Baltimore Sun

20 years later, Okla. City pauses to honor victims

- By Tim Talley

OKLAHOMA CITY — Every day when Dr. Rosslyn Biggs goes to work as a federal government veterinari­an she is reminded of her mother, one of 168 people killed in the Oklahoma City bombing and honored Sunday on the 20th anniversar­y of the deadliest terrorist attack on U.S. soil until Sept. 11, 2001.

Biggs has the same job once held by her mother, Dr. Margaret Clark, as a food safety veterinari­an at the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e. She interacts often with some of the people who recall her mother’s profession­alism.

“I remember her spirit and her dedication,” Biggs said as she and other family members gathered around an empty chair adorned with flowers in a field of chairs that memorializ­e the victims of the April 19, 1995, bombing.

“It’s wonderful to see that people still remember and still care,” Biggs said.

Former President Bill Clinton, who was president when the attack occurred, spoke at Sunday’s service at the Oklahoma City Na- tional Memorial & Museum, where the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building once stood. Memorial officials estimated that 2,500 people attended the observance.

“Oklahoma City, you have chosen well,” Clinton said. “For 20 years you have honored the memories of your loved ones. You have inspired us with the power of renewal.”

Clinton said the city has recovered from the terrorist attack “in the face of mad, crazy people who think that difference­s are all that matter.”

“The whole world needs you now,” the former president said in reference to other deadly terrorist attacks that have occurred around the world.

The service started with a 168-second moment of silence to honor each of those who died. It concluded about 90 minutes later with survivors and tearful relatives of the dead reading the names of those killed.

“This was a place of unspeakabl­e horror and tragedy,” said Frank Keating, who completed his first 100 days as Oklahoma’s governor the day before the bomb attack. “How some evil individual would do what he did … is unforgivab­le and absolutely unimaginab­le.”

After the service, LaDonna Battle and her family stood between two of the 168 metal and glass chairs. The two chairs were inscribed with the names of her parents, Calvin and Peola Battle.

“We’re completing a journey with steel hearts,” LaDonna Battle said.

Timothy McVeigh, an Army veteran, carried out the bombing as revenge for the deadly standoff between the FBI and Branch Davidians in Waco, Texas, on April 19, 1993.

In a statement, President Barack Obama thanked first responders who risked their lives after the bombing, law enforcemen­t and prosecutor­s who brought the perpetrato­rs to justice, and ordinary men and women in Oklahoma for their resilience.

“If those murderers hoped to terrorize the American people that day, to break our spirits or shatter the bonds that unite us, then they completely and utterly failed,” Obama said.

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