by Jan Ting

On the way home from my high school reunion in Michigan, I decided to visit the Flight 93 National Memorial in western Pennsylvania near the town of Shanksville. I had located the memorial site on a map on Route 30 between the Bedford and Somerset exits of the Pennsylvania Turnpike.
I have driven the length of the Pennsylvania Turnpike on many occasions both before and after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. From news reports I was aware of the protracted efforts to acquire the land surrounding the crash site and the necessary political and financial commitments. I had assumed, because the site was under construction, that there might not be much to see, or that the site might be inaccessible. But the 10th anniversary ceremonies at the site showed me that while construction continues, the national memorial is clearly ready to receive visitors.
Every time I drive through western Pennsylvania in daylight I’m struck by how beautiful that part of the country is. That’s especially true in the fall, when the mountains seem to explode with bright colors. And I was again in awe at the natural beauty of the area as I approached the memorial site.
The land acquired for the national memorial is simply gorgeous, and I rejoice that it will forever be preserved as a tribute to the heroes of Flight 93. A memorial plaza has been created near the crash site, and a visitor center, walkways, and memorial groves are planned.
The site still under construction was crowded on the Sunday I visited. The parking lot was jammed with cars and motorcycles. A shuttle bus runs between the parking lot and the memorial plaza, and the driver said that there were so many visitors that day because of the perfect weather.
We are all drawn to the site to pay tribute to the 33 passengers and seven crew members, who were the first to fight back against the terrorists who attacked America on that terrible day in September.
What makes someone a hero? Heroism is not the absence of fear, but the ability to think clearly and act accordingly even when you are afraid, as the passengers and crew must have been when their plane was hijacked and they learned of the other hijacked planes that had been crashed into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.at
A hero is someone who acts in difficult circumstances as we hope we would act if we were in that situation. We have no way of knowing for sure how we would act if so challenged. But we know how the people acted on Flight 93.
We know that they made a plan and joined together to fight for their lives and the lives of their fellow Americans on the ground. They found themselves involuntarily drafted as the first combatants in America’s war on terrorism. And they responded with the creativity, boldness, and courage that we hope we might find in ourselves in that terrifying situation.
They fought for us in the sky over western Pennsylvania. Although they were unable to save their own lives, they succeeded in thwarting the terrorist plan to use their plane against another iconic American target. Through their actions they saved countless American lives.
So, it is gratifying to see the beautiful national memorial to Flight 93 take shape. Americans and free people from all over the world will be drawn to this site in tribute to the heroes who fought and died there. The national memorial insures that future generations will join in the tribute as long as the American republic endures.
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My wife is always taken by the beauty of the Pennsylvania countryside. I was born there and have taken her there twice from our Chicago area home. She is a United Airlines Retiree (UAL); she left UAL not too long after the 9/11 tragedies. We have made a point also to visit “ground zero” in NYC. Returning from travels recently we visted the Flight 93 Memorial. Each site is breathtakingly “haunting” and touching. People need to see and feel the beautiful pain of these memorials. Pray that those heroic actions and sacrifices will cease to be besmearched by the socialist agenda being foisted on our country.
actually, we Don’t know how the people acted on flight 93. we all know what hollywood and the mainstream media tell us…but that’s a far cry from the truth.
when the mayor of shanksville is on record saying his brother-in-law was the first one there, and that there was no plane, and when the county coroner is on record saying there were no bodies, it adds more questions about the “official conspiracy theory” of 19 hijackers and a guy on dialysis in a cave with a laptop.
just sayin’. i have a very, very hard time believing that a plane that’s 125′ across and over half a football field long fit into a hole that is 10′ x 20′.
go to google images, and search “shanksville plane”. there should be lots of pix of a plane from that day. there are none. no wings, no engines, no tail, no landing gear, no aluminum, no wiring, no seats, no luggage, no bodies…the plane, according to boeing’s specs was 155′ long, over 40′ tall, with over 200 seats. so…where’s the plane?
four years ago, i still believed the official story. the 9-second video of the “collapse” of world trade center 7 changed my mind.
you’re welcome to believe “our” government and the mainstream media if you want. i’ll trust simple physics and the eyes that GOD gave me.
we are being lied to about the events of that day. if we love this country, we’re gonna have to “man up” and face it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rWv9K1D1WY0
This is a good thing…
Just our little contribution to those brave souls on Flight 93
http://www.sumpterpinesrvpark.com/America.html