I volunteered at Ground Zero in the days after 9/11. My friend and I drove down to New York and served meals to firemen in a food tent near the still smoking, devastated site.
One day, a policeman who had come through the tent a few times asked us if we wanted to see Ground Zero for ourselves---and at a time when virtually no one had access to the site beyond the country’s politicians and tireless public safety teams.
I remember that when he asked us we immediately put down whatever we were doing and followed him without saying much, but we knew we were being given unique access to something both tragic and historic--something few people would ever see and something we would never forget. We were aware that the scene would be etched into our dreams for the rest of our lives, and become a part of our own story.
And I think we both wondered as we walked why he had chosen us. This policeman, who was now our guide, was solemn and dutiful---not at all using the moment he was leading us to for any other reason than to share it with us. It was clear that he wanted us to see it, wanted these two meal makers from the food tent to bear witness to something that he faced everyday.
He led us up a street and through a police barricade and told us not to take any pictures and then we walked into Ground Zero--- us two young mothers from Massachusetts who hadn't been doing anything special on September 10th.
To describe what we saw inside will always be impossible.
It's everything you saw on TV, but it was the feeling inside the site that I remember most. Not the twisted steel and the abandoned plates of eggs on a restaurant table---but the feeling. There was this heavy silence, but it wasn't---at least to me---the silence of death but the silence of reverence.
It was reverence.
Even today---all these years later---that reverence is what I carry as the remnants from that day.
It's a reverence for those who died, those who searched and rescued, those whose lives were touched so intimately by that tragedy.
And I will remember how small I felt standing amongst the piles of steel and dust and leaving with my head bowed but with an incredible feeling of hope...that one day this hell would lead us to a world that has no rubble...
I don't know where this notion that the people asking questions somehow don't care about the victims came from, but it needs to end NOW. Not one person theorizing and seeking justice against the real criminals is trying to diminish the memory and sacrifice of the victims.
AMEN .. in fact it’s for the ones who were murdered that we continue on for the truth to be known and for those responsible to be Marked forever in history with blood on their hands !
Agreed. It's like saying the murdered victims should be remembered, but forgetting to bring justice to the murderers.
This is a victim mentality and a slave mentality. It's not ok.
What happened on 9/11 was publicly "mourned" by both the victims and the murderers. The human factor has always been present and played up to disguise the true evil.
We need to hold these Pharisees accountable. Their public prayers hold no weight and mock any true mourning that can occur.
Well said, and I agree. I was about forty south of the towers, on the coast and we could see the brown smoke drifting down just offshore. One of the women I worked with lost her son who worked at Cantor Fitzgerald, and many people in our area lost loved ones as well. This is a somber day of remembrance in my opinion.
The PTSD every day people ended up with because of 9/11 is the single Largest event for PTSD.
Every day children that watched the impacts on TV ad nauseum for days in end was real. Many kids felt the second they saw a plane in the sky it was going to crash.
This was the exact reason these images were shown, on loop. The intent was to inflict mass trauma
I had a client a couple of years ago who was supposed to have been on Flight 93. This would have been 2018/2019. He told me the story how he changed his flight plan the night before so he could spend some extra time in the city. You could tell in his voice it still shook him.
I understand where you're coming from. And was not trying to accuse you directly of being anything. You pointed something out and while it is important to mourn, the emotional manipulation is where I have problems. People hide behind taboos as an excuse to not seek truth and I am fucking sick of it. If the truth about 9/11 came out tomorrow, I would still mourn as I do. And with mourning comes continuation with life. I think we honor them better by trying to have the best day possible and living our lives as we would want them to were the roles somehow reversed.