OT/MISC 9-11 tribute and remembrance

Dornroeschen

Inactive
Adding voices to relics at 9/11 museum
Growing collection of oral histories will connect artifacts at N.Y. memorial
The Associated Press
updated 3:10 p.m. MT, Wed., Sept. 10, 2008
NEW YORK - The artifacts awaiting their place in the Sept. 11 museum sit in storage — crushed emergency vehicles, dust-covered purses, a giant steel column covered with victims' pictures. Now, voices will bring them to life.

There's the recorded voice of FDNY retiree Peter Bondy, who put Sept. 11 firefighter Jonathan Ielpi's picture on the 62-ton "last column" at the ruined World Trade Center site in 2002.

And John Abruzzo, a quadriplegic, telling how he was carried down 69 stories of the north tower by his colleagues in a special wheelchair.

And Michele and John Cartier, siblings talking about how they found each other in the chaos before the towers fell, and about their brother, James, who did not make it out.

These are among hundreds of Sept. 11 stories — taped remembrances, even podcasts playing on the Internet — being collected by museum planners who want to connect physical relics of the nation's worst terrorist attack to memory.

Hope for special meaning
They hope the multimedia library — already containing more than 800 oral histories — will have special meaning in what has already become one of the most exhaustively documented events ever.

"This is a story that one-third of the world's population lived through in real time," museum director Alice Greenwald says. "We can't tell people what they already know. There are so many living witnesses."

When the museum opens — by 2012 at the earliest — visitors may be able to listen to a firefighter's account of removing the memento-covered steel column while looking at it. There will be a library in the museum where visitors can find stories by computer and listen.

Some survivors waited years to tell their stories and then spent several hours leaving no detail out, chief curator Jan Ramirez says. Their stories often focus on sense memories: the smell in the air, the struggle to see through smoke. One woman saw glass popping from one of the huge trade center towers and likened it to a run quickly forming on a stocking.

Michele Cartier told her story a month ago. She and her brother, James, each worked in a trade center tower. Her building, the north tower, was hit by a hijacked plane first. Cartier, an administrative coordinator at an investment brokerage, began walking 40 flights down. She tried calling James and couldn't get through. It was hot, a little smoky.

"We just kept going down. I don't even remember where we exited," she says.

On the street — Church Street, on the east side of the trade center — she saw another brother, John. She had no idea why he was there. James had called him and told him to find Michele and he came on his motorcycle. Before a plane hit his building.

Brother vanished
They looked and looked for their brother.

"We waited in the crowd trying to find him, praying. Anyone that looked similar to James, I'd scream out his name," she said.

The south tower collapsed, and the siblings ran, tearing John's T-shirt to form small masks to breathe through the sooty air.

Seven years later, Cartier, now 37, thinks James somehow is responsible for John finding her in the crowd and helping her to survive.

"The chances of me finding John in a crowd of thousands was just an act of God," she said. "John was there to help me and James was the instrument that got John there."

James Cartier, 26, was trying to evacuate from the 105th floor of the south tower when it collapsed.

The memorial foundation has been posting excerpts of some of the oral histories on its Web site. Not all of them are about the day itself.

They include Alison and Jefferson Crowther's reminiscences of their son, 24-year-old Welles, known to survivors as "the man in the red bandanna" helping them leave the north tower. In an oral history recorded through the nonprofit StoryCorps project, Crowther's parents remembered bungee jumping with Welles and riding on Space Mountain at Disney World.

Ramirez said several firefighters are now being interviewed to match their stories with a room of crushed fire trucks in storage at an airport hangar.

Then there is Abruzzo, an accountant at the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, who evacuated the trade center twice — after the 1993 truck bombing that killed six people and on Sept. 11, 2001.

It took six hours for Abruzzo, who was in an electric wheelchair, to get down the stairs in 1993. On Sept. 11, the Port Authority had a portable wheelchair on hand in case he ever needed to evacuate.

Ten of his colleagues took turns taking him down 69 stories; two in the front, two in the back.

"They would alternate and some of the stairways were tight," he remembered. No one knew what had happened or that the other tower had collapsed. "I don't remember a sense of urgency, panic," he said. "We stopped at a Snapple machine."

Five minutes after Abruzzo and his friends got outside, the north tower collapsed.

The wheelchair that carried him down is a permanent exhibit at the museum.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26644318/
 

Dornroeschen

Inactive
Statement of Lee Ielpi to the
National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States
March 31, 2003
The FDNY response and evacuation of over 26,000 people speaks to the experience and dedication beyond the traditional training and preparedness. Despite the knowledge of a possible collapse, every member of the department who was dispatched and many who were off duty responded to the 5 alarm including my son Jonathan Ielpi from FDNY Squad 288.

On September 11, I arrived a half an hour after the collapse of Tower 2. My main objective was to locate my son Jonathan Ielpi who was on duty with the FDNY. It became obvious the monumental task at hand to discover anyone. I began rescue operations at the South West Corner of the 16-acre site on West Street. I continued this process for several hours at which time I realized the need for heavy equipment to begin clearing a path into the site to facilitate rescue operations. I was told by an FDNY staff chief to operate with any means that I was able to acquire to begin the task. We continued to work until midnight that evening to search for any survivors.

The FDNY was deemed to be the lead agency for search and rescue operations at the World Trade Center. I continued to work within the FDNY reporting and operating guidelines as the site transitioned from a rescue to a recovery operation. It took three months until December 11, 2001 when we found my son. At which time I continued a daily schedule acting as a liaison with the FDNY recovery operations and contracted private construction companies clearing the site.

