[an error occurred while processing this directive]

Moment of silence observed at ground zero
Thursday, Oct. 11, 2001
 
Background on Osama bin Laden
Photos of suspected hijackers

Video:
Sept. 12: Bush speaks to nation from Cabinet Room
Sept. 13: Bush warns of 'new kind of war'
Sept. 14: Bush visits workers at Ground Zero
Sept. 14: Day of Remembrance at National Cathedral
AP Photo
Rescue workers stop to observe a moment of silence at 8:48 a.m., EDT, on October 11, the exact time, one month ago, of the terrorist attack that destroyed the World Trade Center in New York.
By JERRY SCHWARTZ
AP National Writer

NEW YORK — Through unstinting smoke and endless tears, weary cleanup workers paused for a moment at ground zero Thursday to mark a grim milestone — the passage of one month since two colossal towers ceased to exist, along with thousands of people trapped inside.

It was a day for remembering. In Washington, President Bush joined multitudes at the Pentagon to remember the 189 people who died there on that same September day. In other places — far from the devastation, but still reeling from these acts — there were ceremonies, as well.

The families of the dead, said Lt. Gen. John Van Alstyne, deputy assistant defense secretary at the Pentagon, ask that they ``be remembered in the history of their great country and in the heart of every one of us.''

In New York, workers took off their helmets and joined arm in arm. ``Don't look at the terrorism over there, look at the heroism over here,'' said Rabbi Joseph Potasnik, a Fire Department chaplain.

Fire Department bagpipers played ``Amazing Grace,'' their pipes decorated with small American flags. They led police officers, firefighters and construction workers to the service, which included a moment of silence at 8:48 a.m., the time of the first attack on Sept. 11.

The ceremonies were the first of several planned both in New York and elsewhere.

At the New York Stock Exchange, representatives of New York's uniformed services rang the opening bell, and received a lengthy ovation.

At the trade center, as bright sunlight pierced the smoke that has persisted for a month, prayers were offered first for the 343 firefighters and 23 police officers who were killed, and then for all the dead. So far, there are 422 confirmed dead and 4,815 listed as missing. In addition, 157 people on the planes were killed.

``The fire is still burning, but from it has emerged a stronger spirit,'' Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said, as he stood with the city's fire and police commissioners on a stage in front of the blackened Dow Jones building.

``Sometimes it feels like yesterday, sometimes it feels like a year ago or more,'' he said. The terrorists, he said, ``attempted to break our spirit — instead they have emboldened it.''

It was a brief service, just 15 minutes long; the idling engines of the heavy construction machinery could be heard in the background. The 23rd Psalm was read, and prayers were offered. At the end, the pipes played ``America the Beautiful.''

[an error occurred while processing this directive]