The Day Time Stood Still
By Robin L. Gass
It was just another morning when it started out that day with all our plans and schedules we hurried on our way Then time stood still before us as in our disbelief we watched in silent horror wrapped in sorrow, filled with grief The tragedy unfolded as the minutes passed us by the minutes turned to hours and we kept on asking why We prayed to God in Heaven as we faced so many fears and paralyzed within our shock we cried a million tears As the sky was falling down with eyes too blurred to see we cried for every precious life and for humanity I know the earth kept turning as the hours slipped away but while our world was shattering time stood still that day
I looked back at my pictures of New
York City. The 9/11 Memorial and Museum showed up.
There’s nothing like a good museum
and memorial to blatantly show you how little you knew of something that devastated
the country you live in so much.
A Timeline: (Thanks History Channel)
•7:59 am – American Airlines Flight
11, a Boeing 767 with 92 people aboard, takes off from Boston’s Logan
International Airport en route to Los Angeles.
• 8:14 am – United Airlines Flight
175, a Boeing 767 with 65 people aboard, takes off from Boston; it is also
headed to Los Angeles.
• 8:19 am – Flight attendants aboard
Flight 11 alert ground personnel that the plane has been hijacked; American
Airlines notifies the FBI.
• 8:20 am – American Airlines Flight
77 takes off from Dulles International Airport outside of Washington, D.C. The
Boeing 757 is headed to Los Angeles with 64 people aboard.
• 8:41 am – United Airlines Flight
93, a Boeing 757 with 44 people aboard, takes off from Newark International
Airport en route to San Francisco. It had been scheduled to depart at 8:00 am,
around the time of the other hijacked flights.
• 8:46 am – Mohammed Atta and the
other hijackers aboard American Airlines Flight 11 crash the plane into floors
93-99 of the North Tower of the World Trade Center, killing everyone on board
and hundreds inside the building.
• 9:03 am – Hijackers crash United
Airlines Flight 175 into floors 75-85 of the WTC’s South Tower, killing
everyone on board and hundreds inside the building
• 9:24 am – The FAA notified NEADS
of the suspected hijacking of Flight 77 after some passengers and crew aboard
are able to alert family members on the ground.
• 9:37 am – Hijackers aboard Flight
77 crash the plane into the western façade of the Pentagon in Washington, D.C.,
killing 59 aboard the plane and 125 military and civilian personnel inside the
building.
• 9:59 am – The South Tower of the
World Trade Center collapses.
• 10:07 am – After passengers and
crew members aboard the hijacked Flight 93 contact friends and family and learn
about the attacks in New York and Washington, they mount an attempt to retake
the plane. In response, hijackers deliberately crash the plane into a field in
Somerset County, Pennsylvania, killing all 40 passengers and crew aboard.
• 10:28 am – The World Trade
Center’s North Tower collapses, 102 minutes after being struck by Flight 11.
• 5:20 pm – The 47-story Seven World
Trade Center collapses after burning for hours; the building had been evacuated
in the morning, and there are no casualties, though the collapse forces rescue
workers to flee for their lives.
The memorial isn’t like other
structures I’ve seen. Whereas most memorials go up, built into the sky, this
one goes down. It’s built as 2 never-ending fountains—squares that engulf the
perimeters of the former North and South Towers. It was raining that day. My
parents and I found a spot on the North Tower memorial that was void of people.
As you approach, you see a dark granite-like border to the memorial. You hear a
low rumble, which loudens as you near. I’m sure 14 years ago, today would have
been a lot louder. Screams, sirens, breaking materials, trucks, horns, more
screams. But we don’t hear any of that—we just hear water. It’s powerful and
beautiful now. As you get even closer to the border, you see writings etched in
the stone. They are the names of every life lost in the Twin Towers. And there’s
a lot of them. Water cascades from the edge of the memorial, where it flows to
its center; dropping into a smaller square and then to the unknown.
Airport-style security meets you
before you enter the museum’s doors, except they let you keep your shoes on. It
was recommended to us to watch a short film upstairs, to set the tone and fill
in the gaps for the rest of our visit. After a long day of walking the city, we
were only too happy to seize the opportunity to sit. The film presented questions
as posed from the top: Was there anything we could have done? How did we not
see this coming? What do we do now? How do we move forward? What just happened?
