Steel Rises,
New Yorkers Rebuild
Lives on 9/11 Anniversary
By Carolyn
Weaver
NEW YORK,
New York (VOA) — Visitors
to New York will find construction underway on a memorial and museum
at the former site of the World Trade
Center, destroyed
seven years ago in the September 11 terror attacks. Nearly 3,000
people died that day, most of them in the collapse of the World
Trade Center’s twin towers. Seven years later, the work
of rebuilding is also ongoing in the lives of survivors, as they
remake their own lives while remembering those who were lost.
Last week, construction workers erected the first steel column
for the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. It was installed
where the World Trade Center’s north tower once stood. Joe Daniels,
president of the museum-memorial, says waterfalls will cascade
into two reflecting pools built in the footprints of the twin
towers.
“It’s all about reflecting absence,” Daniels said
in an interview at his office overlooking the site. “The
names of the victims will be arrayed along the sides of these
pools, and people will go there and recognize this is the spot
where the twin towers stood, and it’s not here anymore; and of
course most importantly, the almost 3,000 people who were killed
that day are no longer with us either."
Another centerpiece of the reclaimed "ground zero" area
will be the Freedom Tower, as it’s called. That is the
massive skyscraper whose design and construction has been dogged
by controversy. Developers call it a hopeful symbol of recovery,
while some architecture critics say the fortified base is more
evocative of fear.
The September 11 Memorial & Museum will cover
half of the former World Trade Center site. Daniels says the
project should
be complete by the tenth anniversary of the attacks in 2011.
In the meantime,
a temporary museum established by the September 11th Families
Association draws thousands of visitors. The WTC Tribute Center is just opposite
Ground Zero, a place that 84-year-old Dina LaFond thought she would never visit. “It
took me four years to go back there,” she said last week. “I never
wanted to go there for the rest of my life."
Dina LaFond
is a volunteer at the WTC Tribute Center, where she helps lead
tours around the site. To each group, she tells the story of her own daughter,
Jeanette LaFond-Menichino, an insurance company vice-president.
She was also a serious part-time artist who was
inspired by the view from her office high in the north tower.
She died in
the attacks. Her mother’s story always begins, “She
was 49 years old. She worked on the 94th floor of the north tower,
right where the first plane hit.”
Jeanette took photographs of the view from her office, her mother
says, and used them in her own landscape paintings.
“The clouds would come right up to her window, and sometimes there were
rain clouds, and you could actually see the rainfall. And if you looked above
the clouds, it was completely clear. And when the airplanes and helicopters passed
by, you could actually see in the compartments,” her mother tells the tour
groups.
Dina LaFond’s husband, Jeanette’s father, died nine months
after the attacks. Now LaFond lives alone in her Brooklyn apartment,
surrounded by her daughter’s paintings. But she is rarely at
home. She works two days a week in a bank office in Manhattan,
and attends Catholic Mass every Sunday. A lifelong singer and
dancer, she also joined a tap-dancing troupe that performs at
retirement centers. LaFond’s goal now is to dance one day
on the stage of Radio City Music Hall. She says her activities
keep her happy and hopeful, and not bitter.
“You know, what am I going to do, keep
crying, and like that? You just take each day as it comes.
Thank God that I found
these places where I could go to sing and dance. Of course, yes,
you do have a kind of hatred for these people here who destroy
innocent people. You just have to brush that out of your mind
and hope to God it never happens again, and you hope they come
to their senses and realize how wrong they were."
Recently, LaFond and her surviving daughter,
Anita, recorded their memories of Jeannette as part of a project
called StoryCorps.
Their stories will be included in an audio archive at the September
11 Memorial and Museum when it opens in three years. Dina LaFond
says that she will continue telling her daughter’s story
to visitors. “It gives you a sense that maybe these other
people might have lost someone and don’t know how to deal with
it, and if I tell them that I miss my daughter continuously,
it’s like having another skin on me, that she is always with
me, that I never forget her, and she’s an inspiration for me
to carry on. And if I didn’t do that, I’d really be lost.”
