9/11/01...remember all those lost that day

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I remember the day, and the days afterward, only too well. Working in the aviation sector, I was on my way home from London Gatwick Airport and my wife had just collected me from Three Bridges station.

"A light plane has just hit the World Trade Centre." she told me. It was of interest to us because we had been in the "Windows of the World" in February that year. Naturally, we assumed it was an accident.

When we got home and put the TV on, we were both shocked to see the news footage which was of the second aircraft slamming into the second tower.

My 8 year old daughter came home from school a couple of hours later and when she saw the news her first words were "I hope that lovely black waitress who said about my pretty dress wasn't at work today 'cos she would have been on the top floor, wouldn't she?" (On our February visit, a friendly waitress had travelled with us in the lift (elevator) with her tea trolley and had chatted to my daughter - "My that's a pretty dress - you folks here on a vacation?")

My eyes still go misty thinking about that waitress and hoping she was sick on that day, or working somewhere else!

At work, everything was very subdued. No flights were able to go to the USA, we had loads of aeroplanes stranded in Halifax and in the US and lots of family members worried about people stuck half way through their journies. Passengers moved around the terminals quietly, almost as if they were in church, and not demanding anything - just grateful to be actually going somewhere. Half of my shift was spent answering enquiries from people worried about their loved ones stranded somewhere overseas with jammed cellphone networks and unable to make contact.

.............and, to this day, I still think about the American Airlines, United and US Airways crews who lost their lives. I had probably met one or two of them - the world of aviation is incredibly small - when either they or I have been "non-revving". (Taking a free, or partly free, holiday known as "non-revenue travel".) Along with the other folks of 09/11, they went to work full of the joys of a late summer's day, not knowing that they would never return.

I look at my 21 year old daughter now as she kisses me goodbye and marches away from the house with a smile lighting up her face and her trolley-bag rattling behind her. She is crewing now for bmi (British Midland International) and thoroughly enjoys the job - I think she was born to do it! .................and daddy feels so proud of her when he sees her stepping forward in her uniform or we sit together testing each other on questions to do with "Safety and Emergency Procedures", "Aircraft Specifics" or "Aviation Medical Knowledge". (Yes, folks, there's one hell of a lot more to the job than "chicken or beef?")

A lump comes to my throat because I think of the parents of the crew members who lost their lives and how they must have to live with it every day!

All I can think of is "God Bless Everyone who was hurt on that tragic day."
 
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It was the day before my birthday. I know i do not sound sympathetic but please stop bringing this up. It was traumatising and people want to forget it.
 
Yes, it was traumatising and, yes, on the whole people want to forget it! In the same way as people would like to forget the horrors of the two world wars, all those killed and maimed in the Northern Ireland "troubles", the Japanese earthquake or the resultant tsunami etc etc.

However, you must recognise that human beings like to interact with each other and, sometimes, reliving the events and sympathising with our fellow creatures helps to comfort those who have lost loved ones - it shows people care for one another and haven't forgotten......much as we would like to!

............and reliving events cements relationships between nations. Somehow, the Atlantic Ocean seems very small these days!
 
It was the day before my birthday. I know i do not sound sympathetic but please stop bringing this up. It was traumatising and people want to forget it.

Maybe where you live which is the UK want to forget it, But here in America. It is one of the worst days in America and it changed America forever and not in a positive way either.
 
I don't think anyone in the UK would want to or should forget it, it's is one of the worst atrocities ever committed and had a far reaching effect on most of the civilised world.
It is receiving a lot of media coverage here at the moment, not a bad thing, as it will educate those who were too young at the time to realise the seriousness of the attack, the devastation and distress it caused and it's consequences for the USA and the rest of this planet.........
 
It was the day before my birthday. I know i do not sound sympathetic but please stop bringing this up. It was traumatising and people want to forget it.

Yes, it was traumatizing, but it should never be forgotten! Should we forget Pearl Harbor? How about WWII and Adolph Hitler? Should we forget those simply because it was traumatizing? Never!!!! All that died for those events deserve to be remembered always for the sacrifices that they made to keep us safe. If your loved one had made the Supreme Sacrifice so that you can live safe and free, would you honor his memory by saying we need to forget it so I don't feel so bad??? Nonsense.

Our country and our freedoms were born on the backs of our fellow Americans that were ready to sacrifice any cost to preserve and protect what we cherish so deeply. Our soldiers, firemen, policemen, and any others who protect us from the evils that come to threaten us deserve our undying gratitude, support, and remembrances of those who gave freely of their lives to help those of us they didn't even know. Now that is truly Heroism!

Don't you EVER forget that!
 
...........our freedoms were born on the backs of our fellow Americans that were ready to sacrifice any cost to preserve and protect what we cherish so deeply.

I agree with you with one exception:

.......our freedoms were born on the backs of our fellow "ALLIES" that were ready to sacrifice any cost to preserve and protect what we cherish so deeply.
 
I agree with you with one exception:

.......our freedoms were born on the backs of our fellow "ALLIES" that were ready to sacrifice any cost to preserve and protect what we cherish so deeply.

