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President Obama’s speech commemorating 9-11

The Bible tells us, “Weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning.”

Ten years ago, America confronted one of our darkest nights. Mighty towers crumbled. Black smoke billowed up from the Pentagon. Airplane wreckage smoldered on a Pennsylvania field. Friends and neighbors, sisters and brothers, mothers and fathers, sons and daughters – they were taken from us with heartbreaking swiftness and cruelty. On September 12, 2001, we awoke to a world in which evil was closer at hand, and uncertainty clouded our future.

In the decade since, much has changed for Americans. We’ve known war and recession, passionate debates and political divides. We can never get back the lives that were lost on that day, or the Americans who made the ultimate sacrifice in the wars that followed.

And yet today, it is worth remembering what has not changed. Our character as a nation has not changed. Our faith – in God and each other – that has not changed. Our belief in America, born of a timeless ideal that men and women should govern themselves; that all people are created equal, and deserve the same freedom to determine their own destiny – that belief, through tests and trials, has only been strengthened.

These past 10 years have shown that America does not give in to fear. The rescue workers who rushed to the scene; the firefighters who charged up the stairs; the passengers who stormed the cockpit – these patriots defined the very nature of courage. Over the years we have also seen a more quiet form of heroism – in the ladder company that lost so many men and still suits up and saves lives every day; the businesses that have rebuilt from nothing; the burn victim who has bounced back; the families that press on.

Last spring, I received a letter from a woman named Suzanne Swaine. She had lost her husband and brother in the Twin Towers, and said that she had been robbed of “so many would-be proud moments where a father watches their child graduate, or tend goal in a lacrosse game, or succeed academically.” But her daughters are in college, the other doing well in high school. “It has been 10 years of raising these girls on my own,” Suzanne wrote. “I could not be prouder of their strength and resilience.” That spirit typifies our American family. And the hopeful future for those girls is the ultimate rebuke to the hateful killers who took the life of their father.

These past ten years have shown America’s resolve to defend its citizens, and our way of life. Diplomats serve in far-off posts, and intelligence professionals work tirelessly without recognition. Two million Americans have gone to war since 9/11. They have demonstrated that those who do us harm cannot hide from the reach of justice, anywhere in the world. America has been defended not by conscripts, but by citizens who choose to serve – young people who signed up straight out of high school; guardsmen and reservists; workers and businesspeople; immigrants and fourth-generation soldiers. They are men and women who left behind lives of comfort for two, three, four or five tours of duty. Too many will never come home. Those that do carry dark memories from distant places, and the legacy of fallen friends.

The sacrifices of these men and women, and of our military families, remind us that the wages of war are great; that while service to our nation is full of glory, war itself is never glorious. Our troops have been to lands unknown to many Americans a decade ago – to Kandahar and Kabul, to Mosul and Basra. But our strength is not measured in our ability to stay in these places; it comes from our commitment to leave those lands to free people and sovereign states, and our desire to move from a decade of war to a future of peace.

These 10 years have shown that we hold fast to our freedoms. Yes, we are more vigilant against those who threaten us, and there are inconveniences that come with our common defense. Debates – about war and peace, about security and civil liberties – have often been fierce these last 10 years. But it is precisely the rigor of these debates, and our ability to resolve them in a way that honors our values and our democracy, that is a measure of our strength. Meanwhile, our open markets still provide innovators with the chance to create, our citizens are still free to speak their minds, and our souls are still enriched in churches and temples, our synagogues and mosques.

These past 10 years underscore the bonds between all Americans. We have not succumbed to suspicion and we have not succumbed to mistrust. After 9/11, to his great credit, President Bush made clear what we reaffirm today: The United States will never wage war against Islam or any religion. Immigrants come here from all parts of the globe. In the biggest cities and the smallest towns, in schools and workplaces, you still see people of every conceivable race, religion and ethnicity – all of them pledging allegiance to the flag, all of them reaching for the same American dream – e pluribus unum, out of many, we are one.

These past 10 years tell a story of our resilience. The Pentagon is repaired, filled with patriots working in common purpose. Shanksville is the scene of friendships forged between residents of that town, and families who lost loved ones there. New York remains the most vibrant of capitals of arts and industry, fashion and commerce. Where the World Trade Center once stood, the sun glistens off a new tower that reaches toward the sky. Our people still work in skyscrapers. Our stadiums are filled with fans, and our parks full of children playing ball. Our airports hum with travel, and our buses and subways take millions where they need to go. Families sit down to Sunday dinner, and students prepare for school. This land pulses with the optimism of those who set out for distant shores, and the courage of those who died for human freedom.

