[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 135 (Thursday, September 8, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5456-S5457]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING SEPTEMBER 11
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, it is hard to believe that 15 years ago
this Sunday the Twin Towers fell, smoke from the Pentagon could be seen
from miles away, and a plane went down in a Pennsylvania field. For
those who lived through that horrible day, the memory still feels
fresh.
Of course, this is especially true for those who lost loved ones.
This weekend, Americans across the country will gather to remember the
thousands of innocent lives that were taken so callously and
indiscriminately in those terrorist attacks. And we remember the first
responders, law enforcement, intelligence, and military personnel who
work every single day to keep our country safe.
This year, we must also take a moment to remember the spirit that
united us in the days after the attacks. Americans of all races,
religions, and backgrounds stood together in solidarity to support one
another and stand against the cowardice of terrorism. Following the
attacks, President George W. Bush visited a mosque. At a joint session
of Congress, he reminded Americans that ``no one should be singled out
for unfair treatment or unkind words because of their ethnic background
or religious faith.'' In the years after September 11, our country did
not always live up to those words, but we must remember the ideals,
values, and humanity that sustained us through those first dark days.
In today's political environment, it is easy to lose sight of that
common spirit. Some are trying hard to divide us. A Federal judge has
been accused of bias because of his ethnic heritage. Religious and
ideological tests for visitors to the United States are discussed as
though they are serious policy proposals. The sacrifices of war heroes
and
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Gold Star families are belittled. And that is just the beginning.
On this 15th anniversary of September 11, we must reject this
divisiveness. While Americans will continue to mourn the loss of so
many on September 11 and in the wars that followed, we will never lose
sight of the core principles that so many generations of Americans
fought to protect.
Mr. CARDIN. Mr. President, this Sunday we will solemnly observe the
15th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks that killed 2,977 people
from 93 different nations and injured more than 6,000 others at the
World Trade Center, the Pentagon, and a field near Shanksville, PA. For
those of us old enough to remember, the events of that horrific day are
seared into our memories as if they just happened yesterday. Over 3,000
children lost at least one parent on 9/11. Many of these children were
too young at the time to comprehend what was happening or to remember
it today, even though they suffered such a devastating personal loss.
According to the Census Bureau, nearly 59 million Americans have been
born since 9/11. Most of these young people learn about 9/11 in school,
much the same way an earlier generation of Americans learned about
Pearl Harbor.
For those younger Americans who don't remember 9/11, I think it is
important for them to understand that the attacks did not just test our
character; they revealed it. The worst attack in American history
brought out the best in the American people. Americans responded with
courage and self-sacrifice, with charity and compassion and
volunteerism and with resolve.
There were incredible acts of individual heroism. ``Numerous
civilians in all stairwells, numerous burn [victims] are coming down.
We're trying to send them down first . . . We're still heading up.'' So
said New York City Fire Department Captain Patrick ``Paddy'' Brown,
Ladder 3, as he and 11 of his men climbed an emergency stairwell in the
North Tower, making it to the 40th floor before the Tower collapsed.
His remains were recovered 3 months later. Three hundred and forty-
three members of the New York City Fire Department and 71 law
enforcement officers gave their lives while helping evacuate 25,000
people to safety.
``Are you guys ready? Let's roll.''--so said 32-year Todd Beamer as
he and other passengers aboard United Airlines flight 93 rushed the
cockpit in an attempt to regain control of the jet, which the four al-
Qaeda hijackers apparently intended to crash into the White House or
the U.S. Capitol. The heroism of the flight 93 passengers undoubtedly
saved thousands of lives here in Washington. Todd's wife, Lisa, was one
of at least 17 pregnant women who became widows on 9/11; Morgan Kay
Beamer was born on January 9, 2002.
There were incredible acts of charity and compassion and
volunteerism. The National September 11 Memorial & Museum at the World
Trade Center has documented some of them. Ada Rosario Dolch was the
principal of a high school located just two blocks from the World Trade
Center. On 9/11, she helped to evacuate 600 students safely; meanwhile,
Ada's sister Wendy Wakeford was killed. To honor Wendy's memory, Ada
helped to build a school in Afghanistan that opened in 2005.
In 2006, Tad Millinger started the ``Walk to Raise'' campaign with
high school friends Brandon Reinhard, Chad Coulter, and Dustin Dean.
They walked 650 miles from their hometown of Rossford, OH, to New York
City to raise money for the National September 11 Memorial & Museum at
the World Trade Center and the Flight 93 National Memorial in
Pennsylvania. Tad is now a volunteer firefighter and emergency medical
technician in his hometown.
Sonali Beaven was 5 years old when her father, Alan, was killed on
Flight 93. ``My loss is central to my identity,'' Sonali has said. ``In
a sense, each choice I've made since that day has been crafted by my
experience. But, because of my loss and the nature of my loss, I choose
love and life every day. Because of my father and the other passengers,
I can't let fear limit me. I have to take today and every day and try
to improve the world we live in and spread the ideology of love.''
There has been resolve. We resolved as a nation to bring to justice
the people responsible for 9/11. Roughly 2.5 million Americans have
served in the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq; despite the horrors of war
and multiple deployments, 89 percent of those veterans say they would
join the military again. On May 2, 2011, Navy SEAL Team Six located and
killed Osama bin Laden in Abbottabad, Pakistan, in Operation Neptune
Spear. The global war on terror is far from over, but I am confident we
will prevail. As President Franklin Delano Roosevelt said in his May
26, 1940 fireside chat, ``We defend and we build a way of life, not for
America alone, but for all mankind.''
What I hope our young people--those who don't have a personal memory
of 9/11--will understand is that, out of many, we are truly one. That
was evident on 9/11, and it is still true. Our partisan, political,
philosophical, and regional differences come to the fore during a
Presidential campaign. But these differences ultimately are dwarfed by
what binds us together as Americans: our hopes for our families, our
communities, our Nation, and the world. The best way for all of us to
honor those who died on 9/11 is to remember that and act accordingly--
courageously, generously, compassionately, and with resolve to defend
and promote justice, freedom, and peace at home and abroad.
(At the request of Mr. Reid, the following statement was ordered to
be printed in the Record.)
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