The Oklahoman

US marks 9/11 with tributes

- BY JENNIFER PELTZ AND KAREN MATTHEWS

NEW YORK — Americans looked back on 9/11 Tuesday with tears and somber tributes as President Donald Trump hailed “the moment when America fought back” on one of the hijacked planes used as weapons in the deadliest terror attack on U.S. soil.

Victims’ relatives said prayers for their country, pleaded for national unity and pressed officials not to use the 2001 terror attacks as a political tool in a polarized nation.

Seventeen years after losing her husband, Margie Miller came from her suburban home to join thousands of relatives, survivors, rescuers and others on a misty morning at the memorial plaza where the World Trade Center’s twin towers once stood.

“To me, he is here. This is my holy place,” she said before the hours-long reading of the names of her husband, Joel Miller, and the nearly 3,000 others killed when hijacked jets slammed into the towers, the Pentagon and a field near Shanksvill­e, Pennsylvan­ia on Sept. 11, 2001.

The president and first lady Melania Trump joined an observance at the Sept. 11 memorial near Shanksvill­e, where one of the jetliners crashed after 40 passengers and crew members realized what was happening and several passengers tried to storm the cockpit.

Calling it “the moment when America fought back,” Trump said the fallen “took control of their destiny and changed the course of history.”

They “joined the immortal ranks of American heroes,” said Trump.

For Nicholas Haros Jr., that concern is officials who make comparison­s to 9/11 or invoke it for political purposes.

“Stop. Stop,” implored Haros, who lost his 76-year-old mother, Frances. “Please stop using the bones and ashes of our loved ones as props in your political theater. Their lives, sacrifices and deaths are worth so much more. Let’s not trivialize them.”

This year’s anniversar­y comes as a heated midterm election cycle kicks into high gear.

But there have long been some efforts to separate the solemn anniversar­y from political campaigns. The group 9/11 Day, which promotes volunteeri­ng on the anniversar­y, asks candidates not to campaign or run political ads for the day. Organizers of the ground zero ceremony allow politician­s to attend, but they’ve been barred since 2011 from reading names or delivering remarks.

 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? A member of the military walks the grounds of the National 9/11 Pentagon Memorial on Tuesday before the start of the September 11th Pentagon Memorial Observance at the Pentagon on the 17th anniversar­y of the attacks.
[AP PHOTO] A member of the military walks the grounds of the National 9/11 Pentagon Memorial on Tuesday before the start of the September 11th Pentagon Memorial Observance at the Pentagon on the 17th anniversar­y of the attacks.

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