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Storytime Tapestry Newsletter
The newsletter devoted to spreading love and cultural
awareness throughout the world.
Special Treat – Christopher M. Zimmerman
Sept 12, 2006
9/11 - and 9/16
Christopher M. Zimmerman
"One can easily understand a child who is afraid of the dark. The real
tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light." ~ Plato
From my rooftop in Harlem you can always see the lights of Midtown at
night: the steady red eyes of Mt. Sinai Hospital, the blinking
one on the spire of the Empire State Building. Some evenings
you can watch the moon as it pop above the housing projects of the South Bronx,
and if you're lucky, you can sometimes make out a handful of constellations,
those silent reminders of eternity high overhead. Mostly, though, the sky is
dominated an endless procession of jets and planes, and the occasional NYPD
chopper clattering by on some unknown urgent mission.
Last night there was something else: a powerful twin beam rising from Ground
Zero. Reaching higher and brighter than anything else, and merging into one
column before it dissipated, it lasted about five minutes, then suddenly went
dead--probably a practice run for the fifth anniversary of 9/11.
The annual "Tribute in Light" is surely the most impressive way of
commemorating the collapse of the Twin Towers--and there are
hundreds of others. For weeks, every paper in the region has been listing
upcoming services and dinners, concerts and candlelight vigils, peace walks and
art shows and tree plantings and readings. But despite the noblest, most
heartfelt attempts to turn the date into a symbol of national unity, a day for
patriotism and community and remembering fallen heroes, the real legacy of 9/11
is fear.
In public, of course, the day will be marked by wreaths, flags, and yellow
ribbons, and by taps, bagpipers, and military fly-by's. Privately, it will
unleash new waves of anger and grief, and conjure up the same nightmarish
images that stopped our hearts five years ago and set off a national panic that
still hasn't subsided: a packed passenger jet slamming into a gleaming office
tower. A hellish firestorm of yellow flames, black clouds, billowing dust, and
flying masonry. Bodies plummeting past pristine glass window-walls to an ugly
death on the pavement far below.
Yes, they promised us the world would never be the same. But who knew how much
it would change? Who knew that for millions of Americans, a low-flying plane
would be enough to bring on a cold sweat? That a passenger at JFK could be
detained because of a "political" T-shirt? That the discovery of an
unmarked bottle of fruit juice could halt an entire subway line? Who knew that,
in the "land of the free," the dull gnawing of low-level anxiety--and
in many instances, the sort of outright paranoia not seen since the McCarthy
Era--would become a daily reality?
That's 9-11. But there's another date in September that bears thinking about:
September 16, which is one hundred days before Christmas. A little-known
tradition that originated in northern Europe, where the autumn suns sets
earlier and the winter cold comes sooner than it does here, One Hundred Days to
Christmas is something my wife and I and our children celebrate every year (as
do many of our friends) and centers around as many candles as we can fit on the
kitchen table and our window sills. We'll have food too, and something hot to
drink, and everyone suggests his or her favorite carol.
If you don't celebrate Christmas, or do, but find the holiday season too
commercialized and kitschy and long-drawn-out as it is, the idea of singing
carols in September might put you off. But if you think about what Christmas
really means--light coming into darkness, and hope into gloom--it makes perfect
sense to anticipate it more than a few weeks in advance.
In a way, such a celebration is the best antidote to 9/11, and to our
government's insistence that we live in a state of perpetual fear. By recalling
the angel's ancient message--"Fear not; I bring you good tidings of great
joy!"--it reminds us of the universal human longing for an end to war, and
of the only way that longing can really be answered: by the coming of the
Prince of Peace.
Christ's light doesn't beam upward from a labyrinth of steel and concrete, but
illumines every heart that receives him, and burns with an oil that will never
ever go out. Even though invisible, it is powerful enough to heal the deepest
wound, to strengthen the weakest limb, to overcome the worst fear.
Christ alone is the true light of peace. He doesn't promise victory in the War on
Terror. He won't secure our borders, or guarantee safer skies and streets. But
he offers far more: "Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you,
though not as the world giveth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be
troubled, neither let it be afraid."
Christopher M. Zimmerman
The writer lives with his wife and children in a small Christian community in New York City and can be
reached at
chriszimmerman@mailstack.com
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