The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Rememberin­g 9/11

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This week, Americans are rememberin­g the events of Sept. 11, 2001 — two decades ago. The Mini Page reminds us of what happened that day and why it’s still important 20 years later.

What happened

On Sept .11,2001,19 member sofa group called al-Qaida (al-KIE-duh) hijacked* four airplanes with many passengers and crew.

Some of these hijackers deliberate­ly crashed two passenger planes into the two skyscraper­s of the World Trade Center in New York City.

Other hijackers crashed a jet plane into the Pentagon, the U.S.

Department of Defense headquarte­rs in Arlington,

Virginia, outside

Washington,

D.C.

Hijackers tried to crash a fourth plane, United Airlines Flight 93, into the U.S. Capitol inWashingt­on,D.C.

Brave passengers and crew on Flight 93 heard about the other attacks when they made calls from the jet. They decided to stop the hijackers before they could hurt more people.

* A hijacking (HIGH-jack-ing) is when people steal a plane, train, car or boat by using force or threats.

Flight 93 crashed in an empty field in Somerset County, Pennsylvan­ia. Those passengers and crew lost their own lives, but they saved people in Washington.

About 3,000 people were killed in the four attacks of that day.

Rememberin­g the victims

Since the attacks in 2001, people have built memorials to those who lost their lives in three main places: the site of the World Trade Center in New York, the Pentagon in Virginia, and the field in Pennsylvan­ia where Flight 93 crashed.

At the National

9/11 Memorial and

Museum in New

York, an FDNY

Ladder 3 firetruck recovered after the attacks is on display.

The truck was damaged by falling debris, burned by fires and rusted. The front cab was separated, and the aerial ladder was partially crushed.

The National 9/11 Memorial and Museum includes objects found at the scene, wreckage of the buildings, and oral histories, or interviews with survivors and first responders, about what happened that day.

Each year, on Sept .11, families of the victims gather at the 9/11 Memorial Plaza to read out loud the names of 2,983 people who lost their lives that day and in the 1993 bombing at the same site.

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 ??  ?? The Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001, just after a plane crashed into it.
The Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001, just after a plane crashed into it.
 ?? Photo by Wally Gobetz ??
Photo by Wally Gobetz

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