Christine Dawood, whose husband and son were among the five people killed in the Titan submersible disaster, is speaking publicly about the aftermath of the incident, including the recovery of their remains and the events leading up to the implosion, as reported [1] by Fox News.
According to , Dawood said it took nine months before any remains were returned to her following the June 18, 2023, disaster in the North Atlantic Ocean. She described receiving them in two small containers.
After losing her husband and son due to the Titan sub imploding, Christine Dawood said ‘I’m a widow now’ and cried
‘It’s the waking up every morning… Sometimes I still don’t believe it. The possibility of it imploding never crossed our minds’https://t.co/uohMWHurQs [2]
— Metro (@MetroUK) January 13, 2024 [3]
“We didn’t get the bodies for nine months,” Dawood said. “Well, when I say bodies, I mean the slush that was left. They came in two small boxes, like shoeboxes.”
Her husband, Shahzada Dawood, 48, and their son, Suleman Dawood, 19, both from London, were aboard the OceanGate-operated Titan submersible when it imploded during a descent to view the Titanic wreck. Also killed in the incident were OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush, businessman Hamish Harding, and Titanic expert Paul-Henri Nargeolet.
Dawood said authorities informed her that limited remains could be identified. “There wasn’t much they could find,” she said. “They have a big pile they can’t separate, all mixed DNA, and they asked if I wanted some of that, too. But I said no, just what you know is Suleman and Shahzada.”
She also recalled the final moments before her husband and son departed for the dive. That morning, she remained on the support vessel while experiencing seasickness as they prepared to descend.
Christine Dawood opens up in a new documentary about losing her husband and son in the Titan sub disaster, reflecting on grief and lessons from the tragedy. https://t.co/Uswae4lPfO [4] pic.twitter.com/fKhohn8cwt [5]
— Jonathan Muller (@synthBotBuilder) June 7, 2025 [6]
“Suleman had his Rubik’s Cube, because he was planning to get the record for solving it at the deepest depth ever,” she said. “And we were giggling, because Shahzada is clumsy and when he was going down the stairs he was wobbling a bit. I waved. And that was it. They got into a dinghy and sped off. It went very fast, the goodbye.”
Hours later, Dawood said she overheard a conversation indicating communication with the submersible had been lost. “They’ve lost communications,” she recalled hearing. She said she was reassured at the time that such disruptions were not unusual.
“Don’t worry, it’s not unusual,” she said she was told. “In that moment, what am I supposed to do? I felt trapped on that ship and I had no choice but to trust what they told me.”
As the situation developed, Dawood said she tried to remain hopeful, believing her husband and son might be stranded but alive.
“But I was worried,” she said, adding that she knew both would struggle in complete darkness. “You literally can’t see a thing.”
She also described the atmosphere on the vessel as one of denial, stating that crew members acted as though the situation would resolve.
“The crew were [acting] like nothing was happening,” she said, noting that activities such as music sessions and movies were organized while the search continued.
“Ultimately, I think they wanted to distract people, keep everyone occupied,” she said. “They wanted everyone onside, not to feed anything to the press.”
The U.S. Coast Guard later determined that the submersible had suffered a “catastrophic implosion,” ending any possibility of survival.
“My first thought was, thank God,” Dawood said. “When they said catastrophic, I knew Shahzada and Suleman didn’t even know about it. One moment they were there and the next they weren’t. Knowing they didn’t suffer has been so important.”
Widow of Pakistani Billionaire Inherits Less Than €100,000 After Titan Submarine Tragedy
The widow of Pakistani billionaire Shahzada Dawood, Christine Dawood, and her 17-year-old daughter Alina have been left with almost nothing following the tragic Titan submarine disaster,… pic.twitter.com/Mg9G5f5JL5 [7]
— THE TRADESMAN (@The_Tradesman1) January 13, 2025 [8]
In a report released last year, the Coast Guard described the incident as a “preventable tragedy,” citing concerns about OceanGate’s safety practices and oversight.
“So I go into Suleman’s room. Sometimes I find the cat sleeping on his pillow and I sit on the bed and let the grief come,” she said. “And after a while I can put the grief away until the next time it gets too much.”