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U.S.: Americans Honor Victims, Heroes At Three Terrorism
Sites

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U.S.: Americans Honor Victims, Heroes At Three Terrorism
Sites

By Andrew F. Tully

New York, 12 September 2002 (RFE/RL) -- Americans
yesterday marked the first anniversary of the 11
September terrorist attacks by honoring the people killed
by the terrorists and the heroes who struggled to save
them.

Relatives of the more than 3,000 victims gathered with
dignitaries and sympathetic fellow citizens in New York
City, Washington, and in a field in a rural area of
Pennsylvania to observe the milestone.

Security was strict at all three sites, and the entire
country was under a heightened state of alert because of
what U.S. President George W. Bush called credible
intelligence indicating that new terrorist attacks were
being planned for this solemn day.

New York began its observance before dawn. Police and
firefighters -- the heroes of that day who lost hundreds
of their own colleagues -- led parades through each of
the city's five boroughs, or subdivisions. They marched
in the early-morning darkness, and as the sun began to
lighten the sky. They moved to the rhythm of drums and
Scottish bagpipes.

These five processions of police and firefighters met at
the site where the two towers of the World Trade Center
once stood. There they joined in a ceremony of
remembrance. At 8:46 a.m., precisely one year after the
first of two hijacked planes struck the trade center,
those assembled at the site observed a moment of silence
for the 2,801 dead and missing in New York.

Then the governor of the state of New York, George
Pataki, read President Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg
Address. That speech had been delivered in 1863 in the
midst of the United States Civil War near the site of one
of the conflict's bloodiest battles. Its focus, however,
was not rancor at opposing forces, but reconciliation.

Then the mayor of New York City, Michael Bloomberg,
addressed those present, as well as the millions of
people around the world watching televisions and
listening to radios. Bloomberg said this anniversary of
terrorism would be a day to remember those who died, as
well as those who rushed to their rescue. "Again today,
we are a nation that mourns. Again today, we take into
our hearts and minds those who perished on this site one
year ago and also those who came to toil in the rubble to
bring order out of chaos," Bloomberg said.

Next, relatives of the dead joined dignitaries for the
90-minute process of reading out the names of those
killed or missing in the attack. The recitation was
accompanied by somber music from various performers.
Former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani took his turn in
the reading as renowned cellist Yo-Yo Ma played a
selection by J.S. Bach.

In Washington, meanwhile, Bush and his secretary of
defense, Donald Rumsfeld, presided over a similar
observance at the Pentagon.  Shortly after the terrorists
struck in New York a year ago, a hijacked plane slammed
into the Defense Department headquarters, killing 189
people.

Bush spoke of the pain that Americans still feel from the
loss of life, and of their country's security, on that
day. But the president added that their country is
responding forcefully. "The murder of innocents cannot be
explained -- only endured. And though they died in
tragedy, they did not die in vain. Their loss has moved a
nation to action, in a cause to defend other innocent
lives across the world," Bush said.

And as he has before, Bush reminded Americans that
defeating the Al-Qaeda network will not come soon, and
will not come easily. "What happened to our nation on a
September day set in motion the first great struggle of
the new century. The enemies that struck us are
determined and they are resourceful. They will not be
stopped by a sense of decency or a hint of conscience.
But they will be stopped," Bush said.

After the Pentagon observance, Bush flew to a rural area
of Pennsylvania to visit the site where a fourth hijacked
jetliner -- reportedly headed for another target in
Washington -- crashed a year ago. Officials say this
plane went down because passengers fought the terrorists.
Forty people died in that crash.

Later, Bush also visited New York to lay a wreath at the
site of the attack in that city. And then he gave a brief
speech to the country from Ellis Island in New York
harbor, where many European immigrants first stepped on
American soil.

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