The Bell Curve -- Joseph N. Bell
On the edge of the abyss where New York City’s World Trade Center once
stood is a crude wooden signpost supporting a handful of pointers like
akimbo arms and legs. I had seen many similar signs on Pacific islands
wrested from the Japanese in World War II. This one said: “Kabul 6750,”
“Tokyo 6759,” and “Los Angeles 2024.” The bottom sign read: “Hell 0” --
and it pointed directly into the bowels of what was once the World Trade
Center.
Somehow, this sign caught for me all of the tragedy, anger,
resilience, determination, courage and irony my wife, stepson and I found
on every corner in New York City a few weeks ago. And I can’t let it go
without one final bouquet.
A story in Tuesday’s Los Angeles Times said Southern Californians are
“all talked out” about the events of Sept. 11 and eager to move on. UC
Irvine professor of psychology and social behavior Roxane Cohen Silver,
conducting a study in the aftermath of the World Trade Center attacks,
told a Times reporter: “People stop talking [about Sept. 11] because they get the feeling from others that others do not want to listen. . . . What
we get is a conspiracy of silence as everybody thinks that nobody wants
to talk about it.”
New Yorkers are still talking. They’re moving on, too, but that hasn’t
stopped the talk. Virtually every local person we met -- from close
friends to cops on the beat -- had a story to tell about that day. And
told it with a kind of emotional energy that was infectious. That energy
pervaded virtually everything we did, said and perceived during our week
in New York. And it is still very much with us.
One close friend of ours lived and another worked within a few blocks
of the twin towers. Stephen Silverman -- a Southern California native and
former student of mine at UCI -- was headed out to walk his dog when a
neighbor whose window overlooked the twin towers called and told him
about the first crash. He looked outside, found debris raining on his
deck, and heard a low-flying plane. He didn’t see the second crash but
heard it, “like a bomb going off.”
So he grabbed his dog and took off for a friend’s place in Greenwich
Village. “The streets were like the attack on Atlanta in ‘Gone With the
Wind,”’ he recalled, “except for one big difference: It was deathly
still. People were quiet and orderly, and so were the police.”
Our other friend watched the burning towers with stunned incredulity
from his office window before he hit the streets for an hourlong walk to
his home in Queens. That office window now looks out on a building --
newly bearing a huge American flag -- that he had never seen from this
window before because it was completely blocked out by the twin towers. A
co-worker who looks out that window every day lost his wife in the
terrorist attack.
We looked down into ground zero from Stephen’s new high-rise
apartment, then walked the area for several hours, carrying away a mix of
powerful impressions. Probably the most powerful was the recognition that
New Yorkers must grapple every day with the absence of the twin towers.
Where these two formidable structures once stamped the identity of New
York City, there is now nothing. Even when they can turn away from the
grief and anger, New Yorkers are faced with this broken skyline as a
reminder.
But that hasn’t prevented them from drawing on the vitality that has
always set New York apart to move on, just like the rest of the country
that doesn’t live daily with such reminders. And it is this spirit that
has galvanized New Yorkers and the rest of us who have watched, admired
and visited.
The spirit is offered up in tangible form all the way around the
perimeter of ground zero. It was very cold when we were there, but the
police officers on duty were polite, often funny, and answered questions
readily. They seemed as protective of this place as they might their own
home. When we asked Officer Mike Ganey why an adjacent building was
covered with an enormous black tarpaulin, he answered: “Because I think
we can save her.” The area is remarkably clean. Sanitary workers were
hosing down emerging trucks and tidying up the streets around the site
everywhere we looked.
A wire fence, covered with canvas, extends all the way around ground
zero. Virtually every inch of it we saw is decorated with notes of
thanks, pictures of and tributes to victims, flowers and tokens of
appreciation. There were Christmas tree lights on a construction shack
and flags planted along the truck entrance. A substantial number of
civilians were wearing police and firefighter caps. The site is
remarkably free of debris now as workers have gone underground in their
search for bodies so visitors using the new raised spectator platform
won’t see much action.
We paid our respects to Alexander Hamilton -- as we always do --
before we left the area. Trinity Church, where he is buried, was
mercifully spared any structural damage. The debris that covered its
graveyard has been cleaned away, and it sits, strong and serene, as a
symbol of continuity.
We are being exhorted to visit New York these days, but the wrong
carrots are being dangled before us. There is truly much pleasure to be
had on and off Broadway, but these are trifles compared with the surplus
energy and determination we can tap into and bring home. There’s plenty
for everyone in New York.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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