We stood atop a hill in rural southwestern Pennsylvania, and I do mean rural.
Cars, trucks, SUVs and RVs kept pulling into the parking area. Groups of people climbed out of their vehicles and into the suffocating July heat. Then, they too stood on the hilltop, staring down at a grassy clearing in front of a woods.
My brain saw it as a scene out of a Paul Simon song — “We’ve all come to look for America.”
For all its tragedy, heartache and vast ramifications, the resiliency and spirit exhibited in this country on 9/11 is an American story. Virtually anyone who was school-age or older on Sept. 11, 2001, can describe what they were doing when that awful news transformed a peaceful, sunny Tuesday morning into a traumatic national turning point.
More than a million people have traveled to that hill near Shanksville, Pa., to share their stories and contemplate.
“It’s a wonderful setting to think about what happened here and what it means to you,” said Jeff Reinbold, a National Park Service ranger and site manager of the Flight 93 National Memorial.
Ten years ago this Sunday, a group of 40 determined passengers revolted against four suicidal hijackers, forcing the al-Qaida terrorists to crash 20 minutes short of their likely target, the U.S. Capitol. Everyone aboard perished. But the broader, heinous plot to attack symbols of American life did not end as the extremists planned.
Instead, today, people “come to look for America” at the places where the wounds of terrorism were inflicted — Shanksville, the World Trade Center site in New York City, and the Pentagon in Washington, D.C. Once the permanent Flight 93 National Memorial opens Saturday at Shanksville, it will become a 2,200-acre national park where a quarter-million visitors are expected annually. The Pentagon Memorial, a park on the complex’s western side, greets visitors 24 hours a day, all year. Ground zero in Lower Manhattan is now the most visited place in New York City, and the National 9/11 Memorial won’t officially open until Sunday.
There are stories behind the nearly 3,000 lives taken that day by the hijacked plane crashes. Their families have stories, too. The residents and workers in those places have their own stories. So do the visitors. Some seem mundane — “I was working at a diner in Hancock, Maryland.” Others profound — “I lost a good 40 to 50 people I knew.”
On an assignment this summer, I listened to the stories of folks we (my wife, our daughter and I) encountered during a two-week trek to New York, Washington and Pennsylvania. The closer we got to Lower Manhattan, the Pentagon and the tiny community of Shanksville, the sharper the memories of the people. No one we spoke with had to pause to remember. Besides their own whereabouts on 9/11, locals in those places saw the changes in daily routines caused by the attacks. Life is similar, yet different.
Those conversations are reflected in a three-part series, “Walking in the shadows of 9/11,” beginning Friday in the Tribune-Star, as well as in video and audio interviews online at www.tribstar.com.
As a result of that journey, I’ll never think of Sept. 11 the same. My own “where-I-was” tale will share space in my mind with the stories we heard. A mom at the Flight 93 Memorial whose son was enlisted in the Army and is in Afghanistan. The first-cousin of a flight attendant who died in the crash at Shanksville. A priest who opened a memorial chapel near the Flight 93 crash site. A woman visiting the Pentagon Memorial who saw the first plane hit the Twin Towers while walking to work in New York. Her husband who had the difficult task of helping identify victims’ remains as a DNA analyst at a New York crime lab. A pastor who guided several people to safety in a Lower Manhattan subway entrance as the South Tower collapsed. The brother of a man killed in the North Tower. The brother of a fallen firefighter who saved lives.
It’s an American story, not about me, but us.
Mark Bennett can be reached at (812) 231-4377 or mark.bennett@tribstar.com.
Mark Bennett B-Sides
MARK BENNETT: Everyone has a role in this American story (see VIDEO)
- Mark Bennett B-Sides
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MARK BENNETT: 500 history runs in her veins, but she’ll pass on the buttermilk
Katy Balch appreciates tradition. The 20-year-old from Terre Haute understands how neatly her role as one of 33 Indianapolis 500 princesses fits her family.
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B-SIDES: Bloomington brain exhibit gives us something to think about
Most of us never think about our brain.
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MARK BENNETT: Read me to sleep, mom
She read. They listened, staring at the pages.
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MARK BENNETT: A lesson to be learned from Lugar’s loss
It can happen to one of the nation’s most revered, principled, effective, hard-working U.S. senators.
And, if it hasn’t already, it can happen to you. -
MARK BENNETT: Despite challenges, 2012 grads have youth, tenacity on their side
Let the doomsday crowd line up like a scene from “Animal House.”
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MARK BENNETT: Political life imitates art
A movie plot typically touches the extremes of life.
