Sounding Board -- Jennifer Glueck
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MANHATTAN -- In 1997, I wrote a periodic column for the Daily Pilot as
I attended school in Jerusalem, a city that I and others deem a target
for terrorist violence. Ironically, however, there were no bus bombings
or tragedies during that year of relative peace.
Never did I imagine that I would see an attack of such massive scale
back home on American soil rather than in Israel. How naive and
idealistic this notion seems now.
Leaving the gym in midtown at 8:45 Tuesday morning, I heard the noise
and saw the smoke of the first collision emanating from lower Manhattan.
The rest of Tuesday’s tragedy has been well chronicled. It was an
incredibly eerie and sad day here in New York City.
After being glued to the TV and radio for countless hours Tuesday,
Wednesday I decided to walk the streets near my apartment in northern
Manhattan. The sky was a crystal blue, seemingly reflective of how this
tragedy has suddenly come into clear focus. I look at the diversity of
faces -- black, white, Latino, Asian -- and the solemn expressions are
the same. We quietly nod to each other as if to acknowledge that we are
all in this one together. We are all dismayed and changed by the
pervasiveness of this tragedy.
Thankfully, a resolve of unity seems apparent. I saw subdued parents
supervising their kids on the playground at Riverside Park, mothers with
strollers resting today’s paper on the handlebars as they ambled and
others catching the shade of a quiet park bench.
Once back on Broadway near Columbia University, I noticed many talking
to loved ones and friends on cell and pay phones. Firemen were coiling up
hoses, likely the same ones in emergency use just a few hours ago, and
security guards standing resolute at all campus entrances. Occasionally
overhead, I heard and saw F-16 military planes jetting through the skies
in a display of symbolic defense.
It’s hard to believe that such physical destruction and human loss
occurred at the epicenters of our nation on Tuesday. Even as I write,
there is the smell of an intense ashy smoke outside my window, which is
about five miles north of where the Twin Towers once stood. I have talked
to a few friends who work in the financial district, and most don’t have
any clear sense of when they will be able to return to work. It certainly
will not be this week.
It seems we must remember and mourn those who have been lost while, at
the same time, not give into terrorism and be immobilized or entirely
consumed by this disaster. It is a delicate balance to strike, I realize.
Perhaps the only temporary relief is that our level of security will be
heightened -- although permanently altered as a result.
On a human level, I am relieved that the best aspects of our nation,
our beliefs, values, determination and diversity, have not been shaken in
the least by this incomprehensible and cowardly act.
* JENNIFER GLUECK is originally from Newport Beach and is agraduate
student at Columbia University in New York City. For the Daily Pilot, she
has also written the “Jerusalem Journal,” which chronicled her year of
study at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
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