Here it is, September 11,
2012. Just 11 years ago, the towers came
down, the Pentagon was gouged, and a lonely plane crashed in a field outside
Pittsburgh before its terrorist pilots could ram it into yet another target. It was a dark day, a day, according to singer
Alan Jackson, “when the world stopped turning.”
It surely did stop turning for thousands of Americans who died that
horrible day at the hands of Bin Laden’s henchmen.
Everybody who lived that day remembers
that day. Do you remember the immediate
aftermath? It was amazing. I’d never seen anything quite like it in my
then 46 years of life. American flags
went up everywhere including on cars and trucks. Churches opened their doors for special prayer
meetings and people came. They came to
pray for the victims, for the victims’ families, and for our country, and many
even prayed for our enemies. For the
next two or three Sundays churches were more crowded as usual—filled with
people looking for hope, looking for answers, looking for something beyond
themselves. And in one of the most
amazing scenes of all, we saw film of our Congressmen and women, Republicans
and Democrats, arm in arm praying together and singing God, Bless America. Nope,
I’d never seen anything like that in my life.
On that day and in the few weeks
that followed, there was no such thing as Republicans or Democrats or
hyphenated-Americans or upper, middle, or lower class Americans. We were all just Americans—united, praying
Americans, “one nation under God, indivisible.”
Having grown up during the turbulent social revolution of the 60s, the
Viet Nam war, and the Watergate scandal of the early 70s, I’d never seen such national
unity in my life than I witnessed in those few short weeks after 9/11.
But, of course, it didn’t
last. Once it was obvious that no more
attacks were imminent, we went back to our old crazy ways of division and
hyphenation, class warfare, and what Bill Clinton called “the politics of
personal destruction.” We went back into
our old ways of not asking what we can do for our country but asking what our
country can do for us. Here it is eleven
years later, and like the Paul Simon song so aptly says, “We’re still crazy
after all these years.”
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