Remembering and Understanding 9/11
September 11, 2011, is the tenth anniversary of that morning in 2001 when a 7th century Arabian warriors’ creed attacked the very heart of the modern world at the dawn of the 21st century.
Ten years later we find America in a state of confusion and disunity concerning the meaning and lessons to be drawn from the Islamist terror attacks of 9/11. This article is offered both as a remembrance of those who were killed by an act of war, and a plea for understanding the nature of the ideology that motivated the terrorists. The decision by a Sharia promoting imam to build a triumphalist mosque adjacent to the 9/11 site has highlighted a great schism in America. There are those who understand the threat posed by fundamentalist Islam and those among us who are unable to. Understanding the threat and confronting it effectively at home and abroad is one the of great challenges America faces today.
This is the scene as I first saw it as a young photographer visiting New York City in 1975. I had no inkling then, that I would be drawn back repeatedly to the towers as a favoured subject over the next 3 decades. This photo was taken from the observation deck of the Empire State Building,
In the center left foreground is the wedge-shaped, 21 story, Flatiron Building completed in 1902. It is one the first skyscrapers ever built, and for years was famous (incorrectly) as the tallest building in the world. The Empire State Building itself held the world’s-tallest record for 41 years until 1972. The most famous symbol of freedom in the world can be seen in the harbor, (distant background right). The Statue of Liberty Illuminating the World is the full name given by the French to their colossal gift, seen between the southern tip of Manhattan and New Jersey.
Each structure in its time inspired the world, with beauty, size, and above all the message of hope that liberty, and man’s creativity thereby unleashed, might lift humankind out of poverty and above tyranny. The World Trade Center (WTC) took its rightful place among them as a symbol of freedom and modernity in 1972.
This is the scene that greeted workers if they looked up as they ascended from subway train to street level on a long spiral stairway. Simplicity of design combined with sheer magnitude produced pure Op Art moire patterns that constantly changed and attracted the human eye.
The photos above show the two towers on the right and the Marriot Hotel on the left. Many escaped from the towers through the hotel before it was shorn in half by the first collapse and later the second.
On an ordinary work day this is how they appeared, serene, magnificently modern and beckoning all to come in and take a trip to the top.
Looking way up one might catch a glimpse of Jan Demczur, the Polish immigrant window washer, and his amazing scaffold machine. He spent each year going up and down, cleaning with a bucket, water, some rags, and a squeegee in all but the most severe weather. On 9/11 he used his metal squeegee to pry open an elevator door, gouge through drywall and create a hole large enough to save five men. They were able to exit the area minutes before the building collapsed.
The Brooklyn and Manhattan bridges through a 100mm telephoto lens from atop the World Trade Center.
Brooklyn Bridge through 300mm lens.
I photographed the World Trade Center over the decades for the beauty, in my eyes, of art icons that played with light and sky. Symbolically, in my mind, they stood for international freedom of commerce and the hope that free markets could draw the world together and help foster peace and security in the world. The Islamists who destroyed them also understood their meaning and attacked them for that reason.
When first I heard, my thoughts were not of the structures at all, but of the thousands of workers who perished so violently and Islam’s obvious hand in it. As news of the devastation unfolded, what I had instantly concluded was confirmed: that bin Laden and Wahabi Islam had struck a blow against western civilization and the very promise that modernity and liberty holds out to the world.
For a brief period after 9/11 the NY Times suspended wielding its pen as a partisan left-wing dagger and did some excellent reporting and should be applauded for that. The “life sketches” done in the days and months after 9/11 offer a unique and inspiring look into what these towers really were: a great combination of free individuals, working and struggling and fulfilling their hearts’ desires. The lives of the victims are clearly described and collectively tell the much greater story of America.
The fabled teeming masses of Manhattans streets are no longer faceless. These life sketches revealed a cross section of American life frozen, researched, and clearly reported. The stories emerged slowly of a group of almost 3,000 American lives halted at the same time and place. Their families and friends live on and gave details to numerous reporters, of the lives lost, that combined, read like nothing else ever written.
