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News

Remembering Hillsborough

150 replies

Pinkjenny · 15/04/2009 09:13

Today is the 20th anniversary of the Hillsborough disaster. I know the grief is not confined to Liverpool, but as a scouser today, I want to share my memories of that day.

My dad is a staunch Liverpool FC supporter. He has held a home season ticket for as long as I can remember, but hardly ever goes to away games. I remember that day was unseasonably warm, I was 11 years old, and my dad was on his way to Sheffield for the game. I was with my mum and my grandparents, going to a market in Prescot as we always did on a Saturday.

We were in the car, and my grandad had the radio on. I remember hearing the reports on the radio, the commentator had total panic and hysteria in his voice, I don't really recall what was said, but I know the atmosphere in the car completely changed, and we headed for home, much earlier than usual. As far as we were aware, my dad was in the Leppings Lane terrace, and my mum must have been completely distraught. I know she held it together for me as I don't remember her weeping or wailing at all.

We got back to my grandparents house, and just as we were about to call the family and friends helpline, my dad rang. He had got a stand ticket about half an hour before the match, from a friend of a friend, and was safe and on his way home.

My mum and I went home, and I stayed outside, waiting for him to come home. When he finally pulled up, I asked him what had happened, and he merely shook his head and went inside the house. I remember he sat down, and didn't speak for about a week. It was awful, the tension was unbearable.

To this day, my dad has never spoken about what he saw, but in his more emotional moments, he has told me how he felt when he pulled up and saw me standing at the top of the road waiting for him to come home. He has never even looked at a copy of The Sun since.

One of my schoolfriends lost her dad, my dad lost one of his friends.

I just wanted to get all that out, and pay tribute to the families of the 96 people that weren't as lucky as we were on 15th April 1989.

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Pinkjenny · 15/04/2009 10:33

Rupert Murdoch told Kelvin MacKenzie to apologise, which he did, but later said he didn't mean it.

That Independent article that onebatmother linked to is so poignant and tragic. I read it out to a colleague and we were both crying at our desks.

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geordieminx · 15/04/2009 10:35

Thanks pj.

slightlycrumpled · 15/04/2009 10:36

I remember that day so clearly, I was 16 and doing exam revision. The Saturday evening news came on and the silence that took over our house was deafening.

Pinkjenny your post is very moving.

BitOfFun · 15/04/2009 10:37

My memories of it are similar to Pinkjenny's...I was 15, and out for the day with a new boyfriend. We got back to his house and events were unfolding on TV. I just felt numb watching it, knowing my dad was there. Obviously, it was the days before mobile phones, and after I'd got a lift home and was waiting for news with my mum and brother, it was about eight o' clock at night before we heard anything, as the queues for the telephone boxes were hundreds deep. I remember crying with relief. My dad got home in the early hours. He told us how close he had been to getting pushed into the section of leppings lane which was the worst part, and how the police were so slow to react. It feels like only a few years ago to me- I couldn't believe it was twenty!

Pinkjenny · 15/04/2009 10:43

BoF - I was just saying to my mum, 'It feels like yesterday'. Glad your dad was OK too.

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ForeverOptimistic · 15/04/2009 10:44

I can remember watching the news unfold on the televisions in Dixons in Bristol at that stage it wasn't clear what was going on and we didn't know that people had died.

Later that night I watched the ITN news with my Mum and we both shellshocked we had never seen anything so horrific before.

We were a family of football fans and my sister and I had been shook up a few months earlier when we were caught in a crowd surge at an FA Cup tie.

It still brings tears to my eyes today when I read the news reports of that tragic event. Thankfully lessons were learned and all seater stadiums were introduced shortly after. Sadly you still news reports of people dying due to crowd surges at other events.

geordieminx · 15/04/2009 10:45

Its made me so sad today.

I'm in Glasgow, wish there was something to do to remember the 96

QuantitativeMeasure · 15/04/2009 10:45

I remember watching the Jimmy McGovern film about 10 years ago- utterly devastating- I will watch it tonight.

edam · 15/04/2009 10:52

Christ, that Observer article is moving. Good grief.