Hearing the hurt and remorse in
former and present leaders’ voices made me thankful I was only 6 when 9/11
happened. What a burden to bear.
We continued on with the exhibit and
oh my stars. I had no idea.
One of my favorite parts was the
beginning—where they project the media and people’s reaction to the crashes, on
a global scale. The impact of the Twin Towers rippled across the world. Its
hurt not only preying on the victims’ families, but on sympathetic hearts through
the nations.
The further you walk, the closer you
get to the heart of the museum. An atmosphere forms. You see the foundational
wall of the North Tower, a concrete pillar colored with every emergency
response unit present that day; a wall depicting the way the sky looked, a hall
of names—everyone lost that day, their memory and a glimpse of whom they were; the
“Survivors’ Stairs”, how hundreds escaped using the stairway; a collection of
items from that day: destroyed ambulances and fire trucks, remainders of
structural columns, airplane seatbelts, hard hats, notes saying “87th Floor, 12
people. We’re trapped” and “Please help”, a phone conversation of a husband
saying good-bye to his wife, a flight attendant telling ground control they’ve
been hijacked.
People walk quietly. There is little
talking, with the exception of the occasional question or comment. I think it’s
because Silence is the voice of pain here. And it’s really loud.
The crushing sound of hearts
shattering together is deafening and it’s everywhere in this place. Tears fell.
Some were mine.
As you walk between these walls, you
can’t help but wonder “Where is God in all of this?” Where is He when you watch
EMS lives be taken, as they fight for the lives of others? Or when the little
girl is told her momma isn’t coming from work today?
Or even when the life you’ve been
working to save ends and you have to tell the family they can’t take her home?
Or when your friend’s loved one passes away from a long hard battle with
cancer? Or when a young woman loses her beloved unborn child? Or when a lifeless
little boy washes up on a Turkish shore? On 9/11—14 years ago—when the skies
grew dark with smoke and the earth shook?
Where is God in all that?
The last thing we did at the museum was
watch another film. It walked us through the timeline of 9/11 and what
happened. It didn’t end there though. Figuratively speaking, 9/11 doesn’t end
on 9/11. It bleeds into days, months, and years after. Rubble is hauled away.
Hearts begin to heal. New stones are set in place. The city is reborn. And then
I saw it.
God never left that day. God isn’t
in the business of destruction or pain. He’s in the business of restoration and
redemption. I'm young. I don't have all the answers. I have much to learn. But I saw God with every loving word of sympathy and condolence, when
nations gathered to share the burden of loss and grief. He's there when the desperate prayers
are prayed. He’s there giving hope that tomorrow is a new day with new mercies.
He’s there giving peace for the troubled hearts. He’s there with every new life
and every blessing. He’s there with strength, when there’s nothing left. He’s
there when your coworker gives you a hug and you take a deep breath. Or when
the cancer-fighter’s neighbor organizes meals to be taken to his family. I see
God in that. He’s where children are no longer suffering, where they never have
to fear again, where they are truly loved. He knows the loss of a child—His
only Son died.
Where death and anguish seem
rampant, He’s orchestrating the entrance of life and immeasurable joy. He is a
God of love, the giver of good gifts. His best one yet, through His Son’s death—2000
years ago when the skies grew dark and the ground shook—after 3 days, life came
back. Death was no more.
My sin nailed His Son to the cross. He who
knew no sin, became sin and paid the full and ultimate price for it. So I wouldn’t
have to. So that through Him, I could know His Father. So that I could be made
whole, I can have joy; my weary, sinful, broken heart can have hope, my slate
is wiped clean; I can know righteousness and forgiveness. So that when I die, I
can spend an eternity in a place with no suffering, hijackings, bombings,
starvation, code blues, losses, good byes, or tears—all with the God who
created me. All because after 3 days, His Son came back to life and showed
death has nothing on the Lord of Life. God isn’t in the business of destruction
or pain. He’s in the business of restoration and redemption.
He was there on September 11th, at 8:46am, 9:03am,
9:37am, 9:59am, 10:07am, and 10:28am and He is here now. We grieve the hurt of
that Day Time Stood Still. But we grieve with hope that tomorrow brings
new mercies and that one day, we will never grieve again.
| "No day shall erase you from the memory of time." -Virgil |