All people who want to to know the truth about the American people, unsullied by ideological reporting, should read about those who perished on 9/11/2001. Their lives, their struggles, their loves, and their stories are revealed and together create a portrait of why America has long been the great beacon of hope to a world in despair.
Paul McCartney of The Beatles wrote a song on 9/11 in New York where he happened to be that day. It’s called Freedom, and he sang it at a benefit concert for 9/11 victims, to an audience of rescue workers, cops and firefighters. For this he was vilified by the radical left and “peace activists” in print and on the radio.
This is my right, A right given by God,
To live a free life, To live in freedom,
Talking about freedom, I’m talking about freedom,
I will fight for the right, To live in freedom
And do you want to try and take it away,
You will have to answer, Cause this is my right
Here’s what a Ukrainian friend who suffered tyranny in his homeland had to say about the left-wing reaction to good Sir Paul and his plucky song with it’s Churchillian tone.
“For writing this hardly political but rather morally upright song, McCartney himself immediately became the object of attacks from the self-proclaimed “peace” activists. He was maligned for wanting to “fight for the right to live in freedom” as opposed to “negotiate for the right to live in freedom” or “work together for the right to live in freedom.” McCartney would perhaps be their hero if he had responded to 9/11 by writing a song called American Idiot. But he wrote a song called Freedom, and for that New York’s own public radio WNYC (an affiliate of the taxpayer-funded NPR) arrogantly dismissed Sir Paul as a “pro-war Beatle.” Given that the same people have never denied the “right to fight” to any anti-American entity or ideology, such hypocritical piousness exposed them for what they are — immoral turncoats unworthy of the great culture of freedom that for two centuries has been the beacon for all the genuine freedom-loving people in all corners of the world (regardless of the turncoats’ claim to the contrary).
Thus McCartney’s simple, morally upright tune has inadvertently become a litmus test that continues to reveal two opposing mindsets in our society. The dividing line between these mindsets is the same line that divides the rational from the irrational, truth from fiction, reality from delusion, integrity from corruption, courage from cowardice, and moral standards from moral relativism. And in the heart of this division gapes a void that once was the World Trade Center.” – Oleg Atbashian
This is a scene from near “ground zero” in November 2001. Here we see the wrought iron fence of Saint Paul’s Episcopal Church which is directly across the street from the WTC site. The church was founded in 1766 and George Washington worshiped here before and after the revolution.
These are the words of Christopher Hitchens in an article titled, Solidarity – Our first duty is to stand together against bin Ladinism, in the Wall Street Journal on Sept. 11 2006.
“The beginning of wisdom is to recognize that the United States was assaulted for what it really is, and what it understands as the center of modernity…
But here I am, writing that it was “the United States” that was assaulted. And there was the president, and most of the media, speaking about “an attack on America.” True as this was and is, it is not quite the truth. …more than 80 nationalities could count their dead on that day. It would have been far better if President Bush had characterized the atrocity as an attack on civilization itself, and it would be preferable if we observed the anniversary in the same spirit.
The time for commemoration lies very far in the future. War memorials are erected when the war is won.
On that day, we learned what we ought to have known already, which is that clerical fanaticism means to fight a war which can only have one victor. Afghans, Kurds, Kashmiris, Timorese and many others could have told us this from experience, … Does anyone suppose that an ideology that slaughters and enslaves them will ever be amenable to “us”? The first duty, therefore, is one of solidarity with bin-Ladenism’s other victims and targets, from India to Kurdistan.”
As true and clear as Hitchens words are about half of Americans and a much higher portion of Europeans, either disagree with him or have no idea what he’s talking about. This points to the greatest and indeed our only true weakness here in the west: the division between those who appreciate and understand that western freedoms are sacred, are in peril, and need to be defended at all costs, and those who don’t, or worse, support the other side.
