Albany Times Union

Fallen priest honored

9/11 Museum acquires prayer bench of Mychal Judge.

- Karen Matthews

A prayer bench used by the Rev. Mychal Judge, a Fire Department chaplain killed in the collapse of the World Trade Center towers on Sept. 11, 2001, was driven to the New York area on Sunday to join the collection of the Sept. 11 Memorial and Museum, museum officials said.

The bench formerly belonged to Judge’s twin sister, Dympnia Jessich, and spent the last five years at an Episcopal monastery in Rising Sun, Maryland, according to Sister Teresa Irene, a Carmelite nun there.

Its path to the Sept. 11 museum has been circuitous.

Judge, a Fransiscan who was praying in the lobby of the trade center’s north tower when he was crushed by debris from the

falling south tower, used to visit Jessich at her home in Berlin, Maryland, Sister Teresa Irene said. The prayer bench was kept in a bedroom Judge used, and its leather is worn from the imprint of his knees, she said.

“It’s worn where his knees would have been,” the nun said. “It’s his life of prayer.”

A new home for the bench became necessary as Jessich prepared to move to Texas several years ago, and friends suggested bringing it to the Episcopal Carmel of Saint Teresa monastery, some 130 miles north of

Jessich’s home in Berlin. Jessich, who was raised with Judge and their elder sister, Erin, in Brooklyn, died earlier this year.

A new home for the devotional furniture item became necessary once more with the nuns’ impending move, so Sister Teresa Irene called Sept. 11 museum officials to see if they were interested.

“We’ve been stewards of this for five years,” Sister Teresa Irene said on Sunday. “I think it’s important that it be in a place where it will be appreciate­d.”

 ?? Photo by Steve Ruark / Associated Press ?? The Rev. Sister Barbara Smith, left, of the Order of Discalced Carmelites, and David Burnhauser, collection­s manager at the National Sept. 11 Memorial and Museum, pack a prayer bench donated to the museum on Sunday.
Photo by Steve Ruark / Associated Press The Rev. Sister Barbara Smith, left, of the Order of Discalced Carmelites, and David Burnhauser, collection­s manager at the National Sept. 11 Memorial and Museum, pack a prayer bench donated to the museum on Sunday.
 ??  ?? The Rev. Sister Barbara Smith, of the Order of Discalced Carmelites, prays on a prayer bench that belonged to The Rev. Mychal Judge, the Fire Department of New York's chaplain who died in the 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center.
The Rev. Sister Barbara Smith, of the Order of Discalced Carmelites, prays on a prayer bench that belonged to The Rev. Mychal Judge, the Fire Department of New York's chaplain who died in the 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center.
 ?? . ?? Sister Teresa Irene Perkins, of the Order of Discalced Carmelites, places her hands on a prayer bench that belonged to The Rev. Mychal Judge.
. Sister Teresa Irene Perkins, of the Order of Discalced Carmelites, places her hands on a prayer bench that belonged to The Rev. Mychal Judge.
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JUDGE

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