Images
from Ground Zero
By
GREGORY J. RUMMO
SEPTEMBER
25, 2001
IT'S RAINING in
New York City today—nine days after the destruction of
the twin towers at the World Trade Center. I am on the
E-train and we’ve just pulled out from the 53rd Street
station, on our way downtown.
Subways are noisy and perhaps that is the reason
there are no conversations going on around me. Or maybe
it’s that New Yorkers are still in shock and they
don’t feel like talking yet.
We finally pull into the Nassau Street
station and I make my way through the crowds and up the
stairs to street level. The drizzle and low clouds adds
to the melancholy mood in and around what has come to be
known as “ground zero.”
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The
National Guard stands watch over a city still
in shock. American flags are everywhere. |
New
Yorkers standing in line, waiting for a police
escort to to go into their apartments and
offices. |
Despite
dust masks, patriotism. |
The sidewalks are crowded with people
and there are police, and National Guardsmen everywhere,
politely urging the crowds to keep moving. The odor is
unmistakable—a fetid, permeating blanket that smells
like a combination of damp cement and something slightly
acrid. It is the smell of death—almost 3,000 men,
women and children—who innocently left for work that
morning never expecting that it would be their last day
on the earth. I can only imagine their collective
screams as they were dismembered and crushed underneath
a million tons of hot steel and concrete.
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New
York City's finest. "We serve willingly,
and with passion." |
More
National Guardsmen and more American flags. |
A
one-million ton pile of smoldering steel and
concrete is all that remains of the World
Trade Towers. |
I turn the corner and I
can’t believe my eyes. Where the north tower of the
World Trade Center once stood is a heap of smoldering
rubble surrounded by other buildings, many with their
windows blown out. Gray dust is still piled on window
ledges and what is left on the streets and sidewalks has
formed slurries—gray, opaque rivulets—with the
splashing droplets of rain.
The wet streets and the
diffuse light make it appear like a ghost town. And to
some extent, it is.
It’s true, I
ponder. One cannot grasp the enormity of the
aftermath from this disaster unless seeing it, smelling
it and hearing it in person.
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Eerily
reminiscent of the Coliseum in Rome, the outer
shell of the WTC is all that's left standing. |
Hundreds
line the streets to get a glimpse, a photo or
to express their grief at the scene of utter
destruction. |
It's
raining in New York City today. The sky is
crying; it's lifeless gray tone adds to the
somberness. |
A woman standing next to me
is weeping. “I used to work across the street, over
there,” she says, motioning with her hand. “My fiancée
gave me my first kiss right in front of that tower.” I
gently engage her in conversation, trying to offer some
comfort. I want to put my arm around her and tell her I
understand. But I don’t because I can’t.
How can you understand
the evil minds that would contemplate such horror? After
a few minutes, she tells me she’ll be ok and she moves
on.
Our nation has been rocked
by something never before experienced in its history.
The thin membrane of our security was ruptured on that
beautiful morning of September 11, and horror came
pouring in.
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Friendly,
helpful and understanding. Thank you NYPD. |
The
wet streets and the diffuse light made it
surreal that day in New York City. |
As
people evacuated the towers, firemen rushed
in--and many lost their lives. |
I stop and engage a police
officer in casual conversation.
"Why are all these
people lined up outside your trailer?" I ask.
"Every person needs to
be accompanied by an escort to get into their apartments
or offices in the area we have cordoned off," he
tells me politely. He's warm and friendly. I can tell he
is going out of his way to be sensitive to anyone that
stops to ask what's going on.
I shake his hand and thank
him, patting him on the back. "God bless you,"
I add.
"Oh, by the way,"
I say, reaching into my back pocket. "Let me give
you one of these." It's a Gospel tract--the message
of salvation interwoven through a story about the
writing of our National Anthem during the war of 1812.
An American flag adorns the front cover.
"Thanks," he
says. "I'll read it later."
It's a ghost town,
alright--a Holy Ghost town. n
Other
columns by the author written about the terrorist attack
at the World Trade Center
Terror
Attacks Offer Preview of 'Last Days'
By GREGORY J. RUMMO
THE RECORD, APRIL
11, 2002
Is
Anthrax The Work Of Domestic Terrorism? One Local
Microbiologist Thinks So
By GREGORY J. RUMMO
THE WEEKLY NEWS,
NOV 8, 2001
It
Wasn't Just Democrats That Underestimated George W. Bush
By GREGORY J. RUMMO
NOVEMBER 13, 2001
China
Playing Critical Role In The Manufacture Of Drug To
Combat Anthrax
By GREGORY J. RUMMO
THE HERALD NEWS,
OCT 21, 2001
London
Cab Drivers Are Solidly Behind U.S. War Against Taliban
By GREGORY J. RUMMO
NEW JERSEY HERALD,
OCT 23, 2001
Offering Comfort In The Face Of Conflict
By GREGORY J. RUMMO
THE RECORD OF
HACKENSACK, OCT 11, 2001
On Collective Desolation And The Consoling Power Of
Prayer
By GREGORY J. RUMMO
THE RECORD OF
HACKENSACK, SEP 17, 2001
The American Vision: Liberty Inseparably Linked To Deity
By GREGORY J. RUMMO
THE HERALD NEWS, SEP
30, 2001
(This also appeared in THE WEEKLY NEWS, ENCOURAGING
TIMES, THE NEW JERSEY HERALD and on THE AMERICAN FAMILY
ASSOCIATION's WEBSITE, www.afa.net
)
United Airlines Pilot “No Fear” Of Flying Again
By GREGORY J. RUMMO
THE HERALD NEWS,
SEP 16, 2001
(This also appeared in THE DAILY RECORD,
SEP 24, 2001 and THE NEW JERSEY HERALD, OCT 14,
2001)
E-mail the author at GregoryJRummo@aol.com
Copyright
© GREGORY J. RUMMO
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