Airline employees from many companies and countries signed this poster in memory of the crew of flight 175 who died when they were crashed into the WTC south tower. The scene is St. Pauls memorial fence.
A Korean man writing on canvas at St. Paul’s fence. Note “Thanks Israel for destroying Iraq’s reactor in 1991!” comment bottom foreground. Imagine how different the world would be if Iraq’s push for a bomb was not thwarted at that time.
“I was there. I looked up and my heart cried for you because I knew there was no escape” is the cri de coeur of an eye witness.
St. Paul’s was used as a staging center for search and rescue personnel. This is the front entrance barricade and directly behind the officer in the center and a little to the right is Ground Zero. These NYPD cops were the only bright faces I saw in the area that day in late November 2001. One officer told me that in the days after 9/11 three feet or more of dusty material covered the ground where they stood. The area still had a sickening odor of death. These cops had seen it all and took it as part of their duty to show a strong confident even cheerful face to the public. Or was it just their way of trying to survive all they had seen with their better natures intact?
Here is what the great Canadian writer Mark Steyn wrote on the 5th anniversary of 9/11:
“One man in the Twin Towers that Tuesday morning must have understood. John O’Neill, a dogged counter-terrorism guy with a whiff of the old-school G-man about him, had just quit the FBI and started work as head of security at the World Trade Center. He made it downstairs where the confabs with rescue workers were punctuated by the thud of bodies from the first jumpers landing on the lobby roof. In the plaza outside, body pieces fell randomly over chairs set up for a lunchtime concert. In the final moments of his life, John O’Neill must have felt his world come full circle. Six years earlier (as vividly recounted in Lawrence Wright’s The Looming Tower) he’d organized the capture in Pakistan of Ramzi Yousef, the man behind the first World Trade Center bombing and a terrorist who’d planned to crash a plane into CIA headquarters.
“In The New York Times, Thomas Friedman wrote: “The failure to prevent Sept 11 was not a failure of intelligence or co-ordination. It was a failure of imagination.” That’s not really true. Islamist terrorists had indicated their interest in US landmarks, and were known to have plans to hijack planes to fly into them. But men like John O’Neill could never quite get the full attention of a somnolent federal bureaucracy. The terrorists must have banked on that: after all, they took their pilot-training classes in America, apparently confident that, even if anyone noticed the uptick in Arab enrollments at US flight schools, a squeamish culture of political correctness would ensure nothing was done about it.”
Five years on, half America has retreated to the laziest old tropes, filtering the new struggle through the most drearily cobwebbed prisms: all dramatic national events are JFK-type conspiracies, all wars are Vietnam quagmires. Meanwhile, Ramzi Yousef’s successors make their ambitions as plain as he did: they want to acquire nuclear technology in order to kill even more of us. And, given that free societies tend naturally toward a Katrina mentality of doing nothing until it happens, one morning we will wake up to another day like the “day that changed everything.” September 11th was less “a failure of imagination” than an ability to see that America’s enemies were hiding in plain sight. They still are.”
– Mark Steyn, New York Sun, Sept. 11 2006
The graveyard behind St. Paul’s where revolutionary war heroes rest. Ground Zero can be seen through the trees. The crater created by the collapse of the towers ended exactly at the back of this churchyard, without disturbing the fence or graves.
These Ladder 10 firefighters lost six of their brothers on 9/11. The rough look of the business next door and the new concrete underfoot attests to the proximity of this station to Ground Zero.
This was the scene in the mid 1980s when I popped into Trinity Episcopal’s idylic grounds a few blocks from St. Paul’s.
Adam and Eve in Manhattan
Mourners kneel at the edge of “the pit” near the corner of Liberty and Trinity streets. – Sept.11 2006
Salman Rushdie the persecuted Indian moslem writer had this to say November 2, 2001.
“Of course this is “about Islam.”…..This paranoid Islam, which blames outsiders, “infidels,” for all the ills of Muslim societies, and whose proposed remedy is the closing of those societies to the rival project of modernity, is presently the fastest growing version of Islam in the world.
