The Columbus Dispatch

Starting a new chapter

Let’s leave sorrow and rage to the past in building America’s future

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The sky was clear and the brightest shade of blue on the morning 2,977 people were murdered by 19 terrorists who hijacked four jetliners. h The morning after, America woke up a changed nation. Not all of it was for the worst. h There was unity on Sept. 12, 2001, as waves of pride and empathy engulfed the nation. h Most will recall the red, white, and blue flags displayed as prominentl­y as anything seen on the Fourth of July during the days following the 9/11 terrorist attacks. h The dead weren’t abstract figures. They were us. h Most of us still pause to honor them on the anniversar­y of the deadliest attack on the United States in the country’s history. h The deep feelings may have faded, but back then, so many of us shed tears for those who lost mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters, sons and daughters. h We felt it when the twin towers at the World Trade Center were reduced to rubble, the Pentagon was rocked and a plane filled with passengers who fought back against the terrorists crashed in a field near a reclaimed Pennsylvan­ia strip mine.

“A great people has been moved to defend a great nation. Terrorist attacks can shake the foundation­s of our biggest buildings, but they cannot touch the foundation of America. These acts shatter steel, but they cannot dent the steel of American resolve,” then President George W. Bush declared from the Oval Office hours after the attack.

“America was targeted for attack because we’re the brightest beacon for freedom and opportunit­y in the world. And no one will keep that light from shining,” Bush said.

There was unity that day and a few that followed.

There was also fear. There was also rage.

There were cries for justice and revenge that led to the persecutio­n of innocent Muslims and a war in Iraq and another in Afghanista­n that became the longest in U.S. history until it ended haphazardl­y on Aug. 31.

Nearly 2,300 United States military service members died in Afghanista­n during that 20-year war, according to a recent casualty report from the Department of Defense.

Another 3,528 service members were killed in action from 2003 to 2011 during U.S. operations in Iraq.

America was a changed nation when the sun rose 20 years ago today. Like then, our foundation is shaking today.

As we battle political strife and a deadly enemy so small it cannot be seen with the naked eye, the coronaviru­s, the time is long overdue for unity.

This time, it should not be out of sorrow or dread.

It is time we turned the page to a new chapter.

Let’s embrace the sort of empathy we felt for those killed on 9/11 as we fight against the coronaviru­s pandemic. More than 650,000 Americans have died of coronaviru­s.

Let us truly unify behind the conviction that each and every one of us is worthy of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

As William Tyler Page wrote in 1917 as part of The American Creed, let us be “... a perfect union, one and inseparabl­e; establishe­d upon those principles of freedom, equality, justice, and humanity for which American patriots sacrificed their lives and fortunes.”

That last part is important: Freedom isn’t free. To make sure we all enjoy freedom, we at times must make sacrifices as individual­s for the good of the many. And relatively speaking, some sacrifices are pretty easy, such as wearing a mask and getting vaccinated.

We should reject the fears that keep us divided and oppressed due to race, gender, sexual orientatio­n, religion and a host of other “isms.”

We should abandon the notion that we cannot work together if we see the world through different eyes and elect politician­s who will do the same.

We must work together to address climate change to protect this home we call Earth.

President George W. Bush was right about this point in his Sept. 11 speech: America is the brightest beacon for freedom in the world.

We are that beacon and more. Terrorists shattered steel and collapsed what were at one time the nation’s tallest buildings. But they did not dent the steel of American resolve.

It is time we shined the light for those who will not remember the pain that lingered in our hearts when we woke up on Sept. 12, 2001.

Let the wave take us away.

We can do this.

Editorials are The Dispatch Editorial Board’s fact-based assessment of issues of importance to the communitie­s we serve. These are not the opinions of our reporting staff members, who strive for neutrality in their reporting.

 ?? TONY GUTIERREZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Deborah Jurcak of Grapevine, Texas, leans over to touch the World Trade Center beams in the 9/11 exhibit in the George W. Bush Presidenti­al Library and Museum May 1 in Dallas.
TONY GUTIERREZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS Deborah Jurcak of Grapevine, Texas, leans over to touch the World Trade Center beams in the 9/11 exhibit in the George W. Bush Presidenti­al Library and Museum May 1 in Dallas.

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