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MARK BENNETT: When it came to artwork, ‘Salty’ always kept it real
The depth of my visual art expertise mirrors that of Neil Young.
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MARK BENNETT: Ongoing challenge: To keep Mother Nature from getting trashed
Soggy, mud-caked jeans and a formerly white T-shirt were my youngest son’s summertime uniform, as a kid.
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Playing a legend: Broadway actor practiced hundreds of shots, visited Terre Haute to play Sycamore legend in 'Magic/Bird'
Until now, the words “Larry Bird” and “Broadway production” simply would not appear in the same sentence.
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MARK BENNETT: How much of your spring break will be spent in the digital world?
It seems harsh to give folks a math assignment on the brink of spring break, but wisdom should never take a holiday, so here goes.
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MARK BENNETT: Litter trashes scenery on first day of spring
A mop is an ironic piece of litter.
Someone once used it to keep floors spotless. When its utility ended, this cleaning device became trash on the edge of a road. -
MARK BENNETT: Food for thought
The finest hours in grocery shopping arrive after 10 p.m.
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Need a tourney tip? Try the team that puts people to work
People filling out NCAA brackets and the Republican presidential candidates share the same problem.
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MARK BENNETT: Manning leaves great memories for Colts fans
The emotion behind the words was obvious.
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MARK BENNETT: Terre Haute native saw tornado bearing down on his school
Disaster drills often leave participants grumbling or wisecracking. Until, heaven forbid, they see what Tom Cullen saw Friday afternoon.
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MARK BENNETT: Year of the River a common interest for diverse entities
Water can compel people to get better acquainted.
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MARK BENNETT: Our greatest president had some help from an obscure relative
On this Presidents Day week, historians weigh the impact of Washington, Jefferson and the Roosevelts on Americans’ lives.
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MARK BENNETT: Proposed trail would give river development momentum, reacquaint community with Wabash
Terre Haute and the Wabash River were like strangers living next door to each other.
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MARK BENNETT: Super Bowl luck? His is mostly bad
I’ve learned to take a Seinfeld approach to Super Bowls.
In a flash of clairvoyance, Jerry excitedly reminded buddy George Costanza that “if every instinct you have is wrong, then the opposite would have to be right.” -
MARK BENNETT: Not-so-casual observers
In the minds of many adults, the most upstanding generation of young people was, ironically, their own.
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MARK BENNETT: On the banks of the Wabash, a sculpture
Paul Dresser remembered his hometown at its best. Terre Haute should remember him the same way.
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MARK BENNETT: A reminder for electorate: You get what you vote for
In the rear-view mirror of our lives, some days loom larger than we expected.
For many Hoosiers, the date Nov. 2, 2010, probably fits that category. -
MARK BENNETT: Keys to the future
Steve Witt fielded a jarring phone call in October 2007.
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MARK BENNETT: Hall-of-Famer Larkin delivered more than clutch hits
A logjam of kids swelled behind the first-base dugout in Riverfront Stadium.
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MARK BENNETT: Polian, Colts and Terre Haute were good for one another
Sentimentality seems alien in a discussion of Bill Polian.
That emotion rarely influenced his decisions in 14 seasons as the day-to-day boss of the Indianapolis Colts. He surely felt it, but seldom submitted to it. The NFL is a business, after all, with winning as its bottom line. Polian knew how to make that happen, and did. Anyone or anything threatening to divert the Colts from title contention could not linger. When it came to that mission, Polian functioned with all of the sentimentality of Joe Friday. -
MARK BENNETT: In this day and age, pure quiet is hard to find
It’s hard to emulate JFK — this JFK, at least.
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MARK BENNETT: Rose professor’s bit part in classic holiday movie leaves a major memory
Most of us see a bit of ourselves in “A Christmas Story.” Mike Kukral does so, literally. The 1983 movie grew into a holiday classic because so many of its poignant, awkward and hilarious moments seem to have been pulled straight from our childhood memories.
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MARK BENNETT: Ferrell’s love of Old Milwaukee shines light on Old Terre Haute
Will Ferrell didn’t walk through traffic at Seventh and Wabash for nothing.
Well, actually it might have been for nothing. Apparently, the comedian just likes Old Milwaukee so much that he came to Terre Haute, unannounced, one morning last September to film wacky commercials for the beer. -
MARK BENNETT: Holiday season makes going to the mailbox fun again
Ants decided to set up a colony in our family’s mailbox last summer.
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MARK BENNETT: First impressions: City benefits from hearing visitors’ views of community
The town should blush.
- More Mark Bennett B-Sides Headlines
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MARK BENNETT: 500 history runs in her veins, but she’ll pass on the buttermilk




