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Article: Merchant Navy Memories - Whatever Happened to Bassala?

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    Merchant Navy Memories - Whatever Happened to Bassala?

    19 Comments by Peter Copley Published on 30th June 2022 08:27 AM
    Bassala and another Egyptian, I think he was called Ahmed, joined my ship (MV Captain Avgerinos) in Ceuta. I remember thinking how had these two bedraggle unemployed seaman finished up in Ceuta. Dressed in long faded shirts and turbans, they looked like they had stepped out of the 1942 movie, Casablanca.

    The captain signed them on as ABs. For all their impoverished appearance they turned out to be fairly competent seamen, especially the 50-year-old Bassala. Not so much the younger Ahmed, who I thought was a bit gormless. Bassala on the other hand was educated and spoke good English.

    Bassala had previously visited Southampton and his enduring memory of England was seeing men eating fish and chips out of newspaper, then screwing up the paper and dropping it in the street. He thought this was uncouth, and if I strolled into the wheelhouse while he was on the helm, he would taunt me by calling, “Fish and chips in the corner.” I would respond with a counter-insult, mimicking a soldier holding a rifle and running backwards saying, “You know what this is, Bassala? It’s an Egyptian soldier charging, backwards.” He’d say, “We kicked you British out of Egypt in 1956.” I’d say, “Rubbish, all the British Paras and Royal Marines found when they invaded Suez was piles of army boots your soldiers had kicked off so they could run away faster.” And so on, exchanging light-hearted insults. However, in spite of Bassala’s anti-British rhetoric, he and I became good friends.

    Later when my wife joined the ship for transit from Avonmouth to Immingham, Kathleen also got on well with Bassala and we had many laughs together. Also, Bassala took good care of me in Alexandria making sure I was safe in the bars and cafés of the Egyptian seaport.

    On the 28th September 1970, Gamal Abdel Nasser, the Egyptian president died. Bassala and Ahmed were working on the deck, I went outside and called down to them, “Hey, Bassala. Your President has just died, Nasser is dead.” Well, I thought they would just shrug and say, “So what.” Instead, they both went into deep mourning, both refusing to work and for two days wouldn’t come out of their cabin.

    The tanker began trading between Venezuela and the Eastern Seaboard of the USA. While in Vera la Crux, I, along with the second mate, visited a local bar. Bassala was already in the bar. I remember seeing him at a table in deep conversation with a couple of unsavoury-looking Venezuelans. One of the girls in the bar pointed out the men to me saying, “Those men are very bad men. They are gangsters from Caracas.” About an hour later Bassala left the bar with the two men. That was the last time I ever saw Bassala.

    The next day we were fully loaded and ready for sailing. The pilot was aboard and getting impatient to let go. We waited in vain for about an hour hoping Bassala would turn up. Bassala enjoyed the company of women, so we guessed he was in bed with one of the many prostitutes of Vera la Cruz. The captain advised the ship’s agent that when Bassala turned up, to put him up in a hotel until we returned to Venezuela.

    We later found out from Ahmed, who reluctantly informed us that his friend Bassala had been trying to buy drugs from the two men. He had money on him in the bar and told the men that he had more money on the ship. Bassala and the two men had returned to the ship to collect the extra money ($100) and then had gone back ashore together, presumably to collect the drugs. I’m not sure what drugs were being bought, cocaine or possibly heroin. What we do know for sure is, that was the last anyone saw of Bassala.

    On return to Vera la Crux a month or so later, he still had not shown up. The agent and police assumed that because Bassala had vanished into thin air, he may have been murdered by the gangsters and his body dumped somewhere in the hills. They said men have been murdered for much less than $100. The captain and mate dealt with his belongings. I paid off the ship in Curaçao around February 1971, flying home via Caracas, looking down over the Venezuelan Hills wondering, “Whatever happened to Bassala?”

    PC - R710198

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  3. #11
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    Default Re: Merchant Navy Memories - Whatever Happened to Bassala?

    Quote Originally Posted by Graham Shaw View Post
    Nope-picture is a tanker.........
    Note....... dont put louis on lookout .......eye eye mr mate.....lol cappy

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    Default Re: Merchant Navy Memories - Whatever Happened to Bassala?

    Nahhhh its a container ship. JS
    R575129

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    Default Re: Merchant Navy Memories - Whatever Happened to Bassala?

    Quote Originally Posted by j.sabourn View Post
    Nahhhh its a container ship. JS
    it could be the flying dutchman .......aaaagh

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    Default Re: Merchant Navy Memories - Whatever Happened to Bassala?

    More likely a French frigit .JS
    R575129

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    Default Re: Merchant Navy Memories - Whatever Happened to Bassala?

    #15 Hi Marian. I don't remember his second name, I'm not sure if I spelled Bassala correctly, it may have been Basa, or Vassala. I always called him Bassala. Your memory plays tricks after 50 years, although I can still see his face clearly in my mind, sticking his head through the radio room porthole, calling me 'fish and chips' and laughing. We became friends, however, he nearly cleaved my head in half with a deck scraper when I taunted him too far. I believe he had a family not far from Alexandria as he promised to take me to see the nearby British war graves, but we never got around to it. I always hoped he had gone off safely with someone but he left his documents and possessions on the ship. Peter.

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    Default Re: Merchant Navy Memories - Whatever Happened to Bassala?

    Great story. I wonder whether Bassala had family in Egypt who wondered where he had gone. Your recollection, Peter, brought this Terry Pratchett line to mind:

    "No one is finally dead until the ripples they cause in the world die away, until the clock wound up winds down, until the wine she made has finished its ferment, until the crop they planted is harvested. The span of someone’s life is only the core of their actual existence."

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    Default Re: Merchant Navy Memories - Whatever Happened to Bassala?

    Quote Originally Posted by William Bramhill View Post
    Great story. I wonder whether Bassala had family in Egypt who wondered where he had gone. Your recollection, Peter, brought this Terry Pratchett line to mind:

    "No one is finally dead until the ripples they cause in the world die away, until the clock wound up winds down, until the wine she made has finished its ferment, until the crop they planted is harvested. The span of someone’s life is only the core of their actual existence."
    I have no fear for bassala.....he took his few dollars and probably got into a businness legal or not ....he is a survivor ....like many on this site ......skinned out left money and gear in the ship and sauntered back when they are ready .....there are a few i know of who were lost and then were found ....it is what so many of us were ...WANDERERS of the world or perhaps sea gypsies......wouldnt have changed it good and bad ...its what made us what we are......and proud of it ......R683532

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    Default Re: Merchant Navy Memories - Whatever Happened to Bassala?

    Looks like a tanker to me!

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    Default Re: Merchant Navy Memories - Whatever Happened to Bassala?

    Quote Originally Posted by j.sabourn View Post
    More likely a French frigit .JS
    aye a frigitt no doubt ......R683532

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