As a bewildered public endeavored to assimilate this overwhelming event, at 903 a.m. a second hijacked jet crashed into Two W.T.C. Millions of people around the world, having been alerted to the incident and now watching the terror unfold on their televisions, watched in shock as the second plane, in the blink of an eye, entered the south tower at approximately the seventy-second floor and partially exited the opposite wall. Fire and police departments were mobilized immediately. Rapid evacuation of the buildings was crucial. Many workers on upper floors, knowing there was no escape, committed suicide by hurling themselves out of windows to their deaths. Then, 62 minutes after it had been crashed into, the south tower crumbled into the streets in a gigantic cloud of dust and debris. Hundreds of police and firefighters intent on their rescue mission lost their lives as Two W.T.C. collapsed. Drivers and attendants of emergency vehicles, unable to abandon their posts, died where they had stopped to give aid and assistance. Employees from the two towers, rushing to escape the raging fires, were caught in the wreckage. Pedestrians, uncertain of which way to turn, and not convinced of the need for urgency, found themselves trapped in an avalanche of concrete. Members of the media, on their way to cover the breaking news of the disaster, became victims of it. Hundreds of commuters, on their way to work via subway, were trapped below ground with no escape possible. Hospital emergency departments, having been notified of the explosions, quickly prepared for the arrival of casualties. When the expected influx failed to materialize, it could only mean that there were few survivors. One W.T.C. collapsed at 1030 a.m., 105 minutes after being hit, adding to the mass confusion in the streets. Seven W.T.C., a later addition to the complex, was damaged,caught fire, and collapsed later that afternoon. Not one of the adjoining structures was left intact. In the aftermath of this incredible misfortune, the pieces of the puzzle began to be put in place. Shortly before 800 a.m. on September 11, 2001, three commercial airliners were hijacked from Logan Airport in Boston, Massachusetts. All were transcontinental flights with passengers destined for California and their full fuel tanks provided the ammunition critical to the mission of the hijackers. Authorities speculate that the pilots were assassinated and their places taken by the terrorists who had had flight training. In all, there were 157 passengers and crew on the two planes. The third plane crashed in Pennsylvania killing 45 passengers and crew. A number of the hostages managed to use their cellular telephones to call their families to say goodbye. Everything occurred in such a short period of time that, other than alerting a handful of people that there were some hijackings, no one had any idea why. The dilemma was that there were no warnings, no demands for ransom, and no hints that this bright, sunny September morning was about to become a day that will live forever in the minds of those who witnessed the tragedy. It will be years before the final toll of damage will be known. To consolidate information, compute the financial losses, designate a monetary value for loss of life, fill the void left on the terrain, to make sense of this misfortune intended to undermine the foundation of America is a formidable assignment. We do know that destruction of the World Trade Center cost the lives of more than three thousand innocent people in the buildings, in the hijacked airplanes, and in the surrounding streets. Who can erase the mental images of those planes smashing into the twin towers? Who is unable to visualize the spectacle of terrified men and women jumping to their doom? How can those of us who observed the collapse of the buildings fail to dwell on the loss of life caused by men,cowards, who lacked the fortitud to proclaim war on their alleged enemy? Today, October 22, 2001, nine more corpses were discovered in the rubble, the first such discovery in several weeks. This may seem trivial when one considers the multitude of people who died. However, the fatalities aren't the only victims of this tragic event. Their families, friends, and colleagues need closure. They need to know with certainty that their loved ones are dead and they need to bury the remains. Unfortunately,most of the casualties will probably never be found because the heat produced by the ignition of jet fuel and the damage incurred by the impact would have instantaneously vaporized everything and everyone in the immediate vicinity. Others, in the buildings or on the streets as the towers collapsed are under so much debris that their bodies may not be found for months. The list of buildings collapsed and damaged includes all seven buildings of the W.T.C.complex comprising W.T.C.6, the US Customs House to the north; W.T.C.3, the 22 story Marriott World Trade Center Hotel just west of Tower Two; W.T.C.4 and 5, the Plaza Buildings, and One Liberty Plaza, a 54 story, 743 foot high building to the east. Firefighters and recovery workers remain on the scene. The fires still smolder beneath the ruins. The American spirit has been bruised and the land has been scarred. The citizens of this powerful nation now realize just how fragile and vulnerable their country is. Nevertheless,they are defiant. They do not consider themselves easy prey for terrorists. They are still optimistic about their place in today's world. They assert that the nightmare visited upon them will be visited upon the perpetrators of this cowardly act. The World Trade Center is no more. The dream of an international axis of business, once a reality,will be revised. Maybe having one place that is so prominent will also be rethought. Whatever the outcome, this massacre has served to strengthen the resolve of a mighty nation. The dream and dreamers will survive. |