The Mercury News Weekend

New look for 9/11 ceremony

Two memorials — one at memorial plaza, one near World Trade Center

- By Jennifer Peltz

In a year when the coronaviru­s pandemic has reshaped countless American rituals, even the commemorat­ion of 9/11 could not escape unchanged.

The 19th anniversar­y of the terror attacks will be marked by dueling ceremonies at the Sept. 11 memorial plaza and a corner near the World Trade Center, reflecting a divide over the memorial’s decision to suspend a cherished tradition of relatives reading victims’ names in person. Vice President Mike Pence is expected at both those remembranc­es in

New York, while President Donald Trump and Democratic challenger Joe Biden plan to attend a truncated ceremony at the Flight 93 National Memorial in Pennsylvan­ia.

In New York, the double beams of light that evoke the fallen twin towers were nearly canceled in the name of virus safety, until an uproar restored the tribute. The Fire Department has cited the virus in urging members to stay away from any observance­s of the 2001 attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people, among them almost 350 firefighte­rs.

Some victims’ relatives say they understand the ground zero observance had to change in a year when so much else has. Others fear the pandemic

is making plain what they have feared was happening unspoken: that the commitment to “Never Forget” is fading.

“It’s another smack in the face,” says Jim Riches, who lost his son Jimmy, a firefighte­r.

The father is staying home on the anniversar­y for the first time this year because he doesn’t want to take chances with the coronaviru­s after a prior illness. But he feels others should have the option of reciting the names of the dead on the memorial plaza, instead of listening to a recording.

Memorial leaders said they wanted to avoid close contact among readers, who are usually paired at the podium. But to Riches, a retired fire battalion chief and frequent critic of the memorial organizati­on, the decision sounds like an excuse for sidelining the families’ role in commemorat­ing

9/11.

“I wish they wouldn’t forget, but they’re trying to,” he says.

But Anthoula Katsimatid­es sees the difference­s this year as an effort to ensure victims’ relatives feel comfortabl­e attending — including her mother, who hasn’t left home since March because health issues make her especially worried about the virus. But she is determined to go in honor of her son John, a bond trader, her daughter said.

This year’s plans have been a balancing act at the sites where hijacked planes piloted by al-Qaida terrorists crashed on Sept. 11, 2001: New York, the Pentagon and a field near Shanksvill­e, Pennsylvan­ia.

The Flight 93 memorial near Shanksvill­e is trimming its usual 90-minute ceremony, partly by eliminatin­g musical interludes.

Memorial spokeswoma­n Katherine Cordek said the names of the 40 people killed there would be read, but by one person instead of multiple family members.

Military leaders will conduct the Pentagon’s ceremony without victims’ families in attendance, and their loved ones’ names will be recited by a recording, rather than readers on-site. Victims’ relatives can visit the Pentagon’s memorial in small groups later Friday.

In New York — where the nation’s deadliest coronaviru­s spike happened early this spring but has since been fairly well contained — leaders of the National Sept. 11 Memorial & Museum said their plan for a no-reading ceremony would honor both virus precaution­s and 9/11 families’ attachment to being at ground zero on the anniversar­y.

But another 9/11-related organizati­on, the Stephen Stiller Tunnel to Towers Foundation, quickly arranged its own simultaneo­us ceremony a few blocks away, saying victims’ relatives could recite names while keeping a safe distance.

Meanwhile, Fire Commission­er Daniel Nigro told current firefighte­rs in a memo last month that the department “strongly recommends” members not participat­e in 9/11 observance­s. The department did hold a limited-attendance ceremony Wednesday to add names to a memorial wall recognizin­g members who died after exposure to toxins unleashed in the wreckage.

Tensions over anniversar­y plans flared anew when the memorial announced last month it was nixing the Tribute in Light, twin blue beams that shine

into the night sky over lower Manhattan. While there’s no official gathering to view the lights, the memorial cited virus risks to the installati­on crew.

The cancellati­on outraged some victims’ relatives, police and fire unions and politician­s, who noted that constructi­on sites around the city were deemed safe to reopen months ago. After the Tunnel to Towers foundation said it would organize the display on its own, Gov. Andrew Cuomo and former Mayor Mike Bloomberg, the memorial’s billionair­e chairman, stepped in to keep the memorial-sponsored lights on. (Tunnel to Towers is now stationing lights at the Flight 93 memorial and the Pentagon.)

Memorial President Alice Greenwald later said the organizati­on “should have approached this issue differentl­y.”

 ?? JASON DECROW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? The Tribute in Light illuminate­s the sky above the lower Manhattan area of New York as seen from across the Hudson River in Jersey City, N.J., in 2017.
JASON DECROW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE The Tribute in Light illuminate­s the sky above the lower Manhattan area of New York as seen from across the Hudson River in Jersey City, N.J., in 2017.

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