When the world’s skies fell silent on Sept. 11, 2001, a remote town on the edge of the North Atlantic became an unlikely stage for one of the most enduring stories of compassion in modern history. Gander, Newfoundland–population 9,000–suddenly found itself host to nearly 7,000 stranded airline passengers after U.S. airspace closed.
What followed has since entered the realm of legend: strangers given shelter, families fed, and the anxious soothed by ordinary people doing extraordinary things.

“Our story is 9/12, not 9/11,” said Claude Elliott, then the mayor of Gander, recently reflecting on those days speaking to CHCO-TV. By that he meant that Gander’s legacy rests not in the horror of the attacks, but in the humanity that blossomed the day after.
The generosity of those days has echoed far beyond N.L. It is now immortalized in the musical Come From Away, which has carried the story from Broadway to Madrid, Sydney, Seoul—and most recently, to the Bay of Fundy, where it made its New Brunswick premiere, helmed by Rogue Productions, this August at KIRA Amphitheatre in St. Andrews.
Elliott, who has seen the show more than a hundred times, believes its resonance lies in its honesty.
“No matter how many times you see the show, it brings you back to those five days in Gander,” he said. “On the first day, we had 7,000 strangers. On the third day, we had 7,000 friends. And on the fifth day, we lost 7,000 family members.”

The musical’s roots trace back to the 10th anniversary of 9/11, when Canadian writers Irene Sankoff and David Hein traveled to Gander to gather stories. What began as a local memory became a global phenomenon, proof that even amid calamity, tales of kindness can cross borders and languages.
Characters in Come From Away mirror real lives: a pair of strangers, Nick and Diane, who met in Gander and later married; Beverley Bass, an American Airlines captain who found herself once more in a familiar stopover town, this time under the weight of tragedy. These stories, along with dozens of others, form a mosaic of resilience that feels both intimate and universal.
Elliott is quick to deflect credit. He insists the heart of the story lies not in any single leader but in the cultural DNA of N.L. and the wider Atlantic region.
“The greatest asset, the greatest resource any community’s got is its people,” he said.

Hospitality, in Gander and across Atlantic Canada, was not a performance but a reflex. Nearby communities—Lewisporte, Norris Arm, Appleton—took in hundreds more passengers, sharing the same instinct to open doors without hesitation.
As the 25th anniversary of 9/11 approaches in 2026, Gander prepares once more for visitors who come to understand how, in the midst of fear and grief, a small town became a symbol of hope. Tourism has followed the fame of the musical, but Elliott remains mindful of what it represents: not theatre, not spectacle, but the memory of lives lost and the reminder of what was found.
His advice today is as unadorned as the acts of kindness that defined those days: “Be positive, be kind, be nice, and your day will go much better.”
It is, at its core, the same lesson Gander offered the world nearly a quarter-century ago—that in moments of rupture, the simplest human gestures can carry us through.

