Kuwait Times

From 9-11 to virus, New Yorkers once again put to a test

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NEW YORK: Nearly two decades after Manhattan’s Twin Towers fell in history’s deadliest attack on US soil, the coronaviru­s pandemic is once again testing the storied mettle of New Yorkers. The September 11, 2001 terror attack on the World Trade Center left nearly 3,000 people dead and shocked the city with its devastatio­n. In comparison, New Yorkers say the deadly coronaviru­s pandemic, which has likely killed some 16,000 in the city, is more of a “slow cancer.”

“9-11 was supposed to be the darkest day in New York for a generation,” said New York state’s governor Andrew Cuomo during one of his recent press briefings. But with the virus’s spread the governor said “there was no explosion, but it was a silent explosion that just ripples through society.” “With the same randomness, the same evil.” Like Cuomo, many New Yorkers have been evoking 9-11 in comparison to the rapid spread of coronaviru­s, which has ravaged the densely populated city home to some 8 million people.

Maggie Dubris, a paramedic who was dispatched as part of an ambulance crew to the World Trade Center site on 9-11, thought she already had lived through “the biggest disaster of my lifetime.” But the pandemic frightens her even more. “After the Trade Center, you knew you’d survive,” the lower Manhattan resident said. “I would see people down there, there was a reunion, we’d see each other, we’d hug,” Dubris said.

With the coronaviru­s pandemic “you can’t touch anyone, and you don’t know who really will survive this, we have no idea what is to come here.” Susan Barnett, a New Yorker who covered the 2001 attacks as a producer at the ABC network, agrees. “9-11 was shocking, this I find so much more frightenin­g because of the global consequenc­es,” she said. “I am more scared now, I think the consequenc­es are global and they could be absolutely dire, in terms of human health and survival,” said Barnett, who now works for a non-profit helping hospitals in developing countries.

‘Slow cancer’

Dubris and Barnett both live in neighborho­ods that were ensconced in clouds of smoke and closed to non-residents for weeks following the 9-11 attacks. Both women see parallels between that era-defining tragedy and the current coronaviru­s crisis. When crowds clap and cheer to honor essential workers at 7 pm each evening, they recall the cheers for rescue workers heading to the WTC site, and those who offered them meals. During a rare outing in deserted Manhattan, Dubris recently happened upon refrigerat­ed trucks used as a temporary morgue.

“I remembered the morgue being set up at the WTC,” she said. “There is that same sense that something terrible, with a lot of deaths, has happened.” But the difference­s between the two catastroph­es are equally pronounced. Ken Paprocki, a photograph­er who before 9-11 worked as an internatio­nal flight attendant, dubbed the attack “a lightning strike, where the human mind could not keep up with the pace in which events were unfolding.” —AFP

 ??  ?? NEW YORK: In this file photo taken on September 11, 2001, the rubble of the World Trade Center smoulders following a terrorist attack in New York. Almost 20 years after this apocalypti­c shock, the COVID-19 pandemic is more like ‘a flood of pain’ or ‘a slow cancer’, according to New Yorkers caught in both tragedies. —AFP
NEW YORK: In this file photo taken on September 11, 2001, the rubble of the World Trade Center smoulders following a terrorist attack in New York. Almost 20 years after this apocalypti­c shock, the COVID-19 pandemic is more like ‘a flood of pain’ or ‘a slow cancer’, according to New Yorkers caught in both tragedies. —AFP

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