Survivor’s story ‘a miracle’ for parents

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GARITA PALMERA, El Salvador -- A Salvadoran fisherman's account of his survival after more than 13 months and 10,000 kilometres in an open boat has proved a double miracle for his mother and father, who lost touch with him eight years ago and thought he was dead.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 05/02/2014 (4461 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

GARITA PALMERA, El Salvador — A Salvadoran fisherman’s account of his survival after more than 13 months and 10,000 kilometres in an open boat has proved a double miracle for his mother and father, who lost touch with him eight years ago and thought he was dead.

Comments by Jose Salvador Alvarenga’s joyful, sometimes tearful parents about their son might help explain how he survived, but they did little to dispel continued doubts about his tale.

His father, Jose Ricardo Orellana, 65, who owns a store and flour mill in the seaside Salvadoran town of Garita Palmera, described a strong, stocky young man who went to sea at age 14. “The sea was his thing,” Orellana said.

CP
Jose Salvador Alvarenga
CP Jose Salvador Alvarenga

His mother, Maria Julia Alvarenga, 59, broke into tears after recounting a phone call with her son from the Marshall Islands. He told her he was well, staying at a hotel and getting food and medicine — but told his mother he didn’t know where he was.

“We hadn’t heard from him for eight years; we thought he was dead already,” said Alvarenga. “This is a miracle, glory to God.”

Alvarenga’s 14-year-old daughter, Fatima, said she didn’t remember ever seeing her father, who left El Salvador when she was just over a year old.

The parents said he was known in his hometown as Cirilo, a nickname that coincides with the first name of a man registered as missing with civil defence officials in the southern Mexico state of Chiapas. The civil defence office said a small fishing boat carrying two men, named Cirilo Vargas and Ezequiel Cordoba, disappeared during bad weather on Nov. 17, 2012, and no trace of them or the craft was found despite an intense two-week search.

— The Associated Press

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