6th Anniversary of 9/11 Terror
Attack
9.11: Horrible nightmare 6 years
ago
by Yang Qingchuan
WASHINGTON, Sept. 10 (Xinhua) -- The Sept. 11 terror
attacks, no matter how much they have shaken up the world, now seem to fade away
in the everyday life of most Americans.
As the event approaches its seventh anniversary,
there has been no intensive media coverage so far about it by major U.S.
newspapers, magazines or TV networks.
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A citizen holds the photo of a fireman
who lost his life in the Sept. 11 attacks at the site of the former twin
World Trade Center towers in New York, Sept. 11, 2007. New York citizens
Tuesday gathered here in rain to attend the ceremony marking the sixth
anniversary of the tragedy.(Xinhua File Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
While most Americans seem to be more obsessed with
the urgent tasks in hand: the economic situation, the presidential election and
the war in Iraq, for those who lost their loved ones in the unprecedented tragic
event on Sept. 11, 2001, they are still struggling between keeping memories
alive and facing challenges in reality.
"For me, what happened on that day is still like
yesterday but the world has changed so much since then," Patricia DeConte, a
retired school teacher from Massachusetts, told Xinhua on Wednesday as she paid
tribute to her elder son Gerald, who was killed in the attack on the Pentagon,
in the Arlington National Cemetery near Washington D.C.
As a director in the Navy Command Center in the
Pentagon, Gerald was organizing the Navy's response to the attacks on the World
Trade Center in New York, which happened earlier that day, when a passenger
jetliner hijacked by terrorists hit the southwest side of the building in
Washington.
He died at the age of 44, with 183 others, including
59 passengers on the plane and 125 in the Pentagon.
On the weekend before Sept. 11, 2001, Gerald and his
mother had had dinner together.
DeConte said she still remembered what they ate that
night: clam chowder, sausage and flank steaks.
Gerald loved to drive an old Jeep with a funny
license plate: FISH79, she said.
"Fish" was his nickname and 1979 was the year he
graduated from the Naval Academy.
"You saw that coming and you knew it was him,"
DeConte recalled.
She was still very sad after all the these years. "It
can never be healed," she said.
But DeConte said she gradually realized that she had
to face the reality.
"We are so lucky we had that weekend all together,"
she added.
For Allen Cranford, whose brother Eric was killed in
the attack on Pentagon, there wasn't much sorrow on his face.
"There's not a single day that I didn't remember
him," said the computer technician from South Carolina.
"But life is going on. And when I stand here today, I
don't feel sad or angry. It's just a feeling of peace," said Cranford.
Allen was a member of the Navy staff, and he was 32
when he was killed.
Cranford said he didn't know whether he had fully
recovered from the loss of his elder brother.
"But what I can tell you is that my life and the
country have changed since 9/11," he said.
For a woman who only gave her first name as Susan,
she was lucky to be out of the office when the plane hit the Pentagon. But most
people in her office were not.
She lost many colleagues and friends, who were buried
in the Section 64 of the cemetery.
Susan said the impact of 9/11 attacks matched that of
the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941.
"The world has changed. We have two wars and we have
terror threats every minute. But I don't know what it means for our country,"
she said.
The tough side of telling the story of 9/11 was to
make the country's next generation understand what had happened that day, Susan
said.
Her son was still very young at the time of 9/11, and
she had to explain to him why there was suddenly heavy security everywhere and
why life was so different after that.
About 3,000 people were killed on
Sept. 11, 2001, when terrorists carried out attacks with hijacked passenger
planes in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania.
War-weary Americans mark 9/11
anniversary
WASHINGTON, Sept. 11
(Xinhua) -- Americans held nationwide ceremonies Tuesday to mark the sixth anniversary of the 9/11 terror attacks, but many
say that the war in Iraq that made it impossible for a
nation to heal.
At the White House, President George W. Bush, joined
by his wife and top aides, observed a moment of silence at 8:46 a.m. local time
(1246 GMT), the exact time when the first plane hijacked by terrorists hit the
twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York six years ago. Full
story
New Yorkers commemorate 6th
anniversary of Sept. 11
NEW YORK, Sept. 11 (Xinhua) --
Hundreds of family members and friends of victims of the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks on the United States today joined politicians, firefighters, first
responders and ground zero workers to commemorate the sixth anniversary of the
attacks in Lower Manhattan.
It was the first time since 2001
that it has rained on the anniversary and the scene was a sea of umbrellas. Full
story
Report: Pentagon security fortified
since 9/11
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9 (Xinhua) -- Security changes
wrought by the 9/11 terror attacks have transformed the Pentagon building into a
"fortress," the Washington Post reported on Sunday.
Meanwhile, a burgeoning police
force has been given state-of-the-art capabilities to protect against a
chemical, biological or radiological attack, according to the report. Full
story
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(From left to right) President George W.
Bush, his wife Laura, Vice President Dick Cheney and his wife Lynne,
observed a moment of silence at 8:46 a.m. local time (1246 GMT), the exact
time when the first plane hijacked by terrorists hit the twin towers of
the World Trade Center in New York six years ago.(Xinhua/AFP
File Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
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