“SEPTEMBER 11”
Almost all
adults remember where we were on this day 16 years ago when we heard the news
that the World Trade Center had been attacked by airplanes. I was in the post office in Decatur getting
the mail about 8:45 AM, when one of the postal workers asked me if I thought
that the second plane that hit the buildings was an accident too. At that time, I was not aware that the first
plane had hit the buildings, but I said in reply – “no, it sounds like neither
one of the planes was an accident.” I
hurried home to watch the TV, and I alerted Caroline who had already gone to
work at the church. I saw the twin
towers fall, and I knew then that we were in a new era.
We had just
taken our daughter Susan up to Macalester College in St. Paul for her first
year, and we were worried about her.
Fortunately, one of our former interns, Alika Galloway, was a pastor in
Minneapolis, and we were very relieved when she called us and said: “I don’t know what’s going on, but if this
goes any further, don’t worry about Susan – we’ll get her and bring her to our
house!” We’re still grateful to Alika
for that great ministry to us. Our
hearts still go out to the families of the 3,000 people killed in the twin
towers, the airplanes, and the Pentagon.
I also give thanks for the First Responders who ran towards the
buildings to save lives rather than running away from the buildings to save
their own.
The meaning
of September 11 is still reverberating through our culture, and there are many
levels. All of us have our interpretations,
and these are a few brief ones of mine. First,
the world suddenly shrunk for Americans.
The nuclear age had made us aware that the oceans protecting our shores
were not really relevant any more. Yet the idea that 21 people, trained by us
to fly our airplanes, could kill over 3,000 people and cause such physical and
psychic damage was stunning. Our idea
of ourselves as the one Superpower in the world was shaken to its core. Our twin gods of materialism and technology
were used and manipulated and attacked.
Few people remember that Puerto Rican nationalists shot up Congress in
1954, wounding five congressmen, but all of us will remember September 11,
because it told us that we were now living in a smaller, global world.
Second, our
Empire mentality led Dick Chaney, Donald Rumsfeld, and George Bush into an
idiotic and disastrous invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan, wars that now seem to
have no end. We invaded these countries
out of hubris and a desire for revenge because our vulnerability had been
revealed to us. This process began in
our losing the Vietnam War, and it continues through the election of Donald
Trump. It will be interesting to engage
Ken Burns’ PBS series on the Vietnam War this month, as we consider this
process again. Sweet Honey in the Rock put it this way in the
song “Battle for My Life:” “Your hunger
for war ain’t nothing new, Cowboy.” I
remember Jonathon Alter’s column in Newsweek “Blame America At Your Peril,” in
the October 15, 2001 issue, as he closed it with these prime facie American
imperial words: “”Al Qaeda was planning its attack at exactly the time the
United States was offering a Mideast peace deal favorable to the
Palestinians. Nothing from us would have
satisfied the fanatics, and nothing ever will.
Peace won’t be with you, brother.
It’s kill or be killed.”
September 11 should have told us that it’s “a just peace” or endless
violence and war – we have yet to hear that lesson. I don’t know that we ever can.
Finally,
the deep enmity for Islam is rooted in September 11. In our history as Christians, we have
considered Judaism as our primary enemy.
In modern times we have seen Islam as a small gnat in the way of our
access to oil, but September 11 changed that.
It is no surprise that we did not attack the nation where most of the
September 11 combatants came from – Saudi Arabia – because they are our primary
oil ally in the region. As the influence
of religion, especially Christianity, wanes in America, some of us look longingly
at Muslims who seem to try to actually practice their faith in a thoroughly
consumer culture such as ours.
There are
many other lessons from September 11, but these stick with me: global life, the futility of violence and
war, and the strengthening enmity for Islam.
As we reflect back on this history that continues to course through our individual
and collective veins, let us remember these lessons and especially the words of
Martin Luther King, Jr.: “We must learn
to live together to live as brothers (and sisters} or perish together as fools.”
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