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Indiana University student and one American among passengers on Malaysia Airlines Flight 17

A doctoral student at Indiana University’s chemistry department, was among the Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 passengers, a school official said.
Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777

(CNN) — A nun, an international athlete and a family traveling on summer vacation.

The victims aboard Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 came from around the world and held a wide range of hopes and dreams.

Their stories are being shared online, in traditional media and among friends and loved ones of passengers aboard the Boeing 777, which was shot down Thursday over Ukraine. On Friday, President Obama told reporters that an American, Quinn Lucas Schansman, was aboard. His Facebook page said he was a student at International Business School Hogeschool van Amsterdam.

Another passenger, Karlijn Keijzer, 25, was a champion rower from Amsterdam who had showed much passion and leadership in the U.S. as a member of the team at Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana.

The blond Dutch chemistry student with an infectious smile left behind a team of friends, many of whom will remember her for a lifetime.

“She was so intelligent and such a hard worker. But rowing was her passion,” said teammate Kelly Bainbridge. Keijzer rowed on the team’s fastest boat crew, where she showed leadership and a technique that Bainbridge described as “pristine.”

Her accomplishments included racing in the European Rowing Junior Championships in 2006 and the World Rowing Junior Championships in 2007.

She was driven and a hard worker, but she never lost sight of who she was, friends said. In the gym during weight training, “if someone was having a tough day, she would give them a pat on the back,” said Bainbridge. She also had a refreshing sense of humor. With a tip of the hat to Indiana’s farmland culture, Keijzer showed up at a team party dressed as an ear of corn.

“I feel like so much of the media coverage focuses on nationalities,” Bainbridge said. This tragedy, she said, transcends that. “For us it wasn’t about where you’re from. We were like family.”

Three additional victims of Flight 17 were a family traveling home to the Philippines. Irene Gunawan, 54, and her children Sheryl Shania Gunawan, 15; and Darryl Dwight Gunawan, 20 were on a summer vacation. The youngest was a high school student, family friend Peter Overbeeke told ABS CBN News.

“They were a very sweet family,” he said. Describing them as “harmonious,” “peaceful” and “successful.”

A 77-year-old teacher and Roman Catholic nun, Sister Philomene Tiernan, also was among Flight 17’s passengers, according to Australia’s Kincoppal – Rose Bay School of the Sacred Heart. The school principal described Tiernan as “wonderfully wise and compassionate.”

In the UK, the Newcastle United football team announced that two of its “most loyal supporters,” John Alder and Liam Sweeney, had died aboard the plane. The two were lifelong supporters and followers of Newcastle. Sweeney volunteered as a steward on fan buses to away games and the two were familiar to thousands of fans and staff, the club told Sky Sports. They were en route to New Zealand to join the team for a tour.

Other victims include a revered AIDS researcher en route to an International AIDS Conference scheduled to begin this weekend in Melbourne, Australia.

Prominent Dutch scientist Joep Lange was a pioneer in HIV research and a former president of the International AIDS Society, which organizes the conference. His partner, Jacqueline van Tongeren, was also on the flight, says the Health[e] Foundation, co-founded by Lange.

“He was a real hardcore scientist, but on the other hand, he really had the heart of an activist. He was quite bold and a little bit of a troublemaker,” said Albert Wu, professor at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Wu had helped Lange plan the 1991 AIDS conference.

Lange “was one of the first people to advocate spreading HIV medications to Africa,” says Wu. At the time, the medication wasn’t being delivered because of refrigeration problems.

“He said, ‘If Coca-Cola can deliver cold beverages to Africa, why can’t we deliver HIV medication?’ And he helped make it happen,” recalls Wu.

‘Wonderful person’

The Malaysia Airlines passenger jet crashed in a rebel-controlled part of eastern Ukraine on Thursday, spurring swift accusations from Ukrainian officials that “terrorists” shot down the aircraft. Ukrainian security services have released a recording of an intercepted telephone conversation between soldiers that Ukraine says proves rebels are to blame.

