Without a doubt, September 11, 2001 is the defining moment of our generation. Millions watched on tv as two planes did the unthinkable and flew into the World Trade Center. Guts were wrenched, lives were lost, and our wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, and "On Terror" were launched. In my life, it was the moment that my priorities shifted and I tuned into what I think is my purpose on this earth ... to work for peace in the little ways I can.
I was in Portland, Oregon that morning getting ready for work and listening to NPR as was my routine. As I stood in the bathroom brushing my teeth, the radio announcer suddenly lost the ability to speak. I knew something was wrong in the world and rushed to turn on the tv, just in time to see the 2nd plane hit.
In a daze, I somehow found my way to work. My heart was broken, and I couldn't help but think that more death and destruction would follow as our country tried to make sense of it all and look for revenge. An eye or an eye, a tooth for a tooth, your children must die because mine did. What I didn't expect was that those around me, those I worked with and even close friends would be catching the revenge bug. I felt so out of place, so out of tune with my surroundings. All of my coworkers' cubicles were festooned with American Flag signs and revenge filled slogans ... I made my own sign with a peace dove. Whenever I opened my mouth and talked about my concerns that more innocent lives would be lost across the globe in retaliation, people looked at me like I had two heads. What kind of American was I?
Luckily for me (and I suspect it was more God than luck), I found my way into two communities where I didn't feel like a freak for my desire to work for peace. First, an artist friend of mine shared her vision to help get this advertisement on the sides of buses. It features a beautiful picture of some Afghan children and a quote from Eleanor Roosevelt: "When will our consciences grow so tender that we will act to prevent misery rather than to avenge it?". It completely captured the movement of my own heart in those dark days. I offered to help her raise money to get the ad on the buses and to set up a website. Our local bus company at first refused to sell us ad space on the buses because the message was too political! I used my bureaucratic background to help convince them otherwise, and the ads were eventually placed on 5 City buses in Portland.
I also found my way into an interfaith peace group that was meeting at the local Friends Meeting House. These were my people, and I started to get involved in our local peace movement. Eventually I got tired of being the only Catholic at the table and looked into restarting our local Pax Christi chapter. Before I knew it, I'd become a bureaucrat by day and a peace activist in all of my other waking hours. One day it dawned on me that I should do something about that, which played a big part in the journey that has me here getting ready to profess first vows as a Sister of St. Joseph of Peace.
It's seven years later, which is hard to believe.
- 2,974 people died as a direct result of the attacks on the World Trade Center (source).
- The Department of Defense confirms 4,155 US military deaths and 30,324 wounded in Iraq as of today (source).
- Documented civilian deaths in Iraq are between 87,062 and 94,990 (source). The actual number is far more (source).
3 comments:
Thanks, Susan. Somehow I have never heard that part of your story - and it gave me a great E.Roosevelt quote for my homily today. I just read that a bishop from the Military Archdiocese said (approvingly) that more soliders ask about which bases have the Latin Mass than questions about the morality of war!
Thanks for sharing this, Susan. It is encouraging to be able to see how living through this brought you -- and, I hope, many others -- closer to God, and to the desire for peace and justice.
You have been wise since you were little, and now so eloquent!
Eileen came home today and said since it was "Patriot Day" they were going to have a student do the pledge over the intercom (instead of the principal) and they asked her to read it, which she did.
Patriot Day . . . I'd rather they told her it was Peace Day.
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