2021
September
07
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 07, 2021
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Sept. 11’s defining moment for me came on 9/14 in a raspberry patch outside Boston – in a moment of collective relief among scattered strangers.

We all have that “where were you when” memory of events like 9/11, the Apollo moon landing, or JFK’s assassination. But the meaning of those memories can percolate over time. 

Twenty years after 9/11, the word “anniversary” carries an oddly celebratory tone, admits Frank Ochberg, the psychiatrist at Michigan State University who helped define the term post-traumatic stress disorder. Yet, he adds, “we have a right to celebrate as we memorialize” – to celebrate “the values that we cherish.” 

The event created what Dr. Ochberg calls “flashbulb” memories – moments around which we build spiritual, political, and moral meaning. 

I hold two enduring flashbulb moments of 9/11. 

On Sept. 13, I opened The Boston Globe to a photo of the familiar facade of the dumpy Park Inn motel in Newton, Massachusetts. Here, three hijackers apparently spent the days before their grisly mission. I passed the motel daily to drop my 3-year-old at preschool, the guest room windows close enough to see through. It was a chilling sense of proximity of terror.

And then, the flashbulb antidote: On Sept. 14, my daughter and I were among a dozen people in a suburban berry field, the raspberry stain growing on her T-shirt, when suddenly in the sky that had been silent for days, a commercial jet out of Logan International Airport roared overhead, close enough, it seemed, to see rivet dimples on the belly of the fuselage.

Its normalcy was a spectacular blue-sky moment – people exhaled sighs, shed tears. We were sharing a collective moment, small but vivid, in perceiving that life marked by historic tragedy could – would – find balance.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Ramin Talaie/Special to The Christian Science Monitor
From the same Queens living room perch where he watched TV coverage of defining moments like the JFK assassination, the Apollo moon landing, and the 9/11 attacks, James Lisa (left) reminisces with his boomer daughter Inez Regan (center) and millennial granddaughter Katelyn O’Prey (right) about the lessons of war and being prepared to fight for good.
MOHAMMAD SAJJAD/AP/FILE
Women in Peshawar, Pakistan, rally in 2011 against the secret targeted killings by U.S. drone strikes that were a mainstay of President Barack Obama’s counterterrorism effort.

Listen

Karen Norris/Staff

Coming of age after 9/11: Muslim millennials sense progress

Reflections on Being Muslim in the Aftermath of 9/11

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The Explainer

Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Christmas caroling: An animated essay


The Monitor's View

AP
Women in Kabul, Afghanistan, gather Sept. 4 to demand their rights under the Taliban rule.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Jeenah Moon/Reuters
One World Trade Center is reflected in the reflecting pool of the 9/11 Memorial in New York City, on the day Taliban insurgents entered Afghanistan's capital Kabul, Aug. 15, 2021. Two decades after the attacks by Al Qaeda terrorists on U.S. soil, many Americans draw inspiration from the selfless qualities of first responders and others in the aftermath.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today for our commemorative issue on 9/11’s legacy. Tomorrow we’ll be back with a regular Daily. We’re working on a story that considers whether Big Tech should become more aggressive arbiters of truth.

More issues

2021
September
07
Tuesday
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