It’s been 21 years since the horrific 9/11 attacks that fundamentally shaped American society.
I remember it like it were yesterday. I was at work, when my secretary came up to me and said, “did you hear about that building falling into the river?”
Now, at the time, there was construction down on River Street in Savannah, so I assumed that’s what she was referring to. Little did I know, it was the largest terrorist attack ever on American soil.
It was surreal, as I’m sure all of us with memories of that day can agree.
At the time of the attack, I was also serving as Mayor of Pooler, and that whole month we held events in the city for folks to express their grief and sorrow for the senseless loss of life, particularly for those six individuals from Georgia.
I’d like to take a moment and recognize those Georgians whose lives were cut too short on that tragic day in 2001:
- Claude Michael Gann, 41, a sales executive from Roswell;
- Maynard S. Spence Jr., 42, a construction safety executive from Douglasville;
- Harshad Sham Thatte, 30, a consultant from Norcross;
- Major Stephen V. Long, 39, a U.S. Army soldier from Georgia;
- Major Wallace Cole Hogan Jr., 39, a U.S. Army soldier from Macon; and,
- Adam White, a 26-year-old from Buckhead
Everyone I just named was under the age of 45. It was a sad day for America, one of the saddest days of my life.
While the pain of this event was very real, it alone doesn’t tell the whole story of 9/11.
Like everyone, the people who worked at my pharmacy were so eager to help, so moved to action by fear and anger that they made a poster showing their patriotism for America and asked everyone who came by the pharmacy to sign it.
There are a million stories like mine, of people hugging their loved ones a little tighter, stepping in to care for a neighbor, and supporting those who needed them the most.
The terrorists meant to stoke fear and pain, but they could never have anticipated the love and patriotism that would unite the American people in a way never seen before and unmatched since.
I pray for those who, on this anniversary, are mourning the loss of loved ones. I pray for those whose lives were senselessly taken. And I pray for our veterans and active-duty military, who will not hesitate to protect us if, and when, our country is in need.
But I challenge you on this somber anniversary to also remember the love, the service, and the patriotism that was felt nationwide on 9/12. That is who we are at our core. That is worth remembering, honoring, and celebrating.
God bless America and God bless our troops.