Particularly horrible that that poor man killed himself two years ago, after Kelvin Mackenzie went on Newsnight to say his apology had been a lie. As if Kelvin hadn't done enough to hurt the Liverpool fans.

geordieminx · 15/04/2009 10:53

He's a vile man

Flower3545 · 15/04/2009 10:56

I read the Mirrors article yesterday and cried buckets

To think that the families received no compensation but certain police officers got big payouts for stress and trauma beggers belief.

Pinkjenny · 15/04/2009 10:58

How could you look someone in the eye and shake your head when they ask you for help? I just don't understand.

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twinmam · 15/04/2009 10:59

Just read it too. Utterly heartbreaking. I'm so glad for those of you whose loved ones survived but as the article shows they will always bear the burden of that awful day and perhaps the guilt of being one of the 'lucky' ones. I had no idea about all the things that went wrong and contributed to the disaster. My heart goes out to the mother still fighting for justice for her son, to the ambulance driver who lives with the guilt that he couldn't help (through no fault of his own), to the police officers who refused to bow to pressure and stuck by the truth that the boy died after that specific time, the officer who held him in her arms as he died, the man who couldnt go on and took his own life and his family who was left behind, those whose marriages and lives were destroyed, to everyone really. The number of dead is shocking enough but it's clear that those who were damaged and broken by Hillsborough are far more in number. It's just so sad and also truly shocking especially as it seems it was preventable.

JamInMyWellies · 15/04/2009 10:59

my thoughts are with all who were affected.

twinmam · 15/04/2009 11:02

I know PJ. It's that image of him smiling as he shook his head.... And yet it was the fans who were villified when all of the survivors confirmed that the people in the crowd tried to help one another and saved lives. They certainly weren't pissing on the dead. And those whose JOB it was to keep order and keep people safe failed and turned their backs on people who were dying.

Kathyis6incheshigh · 15/04/2009 11:05

The thing that shocked me reading that article was just how long the whole thing lasted. I had always assumed it all happened within a few minutes but it sounds in that article that people in the pens knew there was something wrong for a good 20-30 minutes, hence there should have been opportunities to stop it.

Pinkjenny · 15/04/2009 11:07

This may be a really naive question, but why can't the inquiry be reopened? When you read accounts like the one from the ambulance man, who says that his evidence would have directly contradicted the police, shouldn't it be reopened?

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ElenorRigby · 15/04/2009 11:08

I remember is so clearly. I was watching it on TV with my mum.
I remember the pictures of people with their faces crushed against the railings.
Still upsets me to this day.
I went to Anfield with my dad and put some flowers on the pitch, I wasnt a Liverpool fan but it was something I just had to do.

twinmam · 15/04/2009 11:16

Just jumped onto the Sun website to see if they have mentioned Hillsborough (I guess they would, obviously) 'Remember the 96 at 3.06' Obviously no mention of the outrageous lies they printed 20 years ago..... It just feels so hypocritical that they are urging people to remember when that same paper contributed to the grief and suffering of Hillsborough victims.

QuantitativeMeasure · 15/04/2009 11:19

A few weeks ago The Sun did do an article about Hillsborough and did make reference to the lies that they printed, they stated that the newspaper was still hated in Liverpool. IIRC they did apologise (this was about 4 weeks ago )- Too little too late.

Bucharest · 15/04/2009 11:21

I was at university in Salford and my (then) boyfriend was from Liverpool....I went on to work in Liverpool and well remember the hatred the whole city had, and probably still has, for The S**.
I love Liverpool.
Thanks for posting this PJ- will go and read some of the online articles now.

stillenacht · 15/04/2009 11:23

I also wanted to add my voice to say that my thoughts and prayers are with the bereaved families. I remember watching it with my dad as a 15 year old - it was utterly horrendous .

Kelvin McKenzie is an idiot - I have listened to him on the radio a few times - i awasn't aware about what the Sun had said at the time - I will never listen to him again.

Kathyis6incheshigh · 15/04/2009 11:28

Do we know why the Sun said all those things? Was it political, or simply trying to sell papers by printing a different story from everyone else?

Pinkjenny · 15/04/2009 11:31

Kelvin MacKenzie still maintains that it is the truth.

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geordieminx · 15/04/2009 11:32

Yeah, even though its been proved that it wasnt. Tosser

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