The Norwalk Hour

‘Pull hate out of the rubble’

Connecticu­t remembers September 11

- By Ken Dixon

WESTPORT — They came again to Sherwood Island State Park, with its far-away view of Manhattan, to remember and read aloud the names of the dead lost 20 years ago in the attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people, and triggered the nation’s frustratin­g, ultimately losing war on internatio­nal terrorism.

While a whole generation has come of age in the years since that clear day on September 11, 2001, when the four hijacked airliners struck the World Trade Center 47 miles away, the Pentagon in Washington and crashed into a field in Shanksvill­e, Pa., the images remain fresh in the memories of those old enough to remember or who have seen the video record.

So they gathered — the young and the old, the public officials, law enforcemen­t and private citizens — in the rain, around the stone monument here on Thursday to remember how much was lost in two decades minus two days, including 2,448 dead U.S. service members in Afghanista­n and $6.5 trillion dollars that taxpayers will be contributi­ng to the cost of the war until at least 2050.

Thursday was a time for reflection even as the few remaining Americans try to flee Afghanista­n, the last redoubt of a war on terrorism that was marked by corruption, a colossal failure in nation-building and the sudden collapse of the Afghan military and police as Americans withdrew

and the Taliban easily captured the major cities.

For Elizabeth Bullis Weise of Fairfield, “It always helps to talk about it.” Weise’s sister was a flight attendant in the first hijacked plane to smash into the Trade Center, shortly before 9 a.m.

“It was real but not real,” she told a crowd of about 300 people in the pavilion commemorat­ing the state’s 161 dead from 9/11. “That day I felt an entire range of feelings. I dream of her, which is a gift. She is always doing something in life,” Weise said to an assembly that included other families and state leaders including Gov. Ned Lamont and U.S. Sens. Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy.

Sean Rooney, who was from Glenbrook in Stamford, was killed when the south tower collapsed. His wife, Beverly Rooney, was on the phone with her husband and watching the television as the building fell so slowly and horribly. She later went on to become an activist for victims in their families, but was killed in a 2009 plane crash.

Her sister, Margaret Eckert of Massachuse­tts, was at the hour-long memorial ceremony Thursday. “We can pull hate out of the rubble,” Eckert said.

Kathryn Hebert of Norwalk, whose brother Adam Lewis worked on the 89th floor in the south tower and perished, said she had a premonitio­n of his death when she heard about the plane attack that morning.

“There are so many emotional layers,” she said of the ensuing years. “I continue to remain always hopeful that we will learn from 9/11 and so many more tragedies that have followed, including everything that has happened around the pandemic in 2020. There is still so much violence and hatred and negativity in our country and the world. We all need to step back and do our part. This annual remembranc­e is not only about never forgetting an awful, dreadful violent attack on our country, our way of life, our being. Now more than ever this reminds us of our humanity and we are all responsibl­e for humanity, collective­ly and individual­ly.”

Lamont remembered September 12, 2001 as “the day we all came together,” and a quiet day with no planes in the sky, but a growing sense of national purpose

After the names of the 161 were read, Lamont and Lt. Gov. Susan Bysiewicz led the group out to place yellow roses at the memorial area on a nearby point which, on a clear day, you can see the towers of Manhattan. Lamont who earlier in the day attended the memorial service for State Police Sgt. Brian Mohl, said the attacks were as historic as Pearl Harbor in 1941, the assassinat­ion of President John F. Kennedy in 1963 and the COVID pandemic of 2020 and 2021.

The afternoon-long rain finally let up at about 6:30 p.m. as people bearing roses walked out alone and in small groups about 200 yards to join Lamont and Bysiewicz in the memorial garden. The setting sun shined briefly.

 ?? Erik Trautmann / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Above, Emma Hunt mourns the loss of her father, William Christophe­r Hunt, with her family as they attend Connecticu­t’s annual 9/11 Memorial Ceremony on Thursday at Sherwood Island State Park in Westport.
Erik Trautmann / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Above, Emma Hunt mourns the loss of her father, William Christophe­r Hunt, with her family as they attend Connecticu­t’s annual 9/11 Memorial Ceremony on Thursday at Sherwood Island State Park in Westport.

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