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Chris Hondros © Getty Images

New York firefighter Bill Green of Engine Company 6 walks in front of a U.S. flag that was donated to the New York State Museum Monday. The tattered flag was draped over the Engine 6 rig in the wake of the World Trade Center attack and then hung outside their firehouse for a year afterward as a reminder of what firefighter Green calls "that terrible day."


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Hal Stoelzle © News

Loveland artist Ron Petitt was commissioned by the family of Charles "Chic" Burlingame to create a sculpture of Burlingame as a boy with a homemade plane, dreaming of an aviation career. Burlingame was a pilot in one of the jets hijacked Sept. 11, 2001.


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Chris Hondros © Getty Images

A relative of a victim of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks visits the World Trade Center site Wednesday. Some relatives protested development in the 4.7-acre memorial site where the original 110-story twin towers stood.


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Local 9-11 observances

Honoring 9-11


Beyond remembrance: Honor

By Lisa Levitt Ryckman, Rocky Mountain News
September 11, 2003

May the lives remembered, the deeds recognized, and the spirit reawakened be eternal beacons, which reaffirm the respect for life, strengthen our resolve to preserve freedom, and inspire an end to hatred, ignorance and intolerance.

- From the World Trade Center Memorial mission statement

The boy Chic Burlingame once was has been cast in bronze, a child and his dream preserved for eternity.

He's holding a wooden airplane as big as the 6-year- old he was when he built it, all by himself, out of wood scraps and a child's certainty that he could learn to fly.

And so he did.

Forty-five years later, Charles Frank "Chic" Burlingame III was at the controls of American Flight 77 when it was hijacked after takeoff from Dulles International Airport in suburban Washington.

At 9:40 a.m., Flight 77 slammed into the Pentagon, killing 184 people, including all 64 people aboard.

It was Sept. 11, 2001 - a day that never ends.

Two years later, the question remains: how do we honor the memory of the 3,016 people who died that day - and the people who have died because of that day?

How best to remember?

"It's become part of the culture," said Chic's sister, Debra Burlingame, of New York. "We don't want to ever forget it. But if we did want to - we wouldn't be able to.

"The September 11 drumbeat never ceases."

It began at 8:46 a.m., with the thunder of American Flight 11 crashing into the north tower of the World Trade Center. At 10:28 a.m., the north tower collapsed.

At 9:03 a.m., United Flight 175 crashed into the south tower. At 9:59 a.m., the south tower collapsed.

At 9:40 a.m., American Flight 77 crashed into the Pentagon.

At 10:07 a.m., United Flight 93 crashed in a field near Shanksville, Pa.

How best to remember?

In the past two years, Americans have memorialized in hundreds of ways, in every corner of the country, in wood and cloth and stone and metal.

Twisted pieces of steel - debris from the World Trade Center - have become sculpture at a Florida high school, flagpoles in Virginia, part of a church bell tower in Albuquerque.

This year, Sandy Dahl of Lone Tree will ring a bell in a Shanksville chapel in honor of her husband, Flight 93 Capt. Jason Dahl. She's part of the group that has purchased land near the crash site for a permanent memorial.

"I'm just trying to make sure that these people are honored properly," Dahl said of the memorial plan, which calls for the site to be as peaceful and unobtrusive as possible.

"We don't want a McDonald's a mile away," she said.

Hans and Torrey Butzer, husband and wife architects who designed the memorial to the 168 victims of the Oklahoma City bombing, believe that such places need to be created to withstand the test of time and memory.

"People are looking for something of which they can become a part," Hans Butzer said. "These memorials are ways of helping the community engage more thoroughly in events that took place."

Remembering Sept. 11 has become an inspiration for an army of artists.

W. Douglas Stickler, from Lyons, made his tribute to Flight 93 from stone. "To the First Citizen Heroes of the 21st Century," it reads. "The Passengers and Crew of Flight 93.

"Let's Roll."

Loveland sculptor Ron Petitt cast pilot Chic Burlingame in bronze. Debra Burlingame stumbled across Petitt's work on the Internet while she was searching for the addresses of U.S. soldiers killed in the war on terrorism. She believed Petitt's background as a Vietnam veteran made him the perfect artist to capture the essence of her big brother, a Hollywood-handsome military pilot from Herndon, Va., whose straight-arrow perfectionism was tempered by a goofy sense of humor.

"In the midst of all the Sept. 11 chaos, all the imagery, the really horrific imagery, I became very focused on that picture of my brother," Burlingame said. "It's physical evidence of what we'd always known - that Chic wanted to be a pilot from the time he could walk."

And not just any kind of pilot. At the tip of each wing are the letters U.S.A., printed with a little boy's care and concentration.

"Clearly, this is a military aircraft,'' Debra Burlingame said. "Here he is, this little boy, already thinking about serving his country."

In the old family photo, Chic Burlingame is a child in California wearing a striped T-shirt and a wistful expression, standing with the wooden airplane he had just shown off to his family.