This is not wholly to go along with Samuel Huntington’s thesis about the clash of civilizations, for the simple reason that the Islamists’ project is turned not only against the West and “the Jews,” but also against their fellow Islamists. Whatever the public rhetoric, there’s little love lost between the Taliban and Iranian regimes. Dissensions between Muslim nations run at least as deep, if not deeper, than those nations’ resentment of the West. Nevertheless, it would be absurd to deny that this self-exculpatory, paranoiac Islam is an ideology with widespread appeal. – continued below
An Iraqi writer quotes an earlier Iraqi satirist: “The disease that is in us, is from us.” A British Muslim writes, “Islam has become its own enemy.” A Lebanese friend, returning from Beirut, tells me that in the aftermath of the attacks on Sept. 11, public criticism of Islamism has become much more outspoken. Many commentators have spoken of the need for a Reformation in the Muslim world.
The restoration of religion to the sphere of the personal, its depoliticization, is the nettle that all Muslim societies must grasp in order to become modern. The only aspect of modernity interesting to the terrorists is technology, which they see as a weapon that can be turned on its makers. If terrorism is to be defeated, the world of Islam must take on board the secularist-humanist principles on which the modern is based, and without which Muslim countries’ freedom will remain a distant dream.” – Salman Rushdie
NYPD and FDNY banners listing names of the fallen heroes of their respective services.
FDNY …. 343 …. killed —– NYPD …. 23 …. killed
Port Authority Police Dept. banner listing officers killed on 9/11
PAPD …. 37 …. killed ……… one K-9 unit member, Sirius, was also killed.
This photo from September 11, 2006 shows a London bobby passing the Ladder 10 truck.
One aspect that has struck me about the life sketches from the Times is how different the types of people who worked in the WTC were from the terrorists. The New Yorkers were young and old, men and women, of all classes, educational and national backgrounds, races and religions. The terrorists were all Arabs, all male, mostly middle class, educated, mostly Saudi nationals and all Wahabi Muslims.
Winston Churchill in 1921 warned the world to be wary of the Wahabis.
“The Wahabis profess a life of exceeding austerity, and what they practice themselves they rigorously enforce on others. They hold it as an article of duty, as well as of faith, to kill all who do not share their opinions and to make slaves of their wives and children. Women have been put to death in Wahabi villages for simply appearing in the streets. It is a penal offense to wear a silk garment. Men have been killed for smoking a cigarette, and as for alcohol, the most energetic supporter of the temperance cause in this country falls far behind them. Austere, intolerant, well armed, and bloodthirsty, in their own regions the Wahabis are a distinct factor which must be taken into account, and they have been, and still are, very dangerous to the holy cities of Mecca and Medina” – Winston Churchill, House of Commons, 1921, The Culture and Glories of the Arab Race
In 2005 Christopher Hitchens wrote in the british Mirror newspaper:
“We know very well what the “grievances” of the jihadists are. The grievance of seeing unveiled women. The grievance of the existence, not of the State of Israel, but of the Jewish people. The grievance of the heresy of democracy, which impedes the imposition of sharia law. The grievance of a work of fiction written by an Indian living in London.
The grievance of the existence of black African Muslim farmers, who won’t abandon lands in Darfur. The grievance of the existence of homosexuals.
The grievance of music, and of most representational art. The grievance of the existence of Hinduism. The grievance of East Timor’s liberation from Indonesian rule. All of these have been proclaimed as a licence to kill infidels or apostates, or anyone who just gets in the way.
They demand the impossible – the cessation of all life in favour of prostration before atotalitarian vision. Plainly, we cannot surrender. There is no one with whom to negotiate, let alone capitulate.” – Hitchens
The parents of Renee Tetreault Newell visited ground zero Sept 11 2006. Renee Newell was killed when American Airlines flight AA11 was crashed into the WTC north tower at 8:46 am September 11 2001. Renee was an employee of American who was accompanying a friend who was afraid to fly alone.
