Terrorism
Seven Years Later, Sept. 11 Still Resonates
Posted Sep 10, 2008, 04:59 pm CST
By Martha Neil
It's been seven years since terrorists flew two commercial airliners into the World Trade Center's twin towers in lower Manhattan, a third into the Pentagon and, apparently, attempted to fly a fourth, which crashed in a field in Pennsylvania, into an unknown target in Washington, D.C.
But for surviving victims and family members affected by the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, including a significant number of lawyers, life still isn't the same.
After spending two-and-a-half years recovering from burns he sustained while riding up to the 104th floor on the elevator as his building exploded, Harry Waizer has returned to his job as a tax lawyer at Cantor Fitzgerald, in the financial services firm's new midtown Manhattan headquarters, reports the New York Times. His stamina and responsibilities are reduced, however, and he no longer heads the tax department.
“When you are in the hospital for as long as I was and at home for as long as I was, you think about what it is that you want to do with your life,” says Waizer, who is now 57 and never cared much about job titles. The experience, he says, has strengthened his bond with his wife, and his moral compass: “It’s more important for me to be a good person,” he tells the newspaper.
For Alissa Torres, 43, a nonpracticing lawyer whose husband, Eddie Torres, worked at Cantor Fitzgerald, personal heartbreak also has had a positive aspect. She has just published American Widow, which she describes as a 210-page "adult, literary comic book," about her life after Sept. 11, 2001, reports USA Today.
Since that day, her life has often seemed surreal, she tells the newspaper. Initially, she thought her husband might have survived, even though she couldn't find him. A Colombian immigrant, he had worked his way up from being a delivery boy to a dream job as a currency broker.
But two days after the attacks, she says, the truth hit her hard when she saw the CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald crying on television. A week later, her husband's body was recovered. She was about eight months pregnant with their first child at the time.
"It embodies my grief," she says of her book. "I can open it and see this grief and remember it and remember Eddie. But I can also close it and live my life in the present tense seven years later and have a happy home for my son."
Related coverage:
ABA Journal Special Sept. 11 Issue: "Law in the Age of Terror"
Commenting is not available in this weblog entry.
Comments
Posted by Elen Barshevsky - 2 months, 1 week, 5 days, 5 hours, 53 minutes ago
I think that Bin Laden ought to be caught and put into the CORNERSTONE of the NEW World Trade Center for his conspicuous actions. I am still sad at what happened on 9/11, as I had just started my new job when this terrible thing happened. I think we ought to all think about how good our lives have been, and how much better they would have been if this terrible thing didn’t happen. There has to be something we can do to make sure this doesn’t ever happen again. Fooey on you, Bin Laden!
Posted by J.D. - 2 months, 1 week, 4 days, 22 hours, 50 minutes ago
BUT, 9/11 doesn’t resonate with the people running Google. As you’ve probably noticed, they change their homepage for holidays and “important” events.
Some recent examples include: Earth Day, the 50th Anniversary of Legos, the Olympics.
But today, September 11th, the page does not commemorate the death of thousands.
http://www.cassyfiano.com/2008/09/google-remembers-9-11-too-by-doing-nothing
Posted by Richard Wadsworth - 2 months, 1 week, 4 days, 17 hours, 38 minutes ago
JD is right. Google says nothing. I don’t understand how they could have missed this; unless of course, it is a concious effort to remain neutral and not piss off the monied terrorists; and if this is the case, Google iare a bunch of spineless dillweeds.
I think Ellen is also right. We should string up that a-hole Bin Laden by his nuts and then bury him at Ground Zero after drawing and quartering him (after a public trial, of course), as payback for 9/11.
It’s time for Guliani to take charge again and run those terrorists the heck out of the U.S. of A, as soon as possible.