| The radio alarm went off above my head, and I
pulled out of sleep to stretch my arm and turn
it off. My hand lingered over the snooze button.
Something was different this morning.
The usually chipper, inane deejays at Q104.3
had altered their voices. They were serious
and spoke slowly, awkwardly, like people who
are rarely called upon to be serious. I sat up in
bed.
"Jeff has a pretty good view out there in Staten
Island. So Jeff, you said that both towers are
now on fire?"
"That’s right. The first was hit by that plane we
mentioned earlier, and now a very large
explosion has gone off in the second tower. It
appears the second explosion may have been
caused by a second plane, though we haven’t
confirmed that yet. If that does turn out to be
the case, it would seem that the first crash
was not an accident."
"So you’re saying that unless this is an
incredible coincidence, what we’re looking at
here is a coordinated terrorist attack?"
"That’s certainly the way it appears."
I slid into sandals and shuffled to my
roommate Andrew’s bedroom. He was
dressing and preparing for his work day. His
own radio was on, but tuned to a different
station.
"Are you listening to this story about a terrorist
attack? Somewhere on Staten Island, I think."
He looked at me. "They hit the World Trade
Center."
I turned on the TV, but the screen was filled
with static on every channel. Finally, a fuzzy
CBS came through, and we saw what we’d
already pictured in our minds: the two
ramrod-straight skyscrapers towering over the
skyline of Manhattan, pouring black fumes as
if they were factory smokestacks and not the
financial center of the world.
It had finally happened, I thought. The
unthinkable yet all-too-probable event we had
half-feared, half-expected for years, had
happened. The mass destruction of
landmarks in New York City had been
imagined by filmmakers and magazine writers
and crackpot theorists for so long, the idea
had almost become a joke. I remembered a
long-ago subway ride in lower Manhattan, with
a conductor who’d said, "Next stop, World
Trade Center ... unless it’s been destroyed by
Godzilla." Now that the joke had become
reality, it didn’t seem quite so funny.
As Andrew left for work, I called my mom in
Nebraska and left a message that I was alive,
then went online. The lead story on Microsoft’s
homepage was Michael Jordan’s return to the
NBA. The story felt laughably insignificant -- as
would any headline, I thought, more than half
an hour old. CNN and all the major news
network sites were jammed up, and I turned
off my computer after five minutes of watching
the hourglass hang on my screen.
Andrew came back. "I decided not to risk the
subway," he said.
"They’ve shut them down anyway," I said.
"But we should check out the Promenade."
The Brooklyn Heights Promenade, home to
Wall Street execs with multi-million-dollar
nineteenth-century apartments, and favorite
night spot for tourists and hand-holding
couples, sits about four blocks from our
apartment. The walkway faces west across
the East River and offers a breathtaking view
of Manhattan, from the Statue of Liberty on the
left to the Brooklyn Bridge on the right,
anchored by the twin towers of the World
Trade Center directly in the middle.
Right now, the breathtaking view was
streaked with a broad ribbon of smoke, which
stretched southward toward the Statue. The
same scene we had seen on television now
played in front of us -- smoke churned and
rolled from the towers, punctuated by flashes
of flame from below.
Of the hundreds gathered in the small park,
many stood alone, weeping, crossing their
arms against their bodies. Others stood in
small groups around radios, which
announced the Pentagon had also been hit.
Many were women and children -- whose
husbands and fathers, no doubt, worked in
the vicinity of the disaster. A handful, young
men mostly, grew angry. "Strap on your
uniforms, boys," one shouted as he paced the
walkway, "we’re going to war!"
I joined others at the railing who had cameras,
and started shooting everything I saw -- Lady
Liberty with smoke trailing over her head; the
skyline with its two smoldering icons at center;
the Staten Island Ferry crammed with people.
The air smelled like cigarettes, but the smell
was inescapable, carried on the wind.
With a low rumble like a far-off waterfall, the
south tower collapsed. The sound was quickly
overwhelmed by a wail that came from all
sides. Shrieks of disbelief, shock. Great,
grief-stricken sobs. Those who didn’t cry
breathed loudly and painfully, put heads in
their hands. Our greatest landmark, our
symbol of security and stability, had fallen in a
billowing heap of dust.
I would remember it exactly the same way
many others described it later, with words that
speak volumes about both the disaster itself
and our culture: I felt like I was in a movie.
Our view of the city quickly became obscured
by the giant grey cloud, and the deep cries
around me soon formed themselves into
words. "Oh God, oh God, oh God ..."
I couldn’t honestly say where God was then,
as I stood on the Promenade. I don’t expect I’ll
ever have an answer for people who ask,
"How could He allow this to happen?"
The only thing I can say for certain is that I
have seen Him, in other places, not far from
this event ... in the hundreds of people who
lined up to donate blood, so many that the
hospitals were overwhelmed ... in the people
who offered to drive strangers to donation
centers ... in the people who stood at the east
end of the Brooklyn Bridge and offered water
to the throngs escaping the smoke in
Manhattan ... in the man who stood outside
his apartment and handed out surgical masks
to everyone passing by ... in the churches that
stayed open all night for prayer. I even saw
Him on the evening news, in the more than
300 estimated firemen, policemen, and
medical personnel who lost their lives to save
others.
It’s far too early to know what long-term
implications these attacks hold, politically,
emotionally, spiritually, for New York City or for
the United States. But right now we can know
that God is with us, among us, working
through us and thousands of others who may
not even know Him yet. That knowledge gives
us courage to face whatever comes next.
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