Remembering the Sept. 11 attacks
- Share via
This month marks the fourth anniversary of a day we will never
forget. On Sept. 11, 2001, 3,000 people died in New York City,
Washington, D.C., and Pennsylvania.
Victims included firefighters and police officers who were
gallantly saving their fellow citizens from the burning World Trade
Center buildings; military personnel on duty at the Pentagon; and
hundreds of others who were simply doing what they did every day.
Fifty Californians died that day. They were people like David and
Lynn Angell of Pasadena, who were passengers on American Airlines
Flight 11, en route to Los Angeles from Boston; and Yeoman 2nd Class
Melissa Rose Barnes of Redlands, a sailor working at the Pentagon
during the time of the attack.
Learning about the victims’ lives -- their family, careers, hopes
and accomplishments -- is one way to personalize a national tragedy.
In fact, I believe it to be the highest form of remembrance. The men
and women who died that day might be numbers to the enemy, but to me
they are heroes, and I want their surviving families to know they did
not die in vain.
We must also remember Sept. 11, 2001, for something else it
represents: the moment when life as we knew it changed. Most people
will be able to tell you exactly where they were when they first
heard the news. The victims were mourned with great sincerity, and
the images of the tragedy quickly became ingrained in our minds and
hearts. All the while, the flag of our nation looked more vibrant
than ever. From that day on, Americans lived their lives a little bit
differently.
In past wars, our enemy had a face and a nation. This time, the
enemy was elusive, almost invisible. We found out that Al-Qaida, an
international terrorist network with membership in the thousands
worldwide, hated our way of life.
Al-Qaida proved to be a methodical and unconscionable enemy,
sending its members to live in America, blending in seamlessly with
our communities and then attacking the very country they had called
home.
With indomitable spirit and great determination, however, the
United States battled back. Our soldiers captured or killed many of
the terrorist leaders in Afghanistan, and we cut off their funding
supplies. As a community, we dutifully supported our troops.
I will never forget Sept. 11, 2001, and by keeping the day alive
in our hearts and minds, we will continue to fight the enemy and show
them that in America, every life counts.
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Tom Harman is Huntington Beach’s Assemblyman. He
also represents the communities of Seal Beach, Cypress, La Palma and
Los Alamitos and portions of Anaheim, Garden Grove, Westminster and
Stanton.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.