400. Were any of them a threat? Knoth glanced behind him to the cockpit door. It wasn’t very sturdy. It wasn't even locked. When Knoth didn’t hear back from the airline, he made the decision to continue west. He contacted Air-Traffic Control (ATC) in Gander, in the Canadian province of Newfoundland, for clearance to fly on to Toronto, where Lufthansa had a base of operations.“Request denied,” the controller in Gander said bluntly.

“You have to land now.”The ATC, a bunker-like building located less than a mile from Gander International...

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