Decades from now, Americans will visit the memorials to those who were lost on 9/11. They will run their fingers over the places where the names of those we loved are carved into marble and stone, and they may wonder at the lives they led. Standing before the white headstones in Arlington, and in peaceful cemeteries and small-town squares in every corner of our country, they will pay respects to those lost in Afghanistan and Iraq. They will see the names of the fallen on bridges and statues, at gardens and schools.

And they will know that nothing can break the will of a truly United States of America. They will remember that we have overcome slavery and Civil War; we’ve overcome bread lines and fascism; recession and riots; Communism and, yes, terrorism. They will be reminded that we are not perfect, but our democracy is durable, and that democracy – reflecting, as it does, the imperfections of man – also gives us the opportunity to perfect our union. That is what we honor on days of national commemoration – those aspects of the American experience that are enduring, and the determination to move forward as one people.

More than monuments, that will be the legacy of 9/11 – a legacy of firefighters who walked into fire and soldiers who signed up to serve; of workers who raised new towers, of citizens who faced down fear, most of all of children who realized the dreams of their parents. It will be said of us that we kept that faith; that we took a painful blow, and we emerged stronger than before.

“Weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning.”

With a just God as our guide, let us honor those who have been lost, let us rededicate ourselves to the ideals that define our nation, and let us look to the future with hearts full of hope. May God bless the memory of those we lost, and may God bless the United States of America.

 
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Posted by on September 12, 2011 in 9-11

 

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Musings on the tenth anniversary of 9-11

On 11 Sep 01, I was teaching at high school in a small town in the southwest United States. While driving to work I was listening to the Imus in the Morning Show and had heard about Flight 11 flying into the World Trade Center (WTC) and listened to the speculation of what must have happened; as I walked into my classroom I immediately turned on the TV to see what had happened. While watching the CBS Morning News – with about a dozen students – we witnessed Flight 175 hit the WTC. I’m not sure “shock” adequately describes the feelings that morning, but there was no doubt in those few minutes that these were terrorist attacks, and that our world was changing before our eyes.

That night I remember hugging my wife and kids and watching the news. As an Army Reservist, I told my wife, “this is now a war and it’s not a question of ‘if’ but ‘when’ I’ll be called up.” I will forever remember the faces of my children as they tried to cope with what was going on.

For the next week – being a Social Studies teacher – suspended normal class work and – together with my students – watched the beginning of war unfold. We wept together as we witnessed the towers collapse and saw news reports about Flight 77 crashing into the Pentagon, and of the heroism of the passengers and crew on Flight 93 as they rushed to take over the plane forcing its crash into a field in rural Pennsylvania. The days were spent trying to cope with what was being seen, and the feelings of fear and of the unknown future.

By Friday, I decided it was time to give my students a chance to express their feelings. I gave them paper and crayons, markers and colored pencils and told them to draw their feelings. Their feelings poured out onto the paper, and from some there were tears as they drew and wrote about their world turned upside down. I had them write letters to the President and I collected and sent the letters to President Bush. Weeks later he replied, and I gave a copy of the letter to each of my kids.

As the years passed many of my students joined the military, and some found themselves in Iraq and Afghanistan, some multiple times. One didn’t come home. To me, these young men, who willingly volunteered to serve, and to fight, are the greatest generation. They did not hesitate to volunteer and to serve. They willingly went where others would not go. There was no draft.

In 2005, I tried to follow their example, and volunteered to lead a force protection mission for deployment to Iraq; during my training in preparation to go, I was injured severely and eventually received an artificial knee. I have found myself on many occasions wondering if I should have gone anyways, but I would not have been able to move in combat and lead my men the way they would have needed to be led. It is something that will probably always haunt me, that my men went and I did not. They all survived the deployment, but I’ve lost two of them since due to issues with PTSD.

When news came that Osama Bin Laden had been killed by members of Navy Seal Team 6, I rejoiced. I felt no guilt, and still feel none for having done so. Bin Laden hurt my children, and my students. He stripped away some of their innocence and I was glad he was gone. Had I been with the seals I would have – without hesitation – ended his life. To me there are times, and individuals, who are not worthy of trial, nor of justice in the conventional method. He had lived by the sword and he died by the sword.

9-11 is a difficult anniversary. It is not something we celebrate; it is something we commemorate. We mourn the dead and the loss of childhood securities, and we celebrate the heroism of those who rushed into burning buildings, and who’ve fought and suffered on countless battlefields in towns and fields in faraway lands.  We reach out and try to support those who continue to suffer both the seen and the unseen injuries of war. We find ways to help, and we pray for release and for strength, and we pray that the sights and sounds of that fall morning will never be experienced again.

 
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Posted by on September 9, 2011 in 9-11

 

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