The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

‘We were not ready’: NY remembers 1993 trade center bombing

- By Jennifer Peltz

The World Trade Center’s operators apologized Monday to relatives of people killed in the 1993 bombing there, saying the country was unprepared for a terror attack that foreshadow­ed 9/11. The families urged people to understand its legacy.

Victims’ families, survivors, first responders and others marked the bombing’s 25th anniversar­y on what is now the Sept. 11 memorial plaza. They observed a silent moment, read victims’ names, laid roses on the memorial and reflected on an explosion that became a telling signal of terrorists’ aims.

“We were not ready for what visited us that day. Americans were not ready for what visited them that day,” said Kevin O’Toole, chairman of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which runs the trade center. “And for that, I say: I’m sorry. And we are sorry.”

The blast in an undergroun­d parking garage on Feb. 26, 1993, killed six people, one of them pregnant. It injured more than 1,000 and forced an estimated 50,000 to flee the trade center’s twin towers in a scene of smoke, fear and confusion that would be mirrored and magnified on Sept. 11, 2001.

For families of the bombing victims, “‘93 is as big as 9/11,” said Pat Rodriguez, who lost his pregnant sister, Monica Rodriguez Smith. “It’s a place in history that you shouldn’t forget.”

The anniversar­y ceremony and a memorial Mass at a nearby church have been held year after year, but the quarter- century mark brought renewed attention. It’s “long overdue” to Judy Shirtz, sister-in-law of victim Stephen Knapp. She feels the loss of families like hers has largely been forgotten amid the far greater toll of 9/11.

“It happened to us first, it shouldn’t have happened again, and it did,” she said.

Muslim extremists set off the bomb in an effort to punish the U.S. for its Middle East policies, according to federal prosecutor­s. The suspects weren’t directly connected to 9/11, but convicted bombing ringleader Ramzi Yousef is a nephew of self-proclaimed 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. And another man convicted in the plot vowed that “the World Trade Center will continue to be one of our targets” in a letter later found on his laptop.

Six bombing suspects were convicted and are in prison. A seventh remains at large.

“People can’t forget that the ‘ 93 bombing was the powder keg of 9/11,” said Andrew Colabella, a cousin of victim John DiGiovanni and also a city councilman in Westport, Connecticu­t.

Stephen Knapp Jr. also feels it’s important for people to keep the ‘93 bombing in mind — because “you can’t let your guard down.”

At least 100 people, including former New York Mayor David Dinkins, attended Monday’s commemorat­ion by one of the memorial waterfall pools where the names of the bombing victims — DiGiovanni, Knapp, Smith, Robert Kirk- patrick, William Macko and Wilfredo Mercado— are inscribed along with those of the nearly 3,000 killed on 9/11

There was once a memorial fountain for the bombing, but the fountain was crushed on 9/11. A piece of the fountain is among artifacts in the Sept. 11 museum, where a room is devoted to discussing the ‘93 explosion.

The blast knocked out power and severed pipes, flooding backup generators, stranding people in elevators and on an observatio­n deck. Thousands of people fled by groping their way down blacked-out, smoky stairs. Some others were plucked from rooftops by police helicopter­s.

After the bombing, the government-run trade center banned undergroun­d parking, put battery-powered lights and ref lective paint in stairwells, required ID cards for workers to get into the buildings and added security cameras and vehicle barriers around the site. Companies with offices in the building stepped up fire drills and other preparatio­ns.

“For those of us who survived both 1993 and 9/11, I think 1993 happening saved a lot of lives,” Lolita Jackson, then a finance worker in the south tower, said in an interview this month. “We knew how to evacuate differentl­y.”

 ?? RICHARD DREW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pipers from New York police and fire agencies play “The Minstrel Boy” as they participat­e in the 25th anniversar­y ceremony at the 9/ 11Memorial to commemorat­e the six victims of the World Trade Center bombing, in NewYork, Monday.
RICHARD DREW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pipers from New York police and fire agencies play “The Minstrel Boy” as they participat­e in the 25th anniversar­y ceremony at the 9/ 11Memorial to commemorat­e the six victims of the World Trade Center bombing, in NewYork, Monday.
 ?? RICHARD DREW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A visitor to the National September 11Museum, in New York, Friday reads a letter by Carl Selinger to his wife and children as he waited 5-1⁄2 hours to be rescued in a stuck elevator during the truck bomb attack at the World Trade Center. It was a...
RICHARD DREW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A visitor to the National September 11Museum, in New York, Friday reads a letter by Carl Selinger to his wife and children as he waited 5-1⁄2 hours to be rescued in a stuck elevator during the truck bomb attack at the World Trade Center. It was a...
 ?? RICHARD DREW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ed Schantz, representi­ng Monica Rodriguez Smith and her unborn daughter, two of the six victims of the World Trade Center bombing, kisses her name on the 9/ 11Memorial during the 25th anniversar­y ceremony of the event, in New York, Monday.
RICHARD DREW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ed Schantz, representi­ng Monica Rodriguez Smith and her unborn daughter, two of the six victims of the World Trade Center bombing, kisses her name on the 9/ 11Memorial during the 25th anniversar­y ceremony of the event, in New York, Monday.
 ?? RICHARD DREW— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Victoria Rossilli, grand daughter of Stephen Knapp, one of the six victims of the World Trade Center bombing, gets a rose to place on the 9/ 11Memorial, during the 25th anniversar­y ceremony of the event, in New York, Monday.
RICHARD DREW— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Victoria Rossilli, grand daughter of Stephen Knapp, one of the six victims of the World Trade Center bombing, gets a rose to place on the 9/ 11Memorial, during the 25th anniversar­y ceremony of the event, in New York, Monday.
 ?? ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this file photo, firefighte­rs remove a victim on a gurney outside one of the World Trade Center’s twin towers in New York, after a car bomb in an undergroun­d garage rocked the complex. It was a terror attack that foreshadow­ed Sept. 11: the deadly...
ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this file photo, firefighte­rs remove a victim on a gurney outside one of the World Trade Center’s twin towers in New York, after a car bomb in an undergroun­d garage rocked the complex. It was a terror attack that foreshadow­ed Sept. 11: the deadly...

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