Remembering Webster
Deirdre Newman
The irrepressible spirit of Steve Webster, a local surfer who was
killed in a car-bomb attack at an Indonesian nightclub last weekend,
shone brightly Saturday at the 52nd Street Jetty paddle out ceremony
in his honor.
As soon as friend Trent Walker started reminiscing about Webster,
the sun pierced the overcast sky, shining a beam of light and warmth
-- two traits Webster personified -- onto the huge crowd gathered on
the sand in Newport Beach.
About 350 friends, family and fellow surfers, including U.S. Rep.
Dana Rohrabacher in a wetsuit, converged at Webster’s favorite
surfing spot to pay tribute. With words, they painted a portrait of a
gregarious, genuine person, an “insta-bro” to everyone he met, who
lived life to the fullest and always had an entertaining story to
share about his exploits.
“As you got to know him, he was so genuine you couldn’t help but
like him,” Walker said, in a speech punctuated by heavy sighs. “Web’
loved everybody more than they loved him.”
Webster, who lived in Huntington Beach, was killed Oct. 12 at the
Sari nightclub in Bali. Almost 200 people died and hundreds more were
injured in the car-bomb blast. He had been on a surfing trip to
celebrate his 41st birthday with two friends -- John Parodi Jr, 42,
of Huntington Beach and William Stephen Cabler, 42, of Newport Beach.
Parodi, who identified Webster’s body Monday, was not in the bar
when the attack happened. Cabler was injured in the incident,
suffering burns to his hands and severe hearing loss.
Cabler came to the memorial in a wheelchair. His ear problems have
also caused him to lose his sense of balance. Cabler, who sings in
the band El Centro, said he lost 100% of the hearing in his left ear
and 50% of the hearing in his right ear. There is a chance some of it
will return.
Although he would rather have participated in the paddle-out
ceremony, the survivor said he was glad he could come to honor his
friend.
“This is a wonderful celebration of [Webster’s] life,” Cabler
said. “Everyone came together -- Americans of all colors.”
Co-founder of S&S; Commercial Environmental Inc., Webster worked
out of a West Newport office a block away from the beach, allowing
him to pursue his favorite pastime.
Fellow surfers said the luminous Webster embodied the
unadulterated joy of the sport.
“I didn’t know him that well, but I was affected by his presence
in the water,” said Dick McCoy, 50, of Costa Mesa. “When he was in
the water, he glowed.”
Webster’s widow, Mona, still visibly shaken from the loss, used
the leis around her neck to brush away tears as she listened to the
tributes to her late husband.
His stepdaughter, Samantha Bustamante, 16, asked the crowd to do
two things for her and her family: to smile at least once during the
day for her father and to spread the message of how her father was
the “best man who walked this Earth.”
Webster’s brother, Brian, 40, encouraged the surfers in attendance
to share their comrade’s loving spirit beyond this weekend.
“A lot of people knew my brother, so when you guys are out in the
water in the next week, five years, 10 years, and see someone that
was here, give them a hug and think of Steve Webster,” Brian said,
breaking down in tears.
Many of the surfers sported T-shirts created in the last week by
Webster’s sister-in-law, Abbie de Reyes. The shirts read, “Terrorists
Don’t Surf.”
Bill Lachmar, 46, a business partner and surfing buddy of
Webster’s, used his tribute as a means of exhorting the crowd to take
action against terrorism.
“That’s why we’re here -- because a terrorist took a good friend
of mine away. Well, that’s unacceptable,” Lachmar yelled
passionately. “What are you going to do to change it?”
While surfers, traditionally, are a peaceful, mellow group,
freedom is something that requires fighting for, Lachmar said,
equating terrorists to bullies on a schoolyard playground.
Rohrabacher echoed Lachmar’s sentiments, disclosing that he
mentioned Webster’s death to President George W. Bush. He presented
Mona Webster with a letter of condolence from the president.
“A benevolent soul was murdered by terrorists and we are committed
to make sure it never happens to us again,” Rohrabacher said.
Jim Hogan, a 20-year surfing-buddy of Webster’s, suggested
dedicating the 52nd Street Jetty to him with some type of memorial.
When asked, Rohrabacher said he would work with the Newport Beach
City Council on that.
After family and friends paid their tribute to Webster, more than
250 surfers paddled out about 150 yards into a “missing formation,”
forming a giant circle.
“It’s beautiful,” Mona Webster said of the ceremony. “This is all
my friends and family. It’s helping me cope with what I’m going
through.”
Surfers said words of remembrance for Steve Webster, prayed and
then, as chants of “Webby, Webby” filled the air, the leis around
their necks went flying. A plane trailing a banner that read
“Webster’s Boys” circled the crowd a few times to jubilant cheers.
While the paddle out ceremony was taking place, Webster’s son,
Dylan, 6, carefully crafted a sand memorial for his father. He made a
mound of sand, circled it with leis and placed a bright pink rose in
the middle -- a reminder of his father’s vibrant life.
Donations to honor Webster can be made to the Steven B. Webster
Memorial Trust, PO Box 15967, Newport Beach, CA, 92659-5967.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN is a reporter with Times Community News.. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4221 or by e-mail at
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