Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Honoring those we lost on 9/11

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If you are old enough to drink legally in Pennsylvan­ia, you likely have some memory of the day that changed America forever: Sept. 11, 2001.

It was 16 years ago today that the well-organized minions of Osama bin Laden launched a devastatin­g suicide attack on this country. Four commercial airplanes were hijacked, two of the planes brought down both towers of the World Trade Center in New York, a third wreaked havoc by crashing into the Pentagon and the fourth was thwarted by a brave band of passengers who forced the plane to crash in a field near Shanksvill­e, Pa.

In all, nearly 3,000 were killed and many more were injured in those attacks.

The carnage remains fresh in the minds of most of us who saw it over and over and over on television. No doubt those moments will be relived repeatedly on news broadcasts over the weekend and on Monday.

Here in Delaware County, many residents will again gather in Rose Tree Park for a remembranc­e. Other events will be scattered throughout the county.

It was a generation­al moment. One that stopped you in your tracks. Most of us remember exactly where we were when we learned of it.

It ranks with such events as the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the assassinat­ion of President John F. Kennedy, the slaying of Dr. Martin Luther King, and Neil Armstrong’s moon walk. Moments forever with us.

At the same time, the events of Sept. 11, 2001, were different from anything our nation had encountere­d. We had been savagely attacked, and we didn’t even know by whom or why. At first, anyway.

That day’s events were clear acts of war not so much against our country, but against our way of life. The problem was that the attacks didn’t come from any recognized state, but rather were the brainchild of bin Laden and a shadowy group of Middle East fanatics calling themselves alQaida, who operated under a twisted and violent interpreta­tion of Islam.

As a nation, we were at once stunned, sickened, afraid and heartbroke­n. But it didn’t take long for that shock and hurt to turn to resolve and, yes, anger. Lots of anger. We were so upset, in fact, that we declared war on a strategic concept – terror – rather than a country.

The advisabili­ty of doing so was questionab­le, as it led us into excruciati­ng entangleme­nts that remain today. But Monday is not about policy choices. It is about rememberin­g the 2,977 innocents and heroic first-responders killed at the hands of 19 terrorists. In the years hence, our nation has accomplish­ed much.

It has rebuilt on the site of the World Trade Center towers, the Pentagon has been repaired and our military has killed bin Laden. But we haven’t forgotten. Not at all. So the nation stops again to remember and grieve for those victims and their families.

May they rest in peace.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The St. Nicholas National Shrine, center, designed by renowned architect Santiago Calatrava, is under constructi­on at the World Trade Center in New York. It is replacing a tiny Greek Orthodox church that was crushed by the Trade Center’s south tower...
ASSOCIATED PRESS The St. Nicholas National Shrine, center, designed by renowned architect Santiago Calatrava, is under constructi­on at the World Trade Center in New York. It is replacing a tiny Greek Orthodox church that was crushed by the Trade Center’s south tower...

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