Mia writes: It’s the morning after an incredible 72 hours. Who could have thought anything would have knocked The Wedding off the front page and our minds. Enter Osama. Or rather, exit.
I’ve been interested to note very little footage of September 11 – particularly the planes smashing into the buildings – has been used to illustrate the news of Bid Laden’s death.
Instead, there has been a lot of coverage of wild scenes of jubilation, particularly in Washington and New York. I can’t quite imagine similar scenes in Australia but we’ve never been able to compare our levels of patriotism to America. I’ve also been interested to note many of those celebrating seem quite young….they would have been kids on September 11, 2001.
Today, we’re going to hear from an American woman living in Australia for a sense of what this news has meant for her. Seema writes….
“I’m proud to be American today. This is a sentiment that I have seldom felt in the past decade. The pride was overpowering on September 11, 2001, for a few months following that day, when my vote counted to elect Barack Obama as the leader of my country, and when he took the lead at the Oval Office a few months later. But other than those moments, my feelings for America have been mixed at best, muddled in a combination of shame, anger, disbelief, sadness, regret, compassion and helplessness. But today – today I feel pride.
I was in my final year of high school the morning that my country was attacked by what came to be known as Al Qaeda, and, like every American, I watched repeated footage of hijacked planes flying into New York’s World Trade Centre, the Pentagon, and the field in Pennsylvania, and I silently wept for the horror that had been inflicted on my country. My brother was interviewing for jobs in New York at the time, so after I received a call that he was not harmed, my thoughts turned to the thousands of loved ones who would not receive the same good news. I thought of the banker’s daughters who would never get to have their father walk them down the aisle. I thought of the wife of the man who had deemed he would rather die by gravity than by fire, and subsequently jumped from the 93rd floor from which he was working. I thought of the many parents who would have to bury their children and go against the laws of nature. I thought of every victim’s family and my heart broke.