September 11, 2001 Remembered

Filed under: Korea — Jeff in Korea at 1:20 am on Thursday, September 14, 2006

The defining moment of my parents’ generation was the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Everyone seems to know exactly where they were and what they were doing when they heard the news that JFK had been killed. That always amazed me. How big would an event have to be in order for literally everyone in the United States and a very large portion of the rest of the world to remember exactly what was going on at the moment it happened? I had speculated many times as to what the defining moment of my generation would be.

Was it the murder of John Lennon in late 1980? No. That was still an event in my parents’ generation. I was only 11. I know who he was, but it wasn’t a defining moment in my life.

Was it the shooting of President Reagan in the Spring of 1981? I was in my sixth grade classroom when they made the announcement over the Providence Elementary School PA system and wheeled the television in to show the news reports. It was a big event, but the President lived and was joking about his shooting only moments after it happened.

Was it the explosion of the space shuttle Challenger in January of 1986? That was a significant event in my life. I remember televisions being wheeled into my high school cafeteria during lunch hour and showing news reports of the shuttle disaster a couple of hours after it happened. Although it was a significant event at the time, the overall shock and impact of that event did not seem to be a “defining moment of a generation.”

Was it the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah building in Oklahoma City on the morning of 19 April 1995? I was in my car driving the 10 minutes it took to get from my house to the law school. During the 8:00 am news, they had said that they had just received word that there had been an explosion at the federal building in Oklahoma City. I didn’t think much of it until I got home a few hours later and saw the television reports. Eventually, the final count was 168 men, women, and children dead. I thought that this incident had a very good possibility of being the big event to define a generation…a terrorist attack on US soil by a US citizen resulting in massive loss of life.

Little did I or anyone else know that in just six and a half years later, there would be an event of such catastrophic proportions that the Oklahoma City bombing would become a footnote in history to most and forgotten by many.

On the night of September 11, 2001 (Korea time) I was at the house of my friend, Trent Thornock. We were talking and have a generally good time. It was getting a bit late, so I decided to head for home so I could get up for work the next morning. As usual, I was listening to the Armed Forces Network on the radio. The problem with AFN in Pusan is that the AM radio signal from the Camp Hialeah in the heart of Pusan was so weak that was always fading in and out in the daytime and at night it was often impossible to pick up.

The AFN reception on the night of September 11 2001 was very spotty. I was about five minutes away from Trent’s house when I was finally able to pick up a weak AFN signal. Expecting to hear their regular evening programming, I was surprised that there was a news cast on the air. Due to the poor reception, I couldn’t quite make out the details of the story. I heard something about the Pentagon, a fire or bomb, evacuations.

I picked up my cell phone and called Trent and asked if he was watching TV. He said that he wasn’t. I told him what I had heard and asked him to tell me what was on CNN. As I am waiting for him to do that I hear on the radio that all US air traffic has been ordered to land as soon as possible. I was still trying to make sense of what was going on.

Trent came back on the line and he said, “Everything is on fire.” Just as I was asking, “what,” the radio signal cleared and I heard the CNN radio announcer say that the South Tower had collapsed. Trent breathed an expletive. He explained that the South Tower of the World Trade Center had just collapsed.

Trent spent the next few minutes piecing the story together and relaying it to me. Two planes had crashed into the towers. One had crashed into the pentagon. A fourth plane was reportedly head toward the White House and fighters were in the air to protect the white house. I told Trent I was heading home to watch the news myself.

I switched over to Korean radio to hear what they were saying. Most were broadcasting the CNN feed with sound and giving a simultaneous translation over the CNN audio. It was easier to hear than the AFN broadcast.

I listened as all flights were ordered to land at the nearest airport and that any flights not landing immediately would be considered hostile and, if necessary, shot down. The next several minutes were fulled with confusion as unconfirmed report after unconfirmed report of collapses and highjackings and bombs hit the airwaves. Suddenly, CNN reported that the South Tower had collapsed. The World Trade Center towers no longer existed.