Indeed they were, sir.....and I stand corrected! Without our allies abroad, we could not have accomplished our missions. My bad for not noticing that and my gratitude goes out to all those brave people from abroad. :wave:
 
I visited America twice many years ago and did the World Trade Centre (although I much preffered the Empire State building). Every time I see a record of 9/11 it does give me the shivers to think I had been up there. What the people on thew other tower must have thought when they seen the first collapse doesn't bear thinking of. The same spiritual nut jobs di8d evil stuff in London, Madrid, Bali and elsewhere.

In Glasgow we only had a small incident when 2 fanatics (one was doctor for goodness sake meant to save life) rammed a car into the airport terminal building starting a fire. One was still alive determined to do his dirtiest but Glasgow folk are a tough breed and he got thumped. However I do accept that 9/11 was the worst possible atrocity. Dozens of people jumpig out windows and the though of a building coming down and you are in it? Horrible. The same though is there regarding the planes at the Pentagon and the other where the passengers took the crzies on sacrificng themselves sadly.The sad aside to this is apparently many people in Afghanistan have no knowldege of the WTC matter at all.
 
We shall never forget
these colors don't run
God bless the usa
oh say can you see
we must dump the BS asap !!!!!!!
 
Nice, Mcguirel

I'll quote this picture anytime !

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Indeed they were, sir.....and I stand corrected! Without our allies abroad, we could not have accomplished our missions. My bad for not noticing that and my gratitude goes out to all those brave people from abroad. :wave:

Absolutely no problem, sir! It is often overlooked that the great country of America as it is today, was formed by a mass migration of people from all over the world to the clarion call from the Statue of Liberty:

Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free;
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore,
Send these, the homeless,
Tempest-tossed to me
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!

Although American, many of the people's roots are from overseas and when America has troubles and needs help, the help from former friends, relations and countrymen of its ancestors is ready and waiting!

Hands Across The Sea!

Now I am just going to close my eyes and say a prayer or two for the Firefighters of New York City. Having read a book concerning those brave people, I had no idea (as I suspect most people have) that they knew as they entered the building with their heavy kit, that they probably would lose their lives in the service of their city, country and people. All that heavy kit that forms the essential toolkit for fighting fires and helping to rescue people had to be manhandled up flight after flight of stairs - the lifts (elevators) were unuseable. Those men knew they were going on a one way journey - but in the spirit of their calling, they had to do their best and quite a few people owe their lives to the actions of those firemen.

I salute those men who are bigger than I will ever be - and I hope the families of those brave men take comfort and pride in knowing that people hold their memories in awe.
 
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G'day! :wave:

To all our American friends, our hearts are with you, across the Pacific from Australia. :D

It is a day in history
We'll never forget
And a day that we'll cry for
And that you can bet

And it is a day that we lost
Thousands of lives
Our family and friends
And husbands and wives

And it is a day we will honor
Those brave who had dared
To go into those Towers
Because they had cared

And it is a day we will fight
To the very end
To make sure that it never
Happens again

And it is a day we will pray
For the loved ones who perished
Who we so dearly loved
And always have cherished

And it is a day we'll request
If it's not too much
That,that spot at ground zero
"Never Be Touched"

- Billy Nardozzi


Cheers! :)

Jake.
 
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It's amazing that some families of the victims were denied to see the ceremony because the celebrities were more important

Jamie
 
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I will never forget the day, I had arrived home after a particularly hard night shift and fell asleep on the couch with the TV on, I was woken by the attacks being on the news and at first, thinking it was a film, Only after a few minutes did the horrifying reality dawn.
To all those in the US, we still stand shoulder to shoulder with you in the UK. We will never forget the day, we will never forget the bravery of all the emergency service personnel who risked their lives to try and save people, we will never forget those that paid the ultimate price for doing their jobs and we will never forget the innocent victims from all nations.

Aho Mitakuye Oyasin (We are all one)
 
PLEASE REMEMBER THE VICTIMS OF 911.

GOD bless those poor innocent people who died on this day ten years ago. I remember it as if it was yesterday I was in LA and was woken up by the news flash it was horrible glad they got that evil guy who was behind it. GOD BLESS AMERICA.
 
It's amazing that some families of the victims were denied to see the ceremony because the celebrities were more important

Jamie

That is what I find wrong about this whole thing. This day is all about the victims of 9/11 and not a day for any politicians to be grandstanding.
 
Seems like only one year ago we did this: http://forums.auran.com/trainz/showthread.php?t=61836&highlight=world+trade+center
http://forums.auran.com/trainz/showpost.php?p=665209&postcount=17

http://images.auran.com/auran.com/trainz/downloads/tracksideaccessories/kuid_58843_3950.jpg
kuid_58843_3950.jpg

World Trade Center [FONT=Verdana, Arial]Type:[/FONT][FONT=Verdana, Arial]Trackside Accessories [/FONT][FONT=Verdana, Arial]Created by:[/FONT][FONT=Verdana, Arial]Magicland [/FONT][FONT=Verdana, Arial]Date:[/FONT][FONT=Verdana, Arial]1st March 2008 [/FONT][FONT=Verdana, Arial]Version:[/FONT][FONT=Verdana, Arial]TRS2004 [/FONT][FONT=Verdana, Arial]KUID:[/FONT][FONT=Verdana, Arial]58843:3950[/FONT]

do you have that on the download station, i would like to have it for a keepsake
 
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