THE National Maritime Museum is partnering with the ITF Seafarers’ Trust and Mission to Seafarers, to record oral histories of seafarers who have been unable to dock in ports across the globe because of the COVID-19 pandemic and now face difficulties accessing vaccines.

The plight of seafarers has recently been addressed in the Neptune Declaration. More than 700 organisations, including the ITF and the ITF Seafarers’ Trust have signed the declaration, calling for an international commitment to resolving the crew change crisis as soon as possible and building a more resilient maritime supply chain.

The National Maritime Museum, which holds the world’s largest maritime collection housed in historic buildings forming part of the Maritime Greenwich World Heritage Site, signed the Neptune Declaration on 15 March.

Katie Higginbottom, head of the ITF Seafarers’ Trust, said, “We’re delighted to support the National Maritime Museum Greenwich in this worthy endeavour.

“Our friends from the maritime unions around the world all know about Greenwich and were excited to participate in making the collection truly representative of today’s seafarers.”

Working with ITF Seafarers’ Trust and Mission to Seafarers, testimony from across the globe will be recorded and enter the permanent collection at the National Maritime Museum, so future generations can also learn, study and understand the impact of this pandemic on the global maritime sector.

This subject is also raised in the exhibition Exposure: Lives at Sea, a contemporary photography exhibition at the National Maritime Museum, displaying the myriad ways people interact with the sea. One of the photographers, Cezar Gabriel, spent an additional three months at sea in 2020, unable to dock in Brazil due to the coronavirus pandemic. The free exhibition will re-open when the Museum opens later this year.

Union representatives affiliated with ITF (International Transport Workers’ Federation) will receive online training on best practice for gathering oral histories before collecting the experiences of seafarers during coronavirus from their local communities in The Philippines, Indonesia, Ukraine, Hong Kong and India.

Chaplains associated with the Mission to Seafarers will also be trained once lock-down restrictions are lifted to record the stories of seafarers from across the globe.