09-11-2011, 02:30 PM
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Unregistered Abuser
Industry Role:
Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 25,241
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AsianDivaGirlsWebDude
The man being carried in the photo above was Father Mychal Judge, the NYPD Chaplain at the time, who became the first certified fatality of the 9/11/01 attacks...
RIP Fr. Judge
ADG
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Quote:
Perhaps the most upsetting moments of the WTC attacks were above all, those agonizing images of the desperate men and women who fell or jumped from the towers. On the broken window ledges at the top of the towers, how long did they contemplate that unimaginable fall -
So by remembering these heart stopping moments lets hope it ensures that we never forget what actually transpired on that day. RIP
God bless America and her friends
They began jumping not long after the first plane hit the North Tower, not long after the fire started. They kept jumping until the tower fell. They jumped through windows already broken and then, later, through windows they broke themselves. They jumped to escape the smoke and the fire; they jumped when the ceilings fell and the floors collapsed; they jumped just to breathe once more before they died. They jumped continually, from all four sides of the building, and from all floors above and around the building's fatal wound. They jumped from the offices of Marsh & McLennan, the insurance company; from the offices of Cantor Fitzgerald, the bond-trading company; from Windows on the World, the restaurant on the 106th and 107th floors -- the top. For more than an hour and a half, they streamed from the building, one after another, consecutively rather than en masse, as if each individual required the sight of another individual jumping before mustering the courage to jump himself or herself. One photograph, taken at a distance, shows people jumping in perfect sequence, like parachutists, forming an arc composed of three plummeting people, evenly spaced. Indeed, there were reports that some tried parachuting, before the force generated by their fall ripped the drapes, the tablecloths, the desperately gathered fabric, from their hands. They were all, obviously, very much alive on their way down, and their way down lasted an approximate count of ten seconds. They were all, obviously, not just killed when they landed but destroyed, in body though not, one prays, in soul. One hit a fireman on the ground and killed him; the fireman's body was anointed by Father Mychal Judge, whose own death, shortly thereafter, was embraced as an example of martyrdom after the photograph -- the redemptive tableau -- of firefighters carrying his body from the rubble made its way around the world.
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Edit: nevermind
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