Local survives tsunami
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Dave Brooks
It was surfing that helped motivate Patrick Clifford to travel
through Southeast Asia, and after last weekend’s tsunami, it was also
surfing that saved his life.
Clifford, a radiology intern at a hospital in Cochin, India was
working on a religious commune when the 9.0 earthquake centered in
the Indian Ocean sent massive waves toward the coasts of India, Sri
Lanka, Indonesia and Thailand.
As many as 150,000 people are believed to have been killed by the
disaster.
“He was on the 13th floor of his ashram when he said he saw sewage
begin to spill back into the streets and then a massive wall of water
coming in from a distance,” his father Tom Clifford said. “He
immediately ran out in the street into chest-high waters and began
helping pull people out. He said it was chaos.”
Tom Clifford said his son’s bravery had partially to do with his
love of surfing. Every June, Patrick Clifford, now 27 years old,
would surf near the Newport Pier while his grandmother, Gloria
Clifford, looked on.
“I had him every summer, and I made him the water baby that he
is,” she said. “I wore him out that way so he would go to sleep at
night.”
Patrick Clifford even joined the Newport Harbor High surf team and
had planned a side trip from India to Sri Lanka.
When the tsunami hit, Patrick Clifford was in Quilon, a small
island on the western side of India, shielded from the full velocity
of the tsunami. The sheer force of the event led tides to wrap around
the peninsula and flood city streets in Quilon with chest-high
waters.
According to the official website for the region of Kerala, where
Quilon is located, about 175 people in the area died as a result of
the tsunami.
Gloria Clifford said she was very worried about her grandson when
she heard about the tsunami. For five days there was no word from
him, but on Thursday he was able to call his father using a satellite
phone and give a brief description of his run-in with the tidal wave.
Beyond that one call, Tom Clifford doesn’t expect to be in contact
with his son again for quite some time because of damage to the
area’s communication system. Patrick Clifford was not available for
an interview.
Costa Mesa resident Steve Abrams, 37, was visiting Phuket,
Thailand when the massive wave hit. In an interview with the Daily
Pilot, Abrams described how he and a friend helped pull people out of
the water.
Patrick Clifford grew up in Newport Beach and enjoyed surfing from
a young age. After graduating high school, he worked for his father
for seven years as an inspector for Pacific Video Productions in
Newport Beach before moving to Tucson, Arizona to study radiology.
While living with his aunt and uncle, Jill and John Weiss, Patrick
Clifford became interested in transcendental medicine and a follower
of Hindu spiritual leader Mata Amritanandamayi, known worldwide as
Amma, “The Hugging Saint.”
Clifford began his two-year residency in India on Dec. 14, and
when he isn’t interning at a hospital founded by Amritanandamayi, he
assists at a religious commune, or ashram, on the island Quilon. He
is currently being sheltered at a nearby engineering school.
“He said his first order of business is going to be repairing the
ashram,” his father said.
Tom Clifford described his son as a personable and friendly guy
who always put others before himself.
“Part of his religion is the idea that one should be a servant to
humanity,” he said.
“It’s like he didn’t think about himself when he ran out to help
those people.”
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