HELP AND HEROISM IN A TIME OF
CRISIS
Two of Two
By Dave Andrusko
"Far from pressing it neatly
between the pages of a heavy book, to be
retrieved only on special occasions, the day in
memory has gained in power and urgency."
Nancy Gibbs, TIME magazine, September 10, 2007
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President George W. Bush as he delivered
his remarks at the National Day of
Prayer & Remembrance September 14, 2001,
at the National Cathedral. |
Those of us of a certain
age--maybe 55 and up--will always remember where
we were November 22, 1963, the day President
Kennedy was assassinated, and September 11,
2001, the day in which over 3,000 people lost
their lives in terrorist attacks. I sure do.
On 9-11, I was to go to my
graphic designer to put the final touches the
September issue of National Right to Life News.
I had just come out of a 7/11 convenience story
when I heard the news about the first plane
crashing into North Tower of the World Trade
Center.
Communications were, to put it
mildly, chaotic. There was no realistic reason
to believe my graphic artist would be able to
send the files over the Internet to the printer.
But for reasons to this day I
can not fully explain or even understand, I was
determined that the issue go out that night. A
lengthy series of interruptions and
complications ensued, but we printed NRL News
within a couple of hours of the time we had
originally planned to have the edition roll off
the presses.
The following appeared
subsequently in the October 2001 issue. I
reprint it each and every September 11 because
it tells so much about the caliber of the people
who make up our Movement.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Like aftershocks that follow an earthquake, the
aftermath of the terrorist bombings in New York
City and Virginia and the loss of life on Flight
93 in Pennsylvania continue to roil our nation's
life. Fortunately, as a people, we are
characterized by a unique combination of
self-sufficiency and utter willingness to help
others yet be helped in times of great trouble.
While there are and will
continue to be great uncertainties, we are
blessed by constants that never change. Some of
them involve people just like you, who know a
thing or three about tragedy. Let me tell you a
true story that was told to me by Mary Spaulding
Balch, the director of state legislation for
National Right to Life.
In Mary's words, it was a
mother's worst nightmare. When the World Trade
Center and the Pentagon were attacked, Mary's
nine-year-old daughter, Bridget, was in Paris
accompanied by Mary's sister and Mary's
father-in-law. Neither her sister nor her
father-in-law spoke French.
Mary told me her first thought
was that there would be similar terrorist
attacks on civilians in Europe. (The French army
shared her intuition: Within minutes, soldiers
were everywhere on the streets of Paris.) Like
countless others, it proved impossible for Mary
to reach her family overseas.
Frantic, Mary wanted them
moved to an English-speaking country, at a
minimum. But all international flights had been
immediately cancelled as word (and pictures) of
the terrorist bombings were shown around the
world.
By the next day (Wednesday),
Mary's already considerable anxieties had
multiplied many times over. "Everything was in
French, of course, and it was like they were
marooned," she remembered.
Her first instinct, she told
me, was to ask herself, "Whom could I turn to
for help?" A pro-lifer, of course. But how to
reach one in a foreign country thousands of
miles away during an international crisis?
Then she remembered that Brian
Johnston, NRLC's western regional director,
spoke to a French pro-life group just a couple
of months ago. Mary reached Brian, who provided
her with the e-mail address of Myriam, the woman
who had been his talented and helpful
translator.
She immediately e-mailed
Myriam, who responded via e-mail at midnight
Paris time. (Timewise, Paris is six hours ahead
of the East Coast.)
"She began by saying how
distressed she was by the bombings, how sorry
she was for the loss of life," Mary recalled.
"Then she told me 'I will do what I can.' "What
she did was invaluable and went far beyond the
call of duty.
The very next day, Myriam paid
a much-welcomed visit at the hotel. She took
charge, making phone calls, checking with
airlines, and discovering after much
investigation that there were six scheduled
flights leaving Paris for the United States on
Sunday.
Unexpectedly, there would be
only two departures. "So I went to New York
Sunday not knowing whether my family would get
off the plane," Mary said. "But they did--they
had made it out on the second flight."
Why did Mary want to share
this story? "As a mother, I can't tell you how
reassuring it was to me that my daughter would
be in the care of a pro-lifer. It was like when
someone picks up the phone and you can just tell
from their voice that they really care."
What do you mean? I asked.
"Even though we had never met, I knew Myriam was
'family,'" Mary said. "I knew, I just knew she
would take care of my family."
This story is wonderful not
just for what Myriam did out of the generosity
of her heart for Mary's family, but also because
we know in our hearts that such could be
expected from any pro-lifer. This is greatly
reassuring in the face of the uncertainties of
the next months, and years, to come.
The murderous attack on the
World Trade Center took the lives of over 3,000
people who were in the Twin Towers, on the
airplanes, along with hundreds of firefighters,
police, and emergency medical service personnel
who valiantly gave their lives in an attempt to
rescue trapped men, women, and children.
American history books will
forever include stories of the remarkable
heroism we've been blessed to hear about since
that dark day.
Near the top are the rescuers
who have worked to the point of exhaustion
searching for survivors. Tragically, not many
people were found alive.
Ground-zero construction
worker Frank Silecchia's job was to stop
earth-moving machines when he spotted bodies in
the debris. Three days after the attack, in the
smoking rubble of millions of tons of concrete
and steel, he found sections of beams that had
fallen from the collapsing North Tower which had
"landed in an unusual position" (as Daily News
columnist Rod Dreher wrote): a cross.
"Some people will say it's
velocity or physics that put it there,"
Sileccchia told Dreher. "To me, it's an act of
God."
Several other crossbeams
landed in the form of crosses. Workers removed
the most significant of the crosses from the
wreckage, affixed it to a permanent base, and
then placed it over a fallen crosswalk over West
Street. On October 5, The Rev. Brian Jordan
conducted a blessing ceremony attended by 300
people.
Rev. Jordan said the ceremony
fell on the Feast of St. Francis, a day when
Catholics give thanks "for all of God's
creation."
"We've been hurting for three
weeks," Jordan told the Daily News. "So I also
asked God to heal our nation."
Part One |