NEW YORK — Americans paused
again Tuesday to mark the 11th anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, terror
attacks with familiar ceremony, but also a sense that it's time to move
forward after a decade of remembrance.
As in past years, thousands
were expected to gather at the World Trade Center site in New York, the
Pentagon and Shanksville, Pa., to read the names of nearly 3,000 victims
killed in the worst terror attack in U.S. history. President Barack
Obama was to attend the Pentagon memorial, and Vice President Joe Biden
was to speak in Pennsylvania.
But many felt that last year's
10th anniversary was an emotional turning point for public mourning of
the attacks. For the first time, elected officials weren't speaking at
the ceremony, which often allowed them a solemn turn in the spotlight,
but raised questions about the public and private Sept. 11.
"I feel much more relaxed"
this year, said Jane Pollicino, who came to ground zero Tuesday morning
to remember her husband, who was killed at the trade center. "After the
ninth anniversary, that next day, you started building up to the 10th
year. This feels a lot different, in that regard. It's another
anniversary that we can commemorate in a calmer way, without that
10-year pressure."
In previous years, thousands
of family members would attend the ceremony at ground zero. Fewer than
200 family members, clutching balloons, flowers and photos of their
loved ones, had gathered by Tuesday morning at the Sept. 11 memorial,
which opened to the public a year ago. Commuters rushed out of the
subway and fewer police barricades were in place than in past years in
the lower Manhattan neighborhood surrounding ground zero.
Families had a mixed reaction
to the changing ceremony, which kept politicians away from the
microphone in New York for the first time.
For Charles G. Wolf, it's a fitting transition.
"We've gone past that deep,
collective public grief," says Wolf, whose wife, Katherine, was killed
at the trade center. "And the fact that the politicians will not be
involved, to me, makes it more intimate, for the families. ... That's
the way that it can be now."
But Pollicino said it's important that politicians still attend the ceremony.
"There's something missing if
they're not here at all," she said. "Now, all of a sudden, it's 'for
the families.' This happened to our country — it didn't happen only to
me."
And Joe Torres, who put in
16-hour days in the "pit" in the days after the attacks, cleaning up
tons of debris, said another year has changed nothing for him.
"The 11th year, for me, it's
the same as if it happened yesterday. It could be 50 years from now, and
to me, it'll be just as important as year one, or year five or year
ten."
Political leaders still are
welcome to attend the ground zero ceremony, and they are expected at the
other commemorations, as well.
President Obama and first lady
Michelle Obama plan to attend the Pentagon ceremony and visit wounded
soldiers at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. Biden and Secretary of the
Interior Ken Salazar are expected to speak at the Flight 93 National
Memorial near Shanksville, at the site where the hijacked United
Airlines plane went down.
Officeholders from the mayor
to presidents have been heard at the New York ceremony, reading texts
ranging from parts of the Declaration of Independence and the Gettysburg
Address to poems by John Donne and Langston Hughes.
For former New York Gov.
George Pataki, this year's change ends a 10-year experience that was
deeply personal, even as it reflected his political role. He was
governor at the time of the attacks.
"As the names are read out, I
just listen and have great memories of people who I knew very well who
were on that list of names. It was very emotional," Pataki reflected by
phone last week. Among his friends who were killed was Neil Levin, the
executive director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.
But Pataki supports the decision not to have government figures speak.
"It's time to take the next step, which is simply to continue to pay tribute," Pataki said.
The National Sept. 11 Memorial
and Museum — led by Mayor Michael Bloomberg as its board chairman —
announced in July that this year's ceremony would include only relatives
reading victims' names.
The point, memorial President
Joe Daniels said, was "honoring the victims and their families in a way
free of politics" in an election year.
Some victims' relatives and
commentators praised the decision. "It is time" to extricate Sept. 11
from politics, the Boston Globe wrote in an editorial.
But others said keeping politicians off the rostrum smacked of ... politics.
The move came amid friction
between the memorial foundation and the governors of New York and New
Jersey over financing for the museum — friction that abruptly subsided
Monday, when Bloomberg and New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced an
agreement that paves the way for finishing the $700 million project "as
soon as practicable."
Before the deal, Cuomo, a Democrat, and New
Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a Republican, had signaled their displeasure
by calling on federal officials to give the memorial a financial and
technical hand. Some victims' relatives saw the no-politicians
anniversary ceremony as retaliation.
"Banning the governors of New
York and New Jersey from speaking is the ultimate political decision,"
said one relatives' group, led by retired Deputy Fire Chief Jim Riches.
His firefighter son and namesake was killed responding to the burning
World Trade Center.
Spokesmen for Christie and Cuomo said the governors were fine with the memorial organizers' decision.
Of course, it's difficult to remember 9/11 without remembering its impact on the nation's political narrative.
After all, "9/11 has defined
politics in America" since 2001, said Costas Panagopoulos, a Fordham
University political science professor. "At the end of the day, 9/11 was
a public tragedy that affected the nation as a whole."
Associated Press writer Verena Dobnik contributed to this report.
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