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Reflection on September 11, 2001
A Personal Reflection on September 11, 2001
Patricia De Stacy Harrison
Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs
United States Department of State
September 11, 2004
As appeared in the Italian National Daily Newspaper Il Gazzettino
(September 12, 2004)
Venice, Italy
As an American of Italian heritage it means so much to me personally
to be in Venice on September 11, 2004. Among my activities today, Veneto
Region President Galan and I, in the company of renowned architect Daniel
Libeskind, will visit the model of a memorial that commemorates the victims
of the terrorist acts that took place in my country three years ago today.
This memorial, when constructed, will symbolize Italian-American unity
in rejecting terrorism and keeping alive the memory of its victims.
On September 11, 2001, I was in Washington, DC, preparing to enter the
Department of State - where I was preparing for my new role as Assistant
Secretary for Educational and Cultural Affairs. The day that began so
beautifully - the sun shining, the sky clear - ended in horror and sadness.
My good friend Barbara Olson was on the plane that crashed in Pennsylvania.
In my hometown, Brooklyn, New York, so many of the sons and daughters
of my friends were in the World Trade Center Towers on that day. Among
the three thousand people who were murdered that day in those three barbarous
attacks were citizens from ninety countries, including Italy.
Through rituals that included everything from church services to a New
York Yankees baseball game, we began to pray for, remember and honor those
who died that day. We began to understand that we had had heroes among
us all the time - we just never recognized them appropriately - the firefighters,
the police, the emergency workers, our great Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, who
is also a son of Brooklyn, our teachers, our community leaders, chief
among them.
Our First Lady Laura Bush said that everywhere she went people had just
one concern: How can I help? How can I serve?
And I think each of us has asked those questions of ourselves from that
day until today. When we looked up from our grief we could see that the
U.S. Embassy lawn in Rome was covered in flowers brought by the Italian
people. President Ciampi and Prime Minister Berlusconi were there to provide
sympathy and support.
Now, three years later, the generosity of the Italian people is still
evident in the annual scholarship drive by Il Vero Cuore di Venezia for
the children of the New York firefighters who perished on this date three
years ago. The firefighters who did survive will not soon forget the outpouring
of affection and assistance offered by the Italian people.
At the State Department we received thousand of e-mails from Italian
men and women who had come to America on Fulbright or International Visitor
exchanges, or had studied in the United States. They all contained the
same questions: Is the family I stayed with OK? How can I help? How can
I serve?
Daniel Libeskind asked the same questions of himself and the result is
to be seen in his winning design for the new World Trade Center, and again,
in the model being unveiled today in Venice.
In his model for a September 11, 2001 memorial in Padua, Daniel Libeskind
has taken two great symbols of challenge and hope - a beam from the World
Trade Center and the book held by Lady Liberty - and woven them into a
monument that reminds us all of the values that unite us and the responsibilities
that we bear for assuring a future in which all people can live together
sharing peace, prosperity, democracy and human dignity.
My grandfather, Nunziato di Stacio, was born in Venice. When he left
Italy for the United States, like so many generations of Italians, he
sailed past the Great Lady in New York harbor, the Statue of Liberty,
on the way to his new home. Lady Liberty infused my grandfather with the
dream that, building on his Italian roots and traditions, and with the
hope offered by the United States, he could play a part in constructing
a great new world.
Today, many years after my grandfather said goodbye to Venice, I am honored
to be back in this lovely city once again. I am here to commemorate September
11 among so many friends and in the shadow of Daniel Libeskind's model
for the Padua 9/11 memorial. I am here to advocate for that shared future
that unites us, even as we pray for those who gave their lives on this
date three years ago.
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