“Thank you for listening,” she told
a group at the end of a recent tour. The tourists, who come
from Britain, Australia,
Japan and other countries, applauded her. Then they lined up
to shake her hand and kiss her cheek.
Articles
Related to the Remembrance of 9/11:
** Pentagon
Memorial Remembers Victims of 9/11 Attacks
** September
11 Memorial Dedicated at Boston Airport
Pentagon
Memorial Remembers Victims of 9/11 Attacks
By Monaliza
Noormohammadi
 |
The Pentagon Memorial will open seven years after the events
of September 11, 2001.
VOA Photo |
(VOA) Seven
years have passed since the September 11th, 2001 terrorist
attacks
on the United States. About 3,000 people died in the coordinated
attacks that
brought down the twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York, left
the Pentagon badly damaged and a smoldering gash in a Pennsylvania field
where the final hijacked airliner crashed after passengers fought the hijackers.
On Thursday,
September 11th, the victims of the attack on the Pentagon will
be remembered at the dedication of the Pentagon
Memorial. The Pentagon
Memorial is opening September 11, 2008 to honor the lives that
were lost on that date seven years ago.
The privately financed Pentagon Memorial Fund has raised approximately
$21 million for the completion of this project.
Pentagon spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Brian Maka
said, "We
wanted people to fully understand and know that we would never
forget these attacks and the people who died on that day."
Kathy Dillaber survived the Pentagon attack but her sister Patty
was killed.
"I wish it wasn’t here," she said, "but
it is and that’s the way it is so I want to honor Patty’s memory.
They’ve
done a beautiful job with the design. I want to honor the memory
of my co-workers, they were all incredibly good people."
The memorial’s design was chosen through an international competition
won by Keith Kaseman and his wife Julie Beckman.
"We wanted it to be like no other simply because that day
was like no other," Kaseman said. "It should be both
individual and collective in nature, and ultimately it should
be imbedded with enough hints and clues that begin to tell the
story of the people who lost their lives. And make you think
— but not prescribe how to think or what to feel."
Each bench is engraved with the name of an individual killed at the Pentagon
The memorial’s focus is 184 benches built over a pool of water – 59 of the
benches face the Pentagon representing the passengers killed on American Airlines
Flight 77. The remaining 125 benches face the opposite direction memorializing
those killed within the building. Each is engraved with the name of one of
the people killed that day at the Pentagon.
The president of the Pentagon Memorial Fund, James J. Laychak,
lost his brother during the attack on the Pentagon.
"There are different people in this world but that doesn’t
make us different," he said. "We all have the same
things, we all have family, we all have moms and dads, and brothers
and sisters; so I’m hoping that this place will help us respect
people a little bit more, and respect the differences we have
in the world."
Organizers are expecting thousands of people to be on hand when
the memorial is dedicated.
September 11 Memorial Dedicated at Boston Airport
(VOA)
A memorial honoring victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks
has been
dedicated at Boston’s Logan
International Airport
in the eastern state of
Massachusetts.
The airport was where 147 passengers and crew members departed on two flights,
American Airlines Flight 11 and United Airlines Flight 175, that hijackers
crashed into the twin towers of New York’s World Trade Center seven years ago.
The outdoor memorial in Boston features two winding walkways that lead to
a glass cube etched with the names of the victims from the two flights.
Tuesday’s ceremony came before a series of events commemorating the terrorist
attacks of 2001, which killed nearly 3,000 people in all.
On Thursday, the seventh anniversary, both U.S. presidential candidates, Republican
John McCain and Democrat Barack Obama, will attend a ceremony of remembrance
at the former World Trade Center site in New York.
Just outside Washington, the U.S. Defense Department will unveil a memorial
dedicated to the 184 people who died when hijackers crashed an airliner into
the Pentagon.
The Pentagon memorial features 184 cantilevered benches over a pool of water.
Each bench is engraved with the name of one of the people killed that day
at the Pentagon, 59 on American Airlines Flight 77 and 125 inside the building.
The privately financed Pentagon Memorial Fund has raised about $21 million
for the project.
A fourth hijacked plane, United Flight 93, crashed into a field in Pennsylvania,
after passengers struggled with the hijackers. All aboard that flight also
perished.