Have You Forgotten?

Tony Jingo
Seven years ago today, on September 11, 2001, Islamic terrorists hijacked four passenger jetliners and murdered nearly three-thousand Americans, including visitors, on American soil. The al-Qaeda terrorists illegally entered and remained in the United States after obtaining phony documents. These jihadists remained within American borders unchallenged and relatively undetected, until they accomplished their evil designs.

What they did not accomplish was destroying the American spirit.

In an act of war, terrorists in two separate jetliners intentionally slammed into the World Trade Center, another group of jihadists crashed a plane into the Pentagon. A fourth jetliner hijacked and on a deadly course to the White House or U.S. Capitol did not make the intended target. Heroic passengers began to seize control of that plane disallowing the terrorists of their evil desires. That flight ended in a field in Pennsylvania.

Prior to this act of war, America was slumbering and not paying attention to the grave criminality that was afoot. Well, the sleeping giant woke up and so did I. Millions of American's became Patriots that day and rallied behind a sacred cause, the dogged pursuit of justice and the maintenance of Freedom.

As I responded to Ground Zero in my capacity as sergeant of police in the NYPD, I witnessed a side of humanity that makes my vow easy to keep, never to fall asleep again. It was a couple of days after the towers fell that I was on the rescue detail and bucket brigade. Shortly after that, the mission changed and we became the recovery detail. Today, twenty-four people remain missing.

We removed rubble and searched under precarious heaps of concrete and twisted steel, naturally formed by unnatural means. Conversation about the goal of our mission was limited, hope of recovery remained. I dare say even weeks into the mission hope of rescue remained. Hope, no matter how suppressed remained until the last responder ended his or her tour of duty.

From recovering bodies and undefined remains, from following swarms of flies to uncover their desired landing post before they did, to sipping from the bitter cloud that stained your throat and hurt your lungs, the reality of the task was banished to an after thought.

Reality exploded in snatches from otherwise innocuous discoveries. The tip of your boot bumping something soft in the rubble and a look down revealed a woman's purse with the gloss of her families pictures glinting in the sunlight, or spotting an officer sprinting to the make-shift morgue with hair from a recovered brush, in order to provide a DNA sample for closure.

I close my eyes and rewind those images with instant clarity and detect the acrid cloud that turned day into night. I open my eyes and still see those same images, for it is stenciled in the retina. The bone tainted soot will remain in my passages.

You see, my friends, I cannot forget nor do I want to. There are millions of Americans like me, regardless of where they were when those cowardly acts were perpetrated against our resolve. There are others however due to cynicism or blind ideology that will turn a blind eye to evil. Closing your eyes will not make the dark go away, trust me.

The casualty list created on 9/11/2001 did not end on 9/11. There are many of your neighbors still suffering and dying from that toxic cloud. Please, keep them in your prayers and memories.

Today is designated Patriot Day and Americans are implored to find those stored away flags and display them once again. Do you remember how proudly we hailed after that fateful day?

There are many holidays or days of recognition such as Christmas, Thanksgiving, Mother's Day, Father's Day, Memorial Day, just to name a few that inspires a common refrain; "we should give thanks everyday," "we should honor and remember daily," and more. Patriot Day should inspire the same cheer.

Patriotism is not a fleeting sentiment when the going is good or tough; it is a constant unwavering conviction. Patriotism and love of country will encourage and embolden the support and defense of our nation and way of life.

Honor our symbols of Freedom and Honor our Defenders of Freedom.

Never Forget.

Published by Tony Jingo

An American Patriot with an independent view on today's topics. Jingo (noun) One who vociferously supports one's country  View profile

38 Comments

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  • Johnny Yuma8/17/2009

    I was home on 9/11/01 when this took place with my wife, and we didn't have a radio or TV going so didn't know anything about it until that afternoon when our daughter got home and began telling us about it. I had to turn the TV on to figure out what she was talking about, because she was rather excited as she was talking to us. When she's excited she doesn't talk plain. I will always remember what they did and I am glad that Bush was in the White House at that time. I feel sure that if Obama or Clinton either one had been there we would have cowered down like the cowards I feel that both of them are. I am happy to meet someone that was actually there and helped to dig out the remains and helped to identify the victims. I am proud to call myself an American always have been and always will be. It seems to me that most people aren't so patriotic again now. Perhaps because the war lasted longer than they wanted it too. Great piecxe that you have here Tony. Johnny Yuma

  • Greenhill7/16/2009

    I get chills reading this.

  • Deborah Oakes7/1/2009

    And now Iran has millions of protesters to deal with inside their own country. Can you say karma?

  • Jesse Mathewson12/3/2008

    Very well written!

  • Carol Roach12/2/2008

    excellent recount and congrats on making Charlotte's top 10 list

  • mayka11/9/2008

    A very moving article

  • Sheri Fresonke Harper10/28/2008

    Excellent, nice to meet you, I read Louisa's interview :) Sheri

  • Janie Ellington10/24/2008

    Tony--Good to get to know you better through this beautiful article. It is hard to read because it hurts so much but it is important to remember this event.

  • Julia Bodeeb White10/10/2008

    A very moving article. Kudos to you.

  • samaira10/2/2008

    Great and beautiful piece.

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