For months after LMCS diver Rishi Nagassar died in an industrial accident at Paria Fuel Trading Company, his son Nashhik, who was three-years-old at the time, would keep daily vigils at the gate to the family’s home waiting for his father to return from work.
The toddler’s wait usually ended in tears as he could not understand why his father never returned. He would cry for hours and only calmed down when his older brother, Nicholai, allowed him to fall asleep on his chest like Nagassar used to do. However, Nashhik would jump awake late at night, screaming for his father.
Nagassar, fondly known as Ryan, died along with his LMCS colleagues Kazim Ali Junior, Yusuf Henry and Fyzal Kurban, after they were sucked into a 30-inch pipeline at Paria’s Berth 6 last February 25. At the time, they were conducting underwater maintenance on the line.
In an interview at her Couva home ahead of the first anniversary of the tragedy, Nagassar’s common-law wife, Vanessa Kussie wept as she recalled the pain and heartbreak she felt as she tried to console Nashhik while struggling to process her own grief.
“From the time he wake up and he ain’t see his father he will start to make noise and scream and wake and cry until morning. That was our struggle for months,” she said.
Kussie said as she tried to explain the concept of death to Nashhik, he found a way to cope.
“He started calling me Auntie Vene. He started building love and affection for my sister because she started packing his bag and her husband, Anessa and Inky would take Nashhik for months to sleep over by them because he didn’t want to stay home. He started calling my sister mommy, he calls my brother-in-law daddy,” she said.
Kussie also noticed changes in the behaviour of her older sons, Nicholai and Nigel.
“When you talk to Nigel, Nigel would shake his head or nod. He stop eating, he wasn’t even eating. He was always going to meet one of his friends. Probably when he go by his friend he eat, I don’t know.
“My sister used to talk to him, pet him up, baby him to eat. He would go by she and eat, when he come home he would go straight in his room and stay,” she recalled.
Nicholai became like her shadow, staying at her side, trying to take care of her even as he grieved the loss of the only father he had ever known.
Although Nagassar was not their biological father, Kussie said his bond with Nicholai and Nigel was unbreakable, as he often went out of his way to ensure they were happy and comfortable.
“He always say, ‘Leave the children alone, leave them, don’t tell them do anything.’ When he come home he’ll do it, so they grow up that way, they grow up doing nothing. If we barbecuing or whatever they would be around him, you know. He will tell them come drink something, come lime. We would always sit down and eat together,” she said.
She added: “Sometimes I wish this was a dream. I ask God every day and I tell him I wish I could live in a galvanized house if they could just bring him back, take away everything from me, take away everything, just for Nashhik to see his father.”
Kussie admitted she is still struggling to deal with Nagassar’s death. She managed to smile through her tears as she recalled their happier days together, including the last Valentine’s Day they spent together when Nagassar showered her with chocolates and roses.
Kussie said when she saw the number of gifts Nagassar brought home, she thought some were for other relatives.
“I say why you buying all these things for? He say, ‘Girl, I buying chocolate for you so you would have chocolate for the whole year, I don’t know when I buying chocolate for you again.’ And now, when I look back…there is still one heart chocolate in my fridge. Just how he give me, I don’t know how to open that chocolate, every time I take it out, I put it back,” she recalled.
A short while later, she removed a sealed box of chocolates from her refrigerator and showed it off with a smile, even as the tears flowed.
She said Nagassar was a loving and caring person who took time to always shower those closest to him with affection.
Kussie has found a way to cope with her bereavement: “I would take his phone and call my phone just to see “Hun”, I would take my phone and call back his phone just to see the phone ringing, to hear the ring tone.”
The family has been struggling financially since Nagassar’s death and held a barbeque fundraiser to pay their bills.
“You can’t go and tell people at the grocery or at T&TEC or WASA that I’m the wife of one of the divers and they will pay your bill. No, you cannot go to them, your groceries will not be paid that way,” she said.
Kussie, who is appealing for the authorities to do better for all the divers’ families involved, said she is eagerly awaiting the report of the Commission of Enquiry that investigated the accident.
She is confident that Commission chairman, Queen’s Counsel Jerome Lynch will be fair to the families and the lone survivor.
“I hope justice is served for all, that’s all we pray for. Justice and whoever is responsible, I hope that something happens. Something has to happen because this has been happening for so much years and nothing has been done about it and they probably thought this same thing was going to happen. I don’t know how people in Paria sleep,” she said.