It was seven years ago that I found a blog, project 2996 (though I don't know if it is still around and operating) that was committed to remembering the victims of 9/11. So this year, on the 15th anniversary, I thought it would be a good idea to revive my original entry. Never forget!
I am going to take a break from posting things only about our lives
for just a minute. In my surfing around the worldwide interweb, I cam
across a blog that had linked to a site started by Dale Challener Roe
(or DC Roe) called Project 2,996.
It is a network of bloggers who have decided to annually on 9/11 to
remember one (or two) of the victims of the 9/11 attacks. I thought it
was a great idea because the farther away we get from that day, the more
people forget. Sure you hear about it on the news, or you hear people
talk about it, or even see images of the WTC on fire, but unless you
watched it and lived it while it was happening, I don’t think you can
ever truly appreciate the impact it had on people’s lives. And while
the victims will always have their immediate friends and family to
remember them, I think that they need to be remembered by more than just
their loved ones in order to realize the impact of what happened that
day and to never forget why we fight terrorism.
I
picked two people off of the list to remember, Sara Elizabeth Low and
Richard D. “Richie” Allen. I chose Sarah Elizabeth Low because it is
the my oldest daughter's name, Sarah Elisabeth. I still remember her
watching the TV with us on 9/11/2001 and looking at me asking why those
buildings were falling down. I thought that because of the name it
would be a good choice, since I would always remember it. Second,
Richie Allen was an NYC fire fighter. I have, over the years,
developed a special appreciation for fire fighters. My father was a
fire fighter for 25 years and it wasn’t really until 9/11 that I
realized the extent of what he did for a living. Every day he went
into work he was essentially putting his life on the line. He never
knew when there was going to be a fire, never knew what the extent of
that fire would be when he went on a call. Just like members of the
armed forces, police and firefighters put their lives on the line with
every call and do it willingly never knowing if the next run they go on
will be the last run they go on. They are lifesavers, and true
everyday heroes, and I'm proud to tell people that my father was a
firefighter.
This is Sara Elizabeth Low.
Sara
Elizabeth Low was a flight attendant and a resident of Boston,
Massachusetts. She grew up in Batesville, Arkansas and graduated from
Batesville High School in 1991. Sara was a track athlete in high
school, and her team won a state title in 1989. In honor of her memory,
Batesville has annually held the Sara Low Memorial 5K Run and Walk.
Sara
died at the age of 28 in the crash of American Airlines Flight 11
during the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. She was one of nine
flight attendants onboard. Sara and the rest of her flight crew, being
on the first hijacked plane, could have no inkling of what lay in store,
unlike on United Airlines Flight 93, where the crew and passengers
learned of the earlier attacks and mounted a pre-emptive counterattack
that stopped the hijackers from succeeding in their suicide mission. The
last recorded information that we have about Sara Low is that on the
highjacked American Airlines Flight 11, she gave to another flight
attendant, Amy Sweeney, "her father's calling card, which allowed
[Sweeney] . . . to pretend to be a passenger and use an AirFone to call
Logan Airport and relay the vital information." Even a small act like
that took presence of mind and some degree of courage in terrible
circumstances that the vast majority of us will never face.
Despite
having earned advanced degrees in banking and finance from the
University of Arkansas, Sara E. Low was dedicated to her career with
American Airlines. And the 29-year-old flight attendant was stationed
along the eastern seaboard--a part of the nation she adored. For Sara
Elizabeth Low, a career as a flight attendant was a birthright. Family
vacations meant piling in the back of her father's small plane and
heading from Batesville, Ark., to the Gulf Coast or Rocky Mountains.
"Sara didn't think there was too much difference between being in the
plane and being in a car," said her mother, Bobbie Low.
Poised,
collected, yet prone to sudden streaks of silliness — a personality to
calm even the most enraged traveler. And her job sated her wanderlust,
her need for cosmopolitan glamor.
"She would call us
from the different destinations and give us a hard time," said her older
sister, Alyson, a teacher in Fayetteville, Ark. "In the summer she'd
phone from San Francisco or Vancouver because she loved that she had to
wear a sweater, rubbing it in about how hot and humid it is in
Arkansas."
Yet one aspect of the itinerant life wore on
Sara: in her first two years as a flight attendant she had about two
dozen roommates. So at age 28 she had finally found a place of her own
in the Beacon Hill area of Boston, the city from which she boarded
Flight 11. "It had a fireplace and wooden floors," Alyson said. "Our
mother went to Boston in the summer to help her clean it up, and it was
going to be a real home."
"She absolutely loved the
airlines and helping people," her father, Mike, said. Sara is survived
by her parents, Mike and Bobbie Low of Batesville, and her sister,
Alyson Low of Fayetteville, Arkansas.
The second person I remember is Richard D. Allen, know to family and friends as "Richie".
Richie
was 31 on Sept. 11, 2001. He was a life-long resident of Rockaway
Beach. He became a victim of this tragedy as he heroically saved lives
in the line of duty.
Richie loved the beach and worked
Rockaway’s beaches as a lifeguard for many years and he treasured it.
The beach was a peaceful place for Richie and brought him comfort; it
was Richie’s Heaven on Earth. He loved the ocean, which is where he
surfed, fished, swam and paddled.
Before becoming a
fireman and when not lifeguarding on the beach in the summer, Richie
spent his winters as a New York City Public School teacher. He quickly
and easily gained the admiration and respect of his students as they
could tell that he was not like their other teachers. To his students,
Richie was someone they could relate to and they described him as “laid
back” and “cool”.
People become firemen for many
reasons. Richie’s family believes that he became a fireman because
saving people and helping is what gave him life. During his short life,
he saved many people; some he saved as a fireman, some he saved while
lifeguarding and some he saved from themselves. His family believes that
this is what God put him on this earth for. Once people met Richie,
their lives were changed forever.
On
September 11th, Richie was doing what he loved to do: he was helping
others. Richie was a probationary New York City firefighter with Engine
4/Ladder 15 in Manhattan. While he was on the fire department for only a
short time, he fulfilled a life-long dream. Prior to becoming a
fireman, Richie held several other jobs with NYC, which he loved. He
worked for the sanitation department, he was a teacher for the Board of
Ed and spent his summers working as a lifeguard in Rockaway. All of
Richie's jobs entailed serving the people of NYC and making a difference
in other people's lives.
Richie is survived by his
very proud and loving family, which includes his parents, Richie Sr. and
Gail; two brothers, Luke and Mathew; three sisters, Maggie, Lynn, Judy
and her husband Mark; close family relatives, Kathy, Charlie Sr.,
Charlie Jr. and Katie Marquardt, as well as many other dear friends and
relatives.
Thanks to www.livingtribute.com,
www.legacy.com, www.sep11memories.org, &
gypsyscholarship.blogsot.com for the information on these victims.
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