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Backtalk Never Forget the Heroes of 9/11 COMMENTARY O W


N THIS ANNIVERSARY, WE CANNOT HELP BUT relive the pain we experienced as a nation when nearly 3,000 innocent Americans were murdered in cold blood.


It isn’t pleasant remembering that day, but we would be remiss if we did not honor them. We owe it to the dead to never forget because they died for us. As Abraham Lincoln said of those who fought and died at Gettysburg, it is “altogether fi tting and proper that we should do this.” We owe it to the living because there is (strange as it may sound) a silver lining in the dark cloud that cast its dreadful shadow that day.


CHRISTOPHER RUDDY


PUBLISHER, NEWSMAX


I’m talking about the shining light of incredible courage that was demonstrated by hundreds of ordinary Americans. On that day we discovered unknown heroes hidden in our midst. Who could forget Todd Beamer, a businessman on United Airlines Flight 93, who shouted “Let’s roll!” as he and his fellow passengers rushed the cockpit to subdue a group


of hijackers. Their jet crashed into a fi eld in Shanksville, Pa., saving an indeterminable number of Americans.


Hundreds of miles away at the site of the burning World Trade Center, more heroes emerged. There was Father Mychal Judge, a Catholic priest, who upon hearing the news of the attack hurried to the burning towers to administer the last rites of his faith to the dying. Tragically, he soon found himself among them.


When I remember the heroic Americans of 9/11, I see them not as civilians, but as citizen soldiers who were thrust unexpectedly into a war they never saw coming.


They remind me of the brave soldiers who stormed the Normandy beaches on D-Day in World War II.


The opening of the fi lm Saving Private Ryan depicts these intrepid men — their average age was just 19 — being cut to pieces by enemy gunfi re as Eisenhower’s “Great Crusade” began the liberation of Europe.


114 NEWSMAX / SEPTEMBER 2011


Standing next to these remarkably brave D-Day soldiers are the equally sturdy, unwavering New York City fi refi ghters of 9/11, who likewise stared into the face of death and deliberately put themselves in harm’s way. Ernest Hemingway famously defi ned courage as “grace under pressure,” and those words certainly apply to the 343 fi refi ghters and paramedics who made the ultimate sacrifi ce for you and me that day. From my perspective, we have never suffi ciently honored these fallen fi refi ghters — and rescue workers, police offi cers and the many other fi rst responders of 9/11 — who voluntarily gave their lives to save others.


I believe such deserving heroes should be awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor so that we might offi cially recognize their unsurpassed courage.


While we are paying tribute, we must not forget those who followed them — the over 6,100 soldiers who lost their lives in Iraq and Afghanistan to protect us, not to mention the thousands more who have been seriously wounded. We can never forget the immense cost that others have paid so that we might go about our lives in peace and prosperity.


Like the Americans who fought and died at Valley Forge, Antietam, and Iwo Jima and hundreds of other bloody battlefi elds since the fi rst shot of the Revolutionary War was fi red at Lexington in 1775, the heroes of 9/11 should never be forgotten.


They represent what is best about our country — the willingness among our people to make immense sacrifi ces to defend our national ideals of liberty and justice.


Beyond this, the heroes of 9/11 are exemplars of an even greater ideal, one which even if we fail to reach, all of us should at least strive to attain. It is an ideal succinctly stated by Jesus in the Gospel of St. John: “Greater love hath no man than this: that a man lay down his life for his friends” — a fi tting epitaph for Todd Beamer, Father Judge, the New York City fi refi ghters, and all the rest who fell that day to save their distant neighbors, many people they did not know but loved nonetheless.


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