COLOGNE, Germany (AP) — The Germanwings crash last month was an “unbelievable horror” for the families of those killed, compounded by the apparent senselessness of the co-pilot’s actions in bringing down the plane, German President Joachim Gauck told hundreds of
COLOGNE, Germany (AP) — The Germanwings crash last month was an “unbelievable horror” for the families of those killed, compounded by the apparent senselessness of the co-pilot’s actions in bringing down the plane, German President Joachim Gauck told hundreds of victims’ relatives and dignitaries at a memorial service Friday.
Gauck said people across Germany, which lost 72 citizens, still are coming to grips with the March 24 crash. The second-biggest group of victims was from Spain, which lost 51 citizens.
Prosecutors said co-pilot Andreas Lubitz deliberately crashed the plane into the French Alps on the way from Barcelona to Duesseldorf, killing all 150 aboard. They are still trying to determine why.
“We really don’t know what was going through his head during those deciding seconds, in the deciding minutes,” Gauck told the congregation that also included Chancellor Angela Merkel, ministers from Spain and France, and the leaders of Germanwings and its parent airline, Lufthansa.
“But we do know that his relatives also lost on March 24 a person whom they loved, who leaves a void in their lives — in a way for which they can find as little sense as all of the others’ relatives,” Gauck said. “Maybe that is what appalled us so much, the senselessness of what took place.”
The steps to the altar were covered with 150 lighted candles, one for each person who died, including Lubitz.
“It’s not for us to judge,” Cardinal Rainer Maria Woelki, the archbishop of Cologne, told Bild newspaper about the decision to include a candle for the co-pilot.
A choir sang hymns, and religious leaders said multidenominational prayers.
Lufthansa carried a livestream on its website and took out full-page advertisements in many of the country’s leading newspapers expressing sympathy. Flags were ordered flown at half-staff around the country.
Woelki told victims’ relatives that words alone were too weak to give them any solace, but that they should take comfort in the numbers of people at the memorial service, and those following it online or on television.
“You are not alone in these hours of loneliness,” he said.