9/11: Twelve Years Later, An Unwavering Focus On Remembrance
Loved ones of 9/11 victims gathered Wednesday on the new memorial plaza in downtown Manhattan, where they started to read the names of the nearly 3,000 people who died 12 years ago, when hijacked jets crashed into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon and near Shanksville, Pa.
Beforehand, Gov. Andrew Cuomo, musician Billy Joel, firefighters and others were scheduled to join in a tribute motorcycle ride from a Manhattan firehouse to ground zero.
“No matter how many years pass, this time comes around each year — and it’s always the same,” said Karen Hinson of Seaford, N.Y., who lost her 34-year-old brother, Michael Wittenstein, a Cantor Fitzgerald employee.
“My brother was never found, so this is where he is for us,” she said as she arrived for the ceremony with her family early Wednesday.
While preparations for the ceremony were underway, with police barricades blocking access to the site, life around the World Trade Center looked like any other morning, with workers rushing to their jobs and construction cranes looming over the area.
Name-reading, wreath-laying and other tributes also will be held at the Pentagon and at the Flight 93 National Memorial in Shanksville while the commemoration unfolds at Ground Zero, where the mayor who has helped orchestrate the observances from their start will be watching for his last time in office. And saying nothing.
Continuing a decision made last year, no politicians will speak, including Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
Over his years as mayor and chairman of the National Sept. 11 Memorial & Museum, Bloomberg has sometimes tangled with victims’ relatives, religious leaders and other elected officials over an event steeped in symbolism and emotion. But his administration has largely succeeded at its goal of keeping the commemoration centered on the attacks’ victims and their families and relatively free of political image-making.
Memorial organizers expect to take primary responsibility for the ceremony next year and say they plan to continue concentrating the event on victims’ loved ones, even as the forthcoming museum creates a new, broader framework for remembering 9/11.
“As things evolve in the future, the focus on the remembrance is going to stay sacrosanct,” memorial President Joe Daniels said.
Hinson said she would like the annual ceremony to be “more low-key, more private” as the years go by.