The U.S. has concluded a missile shot down the plane but hasn’t pinpointed who was responsible, a senior U.S. official told CNN’s Barbara Starr.

The identities of the 298 passengers on board MH17 have not been released by the airline. Meanwhile, friends and family of passengers have expressed grief and shock through social media; among them are people who knew attendees of the AIDS conference.

The World Health Organization was also able to confirm to CNN that their employee Glenneth Thomas was on board and heading to the Conference.

Thomas’ friend Gina Manola told CNN that he was “a brave, curious person, adventurous. And a lot of people I think were drawn to him. He was a really wonderful person doing great work in the world,” adding that he was planning his 50th birthday celebration.

In a statement, the WHO expressed its condolences to Thomas’ family, friends and colleagues and quoted his twin sister saying “he died doing what he loved.”

“He will be greatly missed by those who had the opportunity to know him and work with him,” it said.

Malaysia Airlines was able to give a breakdown of the known nationalities of the passengers: At least 173 were Dutch, 28 were Australians, 28 were Malaysians, 12 were Indonesian, nine were from the United Kingdom, four were from Germany; four were from Belgium, three were from the Philippines, one was Canadian and one was from Hong Kong.

Authorities are still trying to determine the nationalities of the other passengers.

At least one passenger was from Hong Kong, the city’s Immigration Department confirmed with local media on Friday afternoon.

‘I wait for you’

The 15 crew members on board were all Malaysian nationals, officials said. One of them was Shazana Salleh. Her best friend, Carmen Low Kar Marn, recalls driving to the airport before the flight.

“I just sent (Salleh) to the airport and then I just said ‘I wait for you to come back’ and (she) never come back,” Low told CNN’s Anderson Cooper.

When asked if the loss of her best friend seemed real to her, Low replied through tears: “I just hope it is a false. I try to message her, but no answer.”

Other travelers who were fortunate enough to miss the tragic flight are still in shock.

“I’m shaking … I didn’t know what to do … I’m feeling physically sick,” says a woman carrying her baby at Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport. She was supposed to be on MH17 but had just missed it.

“I was coming to the airport in a taxi, just crying, I feel that I have been given a second chance.”

Troubled airline

Thursday’s crash marks the second time this year that Malaysia Airlines has faced an incident involving a downed plane.

On March 8, Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 disappeared. That Boeing 777 had 239 people on board. Searchers have found no trace of MH370 or its passengers, despite extensive search efforts.

Sarah Bajc, whose partner of two years was a passenger on MH370, said the latest incident brought back memories of the earlier tragedy.

“At first I thought it might just be a joke, you know, something going through Twitter because that’s how I found out about it. All the wounds just opened right back up again. I’m so sorry for all those families,” Bajc told CNN.

“We still don’t know what happened to MH370. It’s not an acceptable situation that we haven’t fixed that problem yet and now we have a whole new one to deal with.”

‘Go fly with the angels’

A public Facebook forum for cabin crew has begun collecting messages of condolence and grief from people working in the airline industry, including some posters who said they were colleagues of those who perished on MH17.

“RIP, flight attendants don’t die, they just fly higher,” posted Ryan Hardy.

Another, identified as Suraya ShaBi Alhussaini said: “Those crews were all my colleagues its the saddest year ever for us in Malaysia airlines …”

As of 5:30 a.m. E.T. (0930 GMT) a posting expressing support for the cabin crew of MH17 had been shared more than 6,400 times and been “liked” by more than 8,700 Facebook members.

Laurie Powell commented on the posting: “This industry is SO big and impersonal, yet at times like this we remember we’re all one big family! RIP dear colleagues of MH17!”

Fiona Silverman added: “To those left behind … this must seem unfair beyond comprehension. To lose colleagues twice within a few months of each other. How does one heal from such a loss? In time you do, but with deep scars.”

In another comment, Helen Chay-Nelson wrote: “So sad. … You all have now earned your wings. Now go fly with the angels!”

Get more coverage of the crash of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 – click here.

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