Saint Nicks Greek Orthodox Church was destroyed by the collapsing towers. The Marriot is on the left.
Since the Wahabi sect consolidated power in Arabia in 1932, they have promoted their totalitarian absolutist version of Islam on a progressively widening scale. Osama bin Laden is the product of Saudi Wahabi schooling. Saudi King Abdullah or the Shia clerics of Iran are little different from bin Ladin in terms of their most cherished religious goal: an entire world which bows to Mecca and obeys Sharia law under penalty of death.
Contemporary Sunni and Shiia Islam take their place in line behind international Socialism and national Socialism/Fascism as the latest models of ruthlessly violent group insanity to threaten Western civilization. For Western leaders to believe that Islam is less dangerous than Communism or Nazism is to commit a terrible error. There are a number of aspects that make 21st century Islam infinitely more dangerous, the fanatical suicidal religious impulse being one and the proliferation of nuclear weapons another.
Some leftists woke up after 9/11 and became what are known in New York as liberal hawks. But not enough heard the wake-up call. Diverse Islamic groups and nations are doing everything in their power to obtain a nuclear device with the intention of using it on the United States. Why not on Europe? Because Islamists know that demographically they will own it, soon enough, unless Europeans drastically change immigration policies. There is scant time or collective will in Europe for any hope on that front. The U.S. is the only force of magnitude that poses a moral and military challenge to Islam’s global surge. Only a united west can hope to survive. In order for that unity to emerge millions of liberals will have to switch sides and support the war effort.
The question remains: if 9/11 didn’t cause a great awakening among the liberal left and socialists of the west, what will?
This is a late afternoon view from the top of the World Trade Center in the mid 1990s. To the west a small pleasure craft is coming into New York. Maybe it was Dan Marino?
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SEE El Marco’s June 6th rally photo-essay – Stop the Mosque at Ground Zero – Part II
Who says it’s not a MOSQUE? Read El Marco’s photo-essay – Prayer Time at the Ground Zero Mosque
See other El Marco Photo-Essays on Islam:
- Islam Clouds Bali’s Horizon
- 9/11 Families Rally Blasts Obama’s Show Trial Travesty
- Cartoons To Die For
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Why not leave a comment?
THANKS FOR VISITING! – NEVER FORGET and NEVER GIVE IN !
……….EL MARCO………..
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towers needed to come down as they represented capitalism and all the wrong it has brought into the world. it isn’t difficult to find cases where the IMF and world bank have destryoed nations, making people slaves and raping natural resources. I’m not an extramist and do not advocate murder of civilians, but when the towers came down, maybe a few people woke up!
Thank you for posting this. I felt this emphasizes the humanity of this event and it’s sequelae rather than expressing our rage and angst. It also took an edge off the journalism emphasis on drama and hype in stories where the content is pretty much sensationalism instead of a journal or diary of reflection.
The photography was wonderful.
El Marco,
THANK YOU FOR BEING THE VOICE FOR AMERICA AND ITS CONSERVATIVE CITIZENS WHO WISH MORE FOR OUR COUNTRY than entitlements from men, but rather our FREEDOM based on scriptures.
No one in the media I’ve read captures what I agree with more, and expresses it so well, as you do with your words and images.
The Grace of our Heavenly Father, His Son and the Holy Spirit Bless you always.
It’s all George Bush’s fault! OK, it works for Democrats so I thought it would be a perfect, all situation explaination of the problems of the world…lol…The real reason is the Tea Party. Wait? That won’t work either. OK, OK, OK. I’ll actually try to think but it’s very, very hard. I’m not used to it at all.
[…] get the full impact of his art and the words he’s chosen to set them like diamonds, you must visit his site and see his cry of the heart for yourself. Truly a work of an […]
Thats great that you talk about Remembering and Understanding 9/11 • Looking at the Left. I was searching for a log time some informations about Remembering and Understanding 9/11 • Looking at the Left.
