NEW YORK — Life in lower Manhattan resembled any ordinary day Wednesday as workers rushed to jobs, but time stood still at the World Trade Center site while families wept for loved ones who perished in the terror attacks 12
NEW YORK — Life in lower Manhattan resembled any ordinary day Wednesday as workers rushed to jobs, but time stood still at the World Trade Center site while families wept for loved ones who perished in the terror attacks 12 years ago.
For the families, the memories of that day are still vivid, the pain still acute. Some who read the names of a beloved big brother or a cherished daughter could hardly speak through their tears.
On the memorial plaza overlooking two reflecting pools in the imprint of the twin towers, relatives recited the names of the nearly 3,000 people who died when hijacked jets crashed into the towers, the Pentagon and in a field near Shanksville, Pa. They also recognized the victims of the 1993 trade center bombing.
Bells tolled to mark the planes hitting the towers and the moments when the skyscrapers fell.