This process continued in a twenty-four hour operation seven days a week for nine months. One must understand in the nine-month process the total of 19,934 human body parts were recovered. In October, 2001 through May, 2002 the FDNY utilized a GPS system to map the location of discovery of human loss as displayed on this map with in a 75-foot grid. Multiple layers of discovery from the top of the 75-foot pile to 7 stories beneath the ground level are not represented. The overwhelming task of recovery within the ashes, dust and debris to recover our loved ones took an extreme toll on New York City. The condition of remains and length of recovery attributed to the agony of many families who today still have not been notified of identification. More than 65% of the remains recovered have not been identified today. I commend New York City on the unified response and expertise to manage such monumental catastrophe within a city of 13 million people. The expertise and training for crowd control, response and management for New York City.

The need for information regarding recovery operations from the families who lost loved ones became apparent, especially from the non-uniformed service families. I became involved with the September 11th Widows and Victims Families' Association to distribute information to other families regarding the recovery and identification of our loved ones. Due to the unprecedented nature of the attacks and devastation, the coordination of information, relief and resources became an incredible task in the months that followed. From the consolidation of the missing persons to the filing of paperwork for relief for the families the need for coordination of agencies became apparent.

Failures in Homeland Security.
Immigration; FAA Security; Intelligence Failures.
Response to Attacks at WTC on September 11, 2001.
Coordination of FDNY and Agencies.
Immediate Rescue Extrication.
Heavy Equipment needs. Management of immediate resources.
Recovery operations.
Coordination of Relief on September 11, 2001
Families Response and Information.
Homeland Security Response Preparedness
Deployment of FEMA & Urban Search and Rescue Teams during grounding of FAA.
Future Attacks, coordination for major cities.
Response of New York & Lessons for the Future.
Improvements to response.
Responsibilities of Commission
Regulation of domestic buildings and construction. Guidelines for any construction regulated by local emergency response agency.
Coordination of agencies and relief.
Response and Preparedness.
Lee Ielpi is a native of Great Neck, NY where he resides today with his family. Lee is a father of two girls and two boys. Both sons are firefighters with the FDNY. Lee became a volunteer with his local Great Neck Vigilant Fire Department in 1963 where he rose through the ranks to become Chief of the Department. Lee continues to serve as an active member and trustee of the Vigilant Department.

In 1968, Lee was drafted to serve in the US Army in Vietnam. While serving, he volunteered to be deployed under the Reconnaissance Unit with the Second of the 28 Infantry, First Infantry Division. While serving for his country, Lee earned a Bronze Star for Valor and two ARCOM medals for Valor in addition to being decorated with a Combat Infantry Man's Badge and Air Medals. Lee's first child was born while he was serving in Vietnam in 1970.

Lee Ielpi joined the New York City Fire Department in September, 1970. As a probationary firefighter he was trained during one of the busiest periods of firefighting in Brownsville section of Brooklyn, NY. Lee was selected to serve as a member of the elite Special Operations Company, Rescue 2 in 1977. Rescue companies of the FDNY serve to operate at all working fires within their borough, any type of rescue operation, hazardous materials and scuba operation. These companies assist with all rescue equipment for any type of extrication. While serving in the FDNY, Lee Ielpi was awarded twenty-four recognitions of exemplary service ranging from Class 3 metals to Unit Citations from his Rescue Company. The awards included three of the prestigious Class 3 Rescue medals awarded on separate occasions by New York City and the firefighters who witnessed the hazardous conditions under which the rescues were performed. Lee also received a Class B ribbon of honor for service beyond duty.

On September 11, 2001, Lee arrived at the World Trade Center within a half hour of the second collapse and assisted to organize operations until midnight of that evening. Lee returned to Ground Zero daily to assist organization of the rescue operations. Upon the third week, the rescue operations were reclassified by the City of New York as a recovery operation. As is tradition within the FDNY, Lee worked hands on daily for nine months to bring home all that were lost including his son Jonathan Ielpi, FDNY Squad 288.

http://www.globalsecurity.org/security/library/congress/9-11_commission/030331-ielpi.htm
 

Terriannie

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Today will always be a day of remembrance for me. The horror of 9-11 will always stay in my mind yet I have been given a gift of joy for this day. Today is also my 5th grandchild's birthday. She will be 1 years old and her name is Lillian GRACE.
 

fruit loop

Inactive
Glorified and sanctified be God's great name throughout the world which He has created according to His will. May He establish His kingdom in your lifetime and during your days, and within the life of the entire House of Israel, speedily and soon; and say, Amen.

May His great name be blessed forever and to all eternity.

Blessed and praised, glorified and exalted, extolled and honored, adored and lauded be the name of the Holy One, blessed be He, beyond all the blessings and hymns, praises and consolations that are ever spoken in the world; and say, Amen.

May there be abundant peace from heaven, and life, for us
and for all Israel; and say, Amen.

He who creates peace in His celestial heights, may He create peace for us and for all Israel; and say, Amen.
 

Sugaree

Inactive
I could never forget, it is still so fresh in my mind. I will be walking through this day with a heavy heart.
 

baw

Inactive
Here's a few posts from that fateful day.


EAS ALERT SYSTEM ACTIVATED
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?t=6209


9/11/01 – 7:52 a.m. – Plane crashes into World Trade Center NYC
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?s=&threadid=6205


Weird Looking Crash Site/Pittsburg
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?t=6249


Just got back from gas station
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?t=6287


Some new facts coming out on CNN
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?t=6303
 
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