I was utterly stunned. I had no idea how to react or what to do. The only thing I could think to do was to call my friend Jeff, who grew up in the Bronx and ask if he knew. I called him. He was in a bar on Texas Street having a drink. I asked if he had heard the news. He said what news. I told him that he needed to get to a television immediately because America was under attack and the twin towers had just collapsed. Of course he didn’t believe me. I told him to just shut up and go to a TV.

I got home and was awed by the video images being shown over and over and over again and the complete confusion as to what was going on.

Shortly thereafter, word came that a Korean Air passenger plane from Seoul to New York had been hijacked and that fighters had been scrambled to check it out and, if necessary to blow it out of the sky. Thankfully, it turned out that, for some reason, the pilot had mistakenly broadcast a hijacking code.

I well never forget where I was or what I was doing on that day. I will never forget what was done to my country and it’s citizens.

2 Comments »

Comment by dg611

14 September 2006 @ 3:05 pm

I was laying in bed in that place between sleep and awake when my wife came in and said, “The pentagon is on fire.”
“Huh” I replied and rolled over. She returned to the living room. From the other room I could barely make out,
“washington…new york…airplanes…World trade center….Don!!! Come here!!!” Her voice was more desparate so I staggared into the other room in time to see the CNN coverage of the events. Tower 1 was on fire and a few seconds later, I saw the second plane hit tower two and I let out a scream like I had been stabbed. CNN was showing the footage from a few minutes before. I was now totally awake and in a state of shock. I immediately thought of my cousins living in Manhattan. Were they there?! As CNN returned to the live coverage, I sat transfixed by the events. Shortly after the second tower was struck, I thought I saw it start to buckle and I said to my wife…”Oh God…I think it’s gonna go down.” And as it did, I felt sick, like I was going to throw up. CNN switched between the events. I saw the pentagon and heard about the other planes and the state of panic that was ongoing. My wife asked me,
“What’s going on, I don’t understand?”
“Looks like we are under attack…all those people…it’s rush hour there!” Then, the second tower fell and like I cried aloud. It just poured out of me. All those people! On the planes, in the buildings, on the ground, the firefighters, policemen, who could do this? My wife tried to comfort me but it was useless. I didn’t sleep that night, not at all. I tried to contact my cousins to no avail. Total devestation and a feeling of helplessness all at once was overwhelming. I still weep when I think about it. Even though I was on the other side of the earth, the effect is still there.
I used to think the challenger disaster was the defining disaster in my generation (similar to your’s jeff) because i remember what i was doing at the time like it was yesterday. But that pales in comparison to 9/11. I don’t think I can ever forget the images, events and feelings of that day.

Rest in peace to all who perished.

Comment by tmc1233

16 September 2006 @ 10:21 am

My 30th birthday…. The first reports from AFn were of a small plane hitting one of the towers, and I didn’t think much about it. Friends of mine took me out for a late dinner. We got a call from someone else telling us that the second tower had been hit. A while later that person called and said that a tower had collapsed. We had a hard time believing that. We got to the then local foreigner hang-out which had a big screen TV. From there we watched in awe as CNN (with Korean voicing over) showed the images. The Korean broadcasters would get slammed in the English papers a few days after, for not only taking CNN’s feed for all of the local stations and putting it into Korean, but ALSO voicing over CNN, which deprived non-fluent Korean speaking foreigners outside of AFN broadcast areas from having access to the news and left us just speculating on what was being said.

I also remember the outpouring of sympathy from leaders around the world, even the North Koreans, Cubans, Iranians, and other countries that have had historically bad relations with the US. There was one exception though.

Instead of offering help or even condolences, Kim Dae-jung instead lectured the US about how it was foolish to retaliate, while even leaders like Mohammar Gaddafhi said that if ever there were reason for retaliation, this was it. It was then that I lost any shred of respect I may have had for Kim Dae-jung.

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