
How a plane diverted to Newfoundland on Sept. 11 forged a 20-year friendship
GAMBO, N.L. — Every Friday evening, Steve Badcock pours himself a drink and flips open his laptop to video chat with a close friend he met because of a terrorist attack in New York City and its ripple effect across the skies.
It often takes a few tries to connect — internet can be sketchy in the rural Newfoundland community of Gambo, where Badcock lives and where his friend Steven O’Hehir arrived on a school bus after his flight to Cincinnati was diverted to central Newfoundland on Sept. 11, 2001.
This past Friday, after a few more failed attempts than usual, O’Hehir suddenly filled the screen, beaming in from his home in Winchester, England, laughing and making wisecracks while proudly displaying his Newfoundland T-shirt.
The day 20 years ago that began with two hijacked planes flying into the World Trade Center in Manhattan caused “so much misery and so much sadness for so many people,” O’Hehir said. “It changed the world.”