[…] at the Left has an absolutely wonderful retrospective and memorial piece, Remembering and Understanding 9/11. All people who want to to know the truth about the American people, unsullied by ideological […]
9/11 Will for ever be engrave in my mind. It was 6:00 am on this day that I awoke to my T.V. Alarm Clock only to wake to the tragedy that a Commercial Plane had crashed into one of the WTC New York Towers. Watching this event before heading to work a second Plane hit the other building and then I new, this was no accident but a deliberate senseless act of terrorism and murder. I never made it to work, I stayed home lamenting the fretful events of the day. The WTC Buildings destroy, The Pentagon hit, and the 93 Flight crash where America began the fight to defend her self from such violence was all started by ordinarily American Citizens and not by Our finest train Military Men and Women. Now as we go forward in the struggle to keep America safe, we must not flounder away from the task at hand and keep a vigilant attitude and protect our self’s from foreign and domestic radicals who mean us harm. America stay the course and let’s deal with the responsibility of protecting our American way of life. God Bless America and let’s take a stand, and let’s Roll.
America grieves with the families of the victims of 9-11. This act was not only done to each of you it was done to every freedom loving America. We can not know the depths of your pain, but we do share in your heartaches.
This is a scar on America, but make no mistake about it she is not down nor is she how. I believe as Ronald Reagan emphasized, America is a shining city upon a hill whose beacon light guides freedom-loving people everywhere.”
Those that died on 9-11 were killed because of hatred in a senseless cowardly act by evil people that are taught to hate from birth. What makes America and Americans different is we value life and liberty, enough to die for it. Many brave members of our military have done just that to defeat those that did this to our citizens. We remember the victims of the WTC, Pentagon and Fight #93 that crashed in Shanksville PA field. We honor them, we honor you by pledging to stand up for America and not let those that seek to destroy her be victorious. God Bless each of you and God Bless the USA! America: In God We STILL trust!
A wonderful photo essay!
I’ve visited NYC three times: 1971, 1977, and 2005.
In 1971, I went with some college students to Spanish Harlem and had quite a feast in a famous restaurant there. Part of our Spanish culture course at the university here in Virginia.
In 1977, I recall being awed by the WTC: all the shade that resulted because of those tall, tall buildings, the likes of which we didn’t have at that time in the D.C. area.
In 2005, I visited Ground Zero and St. Paul’s. I cried.
Now, here we are 10 years after 9/11, and so many have gone back to sleep as the whitewash of Islam has deceived them.
[…] Ten years later we find America in a state of confusion and disunity concerning the meaning and lessons to be drawn from […] Looking at the Left […]
Really nice, thank you for taking the time.
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[…] miss also, this collection of essay by 9/11 Chaplains. I particularly liked this one.And this photo essay of the WTC by El Greco GalleryInstapundit has a roundup of writing from those first daysKathryn Jean Lopez: “Raised with […]
[…] El Marko, who writes at “Looking At the Left”, sent us a link to his latest post “Remembering and Understanding 9/11” and it’s the best I’ve seen of the 9-11 memorials, so go […]
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[…] The facts are 2,977 innocent people were killed on 9/11/2001 by 19 Islamist extremists, members of the al Qaeda terrorist organization. The attacks radically changed the world as we know it. A decade later, we have kids who weren’t old enough at the time, but now are able to form their own opinions. And we have adults that don’t understand 9/11: […]
God rest their souls. A tearfilled thank you EM – their lives gone, but not forgotten.
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thank you for this memorial
Beautiful, as always!
[…] in the towers and the Pentagon. Humanity at its worst brought out humanity at its finest that day.El Marco published a 9/11 photo essay that you must see. The photos bring back such memories. Not just memories of that day, but memories […]
[…] and Understanding 9/11 Remembering and Understanding 9/11: A terrific photo tribute by El Marco.Related: Make sure to watch ReelzChannel‘s special 9/11: […]
[…] and Understanding 9/11Remembering and Understanding 9/11: A terrific photo tribute by El […]