New York Daily News

An annual return for a brother still lost

Family: Ground Zero is ‘closest we can get’

- BY LARRY MCSHANE

On Sept. 12, 2001, West Point cadet Joe Quinn boarded a Metro-North train for Lower Manhattan in search of his older brother.

It took him a year to finally reach his destinatio­n, on the first anniversar­y of the attack. His sibling Jimmy, working on the 104th floor for Cantor Fitzgerald, has yet to be found.

The Quinn family returns to Ground Zero for the 17th time this Tuesday — and Joe jokes that the clan has little choice.

“We’re scared of ‘What if there’s a heaven? What would Jimmy say if we didn’t go?’” said Joe Quinn, 38. “We realized with all these people in one area, and all the news cameras — if we weren’t there, we would be in trouble with Jimmy.”

There’s a more serious pull for the Quinns each year as Sept. 11 rolls around, a somber September family reunion on the grounds where 23-yearold Jimmy perished.

“They’ve never found any of his remains, so this is the closest we can get,” explained Joe Quinn. “There’s no public remembranc­e of him — a tombstone or a gravesite. You see the same people, and share the whole thing all over again.

“It kind of brings you more comfort in a way.”

Quinn, the son of a retired NYPD officer, went on to graduate West Point and serve six years in the U.S. Army with three deployment­s in Iraq and Afghanista­n. The native Brooklynit­e learned even more about loss and trauma during his military tours, and channeled his experience­s into his job as executive director of the Headstrong Project.

“We’ve got your back,” the organizati­on’s website promises.

The group’s mission is providing free PTSD treatment, with veterans seeking aid contacted within 48 hours by experience­d clinicians — confidenti­ality assured. The process is intended to remove the stigma often associated with the illness by those suffering from PTSD.

Quinn’s unique personal experience­s allow him to connect the mental health dots, whether the victims are survivors of 9/11 or a firefight in Fallujah.

“It’s interestin­g — trauma is trauma,” the bearded Quinn explained. “All trauma is the same. The other part, the hard part, is ‘Why was it that person? Why wasn’t it me?’

“And for me, going into combat… I held this kind of deep-seated shame that I wasn’t there for my brother. Now all of these people are dying in Iraq and Afghanista­n, and it’s all because of that day. And how do you rectify that during your time overseas?”

As Sept. 11 looms this year, Quinn said he often hears the same question about Jimmy. Most of the inquirers don’t expect his reply.

“A lot of people ask me, ‘Is is hard that your brother died on 9/11?’” Quinn recounted. “I say not that he died — people die. My biggest fear was that (Jimmy) was scared. That’s the only thing I can think of. He was on a high floor in the north tower. Was it instantly? Or for 90 minutes, was he scared?”

When he returns to the 16acre Lower Manhattan stretch of Ground Zero this year, Quinn — now the father of two — will fondly recall his brother with the family’s next generation.

“I have kids, my brother has a daughter, and it’s to remind them of that day and their uncle,” he said. “We just want our loved one remembered. So many years later, you just want the stories of your loved one to live on.”

 ?? KENDALL RODRIGUEZ ?? On Sept. 12, 2001, Joe Quinn (above) went to Ground Zero in search of his older brother Jimmy (below) who worked for Cantor Fitzgerald on on the 104th floor of the North Tower. The Quinn family will to Ground Zero for the 17th time this Tuesday.
KENDALL RODRIGUEZ On Sept. 12, 2001, Joe Quinn (above) went to Ground Zero in search of his older brother Jimmy (below) who worked for Cantor Fitzgerald on on the 104th floor of the North Tower. The Quinn family will to Ground Zero for the 17th time this Tuesday.
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