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Showing posts from January, 2005

After the Wave

 

After the Wave text

 This is an article I wrote about my experience surviving the Indian Ocean tsunami on December 26, 2004.  On another post, I (badly) shared the images from Bellarmine Magazine where it appeared.  There are two sections that are included here that did not make it into the print version.   Bellarmine alumni Ned Berghausen writes about his  experience in Thailand during and after the tsunami I was in southern Thailand on December 26 th when the tsunami hit.   I was staying on a small island called Ko Phi Phi east of Phuket. The island is only accessible by boat, and there’s no transportation on it beyond foot traffic.   Most of the development on Phi Phi is on a narrow isthmus, called Ton Sai, between two bays, which is where I was staying.   I had decided to spend Christmas on the beach, taking a vacation from my life in Bangladesh , where I’m a Peace Corps Volunteer.    I was traveling by myself.   The plan was to meet up with my family in Bangkok on the 28 th , and from there t

Louisvillian in Thailand aids rescues

The blueprint for Ned Berghausen's life was set early: St. Xavier graduate; a 2001 graduate of Bellarmine University with a degree in philosophy and a minor in theology; joining the Peace Corps after a year studying overseas because "it appealed to me to give something back." His Peace Corps assignment was in Bangladesh. Along the way he had written a 100-page paper on The Book of Job — the Old Testament poem that discusses faith and the suffering of innocent people. Berghausen, 24, was vacationing on Ko Phi Phi Island in southern Thailand on Dec.26 when the tsunami hurtled ashore. "I'm alive," he would write in an e-mail message to Louisville family. "I've seen unimaginable horror. ... I can't begin to tell you about it, but here's a try: Hundreds of dead people, utter devastation, rubble and ruin everywhere, people seriously injured, dying. Somehow I was unscathed. Not even touched. "...I spent 48 endless hours pulling people out of t