He's not smiling; he's not even looking at the camera. He gazes at something on the ground - a propeller that had just fallen off his precious creation. Petitt was overwhelmed by the simple power of the image.

"When you look at the photograph, the first thing you think is, what a tragedy," Petitt said. "But he realized his dream. He was a Navy fighter pilot, a commercial aviator. The message is, you can fulfill your dreams."

The statue is called American Patriot.

Sales of the work, both tabletop and life-size, will help fund scholarships in Burlingame's memory through the Patriot Dreams Foundation. Petitt is creating a special edition of the statue; there will be 911 of them.

"The family wants to put it in places where the public can get the same inspiration from the photograph that we all do when we see it," Pettit said.

How best to remember?

A month ago, a coalition of groups proposed making Sept. 11 a day of voluntary kindness. The New York-based coalition calls itself One Day's Pay, a reference to the idea of repaying the community by giving at least one day of service.

"We're not looking for it to be a holiday," said the group's vice president, Jay Winuk, whose brother, Glenn, died trying to rescue people in the south tower. "But we want it to be more than the anniversary of a great tragedy."

Two years later, the world has become a sadder place, in the name of making it a safer one.

When Army Sgt. 1st Class Daniel Aaron Romero died in Afghanistan on April 15, 2002, he became Colorado's first combat casualty since Vietnam and the only Coloradan to die in the Afghan war. When Marine Lance Cpl. Thomas Slocum was killed on March 23, 2003, he became the state's first casualty in Iraq.

A honey locust tree with a crooked trunk grows in his memory in the back yard of the Thornton home where Slocum grew up.

Twenty-five soldiers from Colorado - including 17 from Fort Carson - have died in Iraq since the war began March 19. Memorial ceremonies at Fort Carson have become a regular event.

Debra Burlingame has made it a goal to write to every family that has lost someone in Afghanistan or Iraq. So far, she's contacted 50 of them.

"These guys will never be forgotten," she said. "We felt they were fighting on Chic's behalf and died on his behalf. There's a profound connection there."

Martha Teas Meiklejohn was no soldier. But when she came home to Delta from Baghdad last month in a plane that landed just after midnight, her husband, Jamie Meiklejohn, was there to meet his wife's flag-covered coffin.

The 46-year-old woman became a casualty of Sept. 11 when a bomb exploded at her U.N. office, where Iraqis could come for information about food distribution, health issues, land mines and educational services. Meiklejohn's U.N. tour officially ended Aug. 1, but she had agreed to stay on.

How best to remember?

When Oklahoma City began the process of planning a memorial to the 168 victims of the Afred P. Murrah Federal Building bombing, they had no guide. They could look to the Holocaust museum and the Vietnam Memorial, but this was fundamentally different - an act of terrorism on U.S. soil.

"We had some of the same challenges (as New York)," said Kari Watkins, the executive director of the Oklahoma City National Memorial, who talks to her New York counterparts regularly. "So far, they haven't given me a situation we haven't dealt with."

There is at least one challenge they didn't face in Oklahoma. Of the 2,792 people who died at the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, investigators have identified the remains of 1,518. There are still more than 12,000 body parts, unidentifiable. But someday, it might be possible to identify them, so the remains are being dried and sealed and saved. Every one of the 5,200 design entries in the memorial design competition had to include a suitable space to store them.

A winning design is expected to be selected this fall; construction will begin in 2006.

"Done correctly, a memorial will inspire people," said former New York Mayor Rudy Guiliani. "It should not symbolize the loss of our world before Sept. 11 or of an America that no longer exists. It should symbolize our survival and our triumph."

Minoru Yamasaki, chosen over 12 other American architects to design the World Trade Center in 1966, considered 100 different designs. One tower was too unwieldy; several looked too much like a housing project.

So it was two - twins 110 stories high, with an acre of office space on every floor and a view from the top that went on for 45 miles in every direction. It was Yamasaki's steel and glass tribute to world peace.

"The World Trade Center should, because of its importance, become a representation of man's belief in humanity," the architect once said. "His need for individual dignity, his beliefs in the cooperation of men, and through cooperation, his ability to find greatness."

It took nearly seven years to build the World Trade Center. After it was hit by the jetliners, the north tower stood for 102 minutes and the south tower for 56 minutes. Once they began to fall, their collapse took just 12 seconds.

The 4.7-acre memorial site includes the two towers' 40,000-square-foot footprints, places made sacred by tragedy.

How best to remember?

A design already has been chosen for the two-acre Pentagon memorial: the work of two young New York architects was chosen from more than 1,100 entries.

In a design that echoes Oklahoma City's, aluminum benches - one for each of the 184 victims - will sit atop small lighted reflecting pools, positioned parallel to the jetliner's flight path.

Each bench will be engraved with the name of one of those murdered and arranged by their ages, from 3 to 71.

On Sept. 12, Chic Burlingame would have turned 52.

Now he's forever 6, a little boy with a homemade airplane who lived and died his dream.

Ryckmanl@RockyMountainNews.com or 303-892-2736.

 
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