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Walk with Me Through this Day (9/11 think piece)

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benny05 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-11-06 10:34 AM
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Walk with Me Through this Day (9/11 think piece)
A speech by former Senator John R. Edwards given to the CBC group at a breakfast 2 years ago today:

Good morning.

Today, on this day of remembrance and mourning, we have the Lord's word to get us through. "The bricks have fallen, but we will build with dressed stones; the sycamores have been cut down, but we will put cedars in their place."

And let me show you how we are building and putting cedars in those three hallowed places-the footprints of the Towers, the Pentagon, and the field in Pennsylvania. Walk with me through this day and you will see that this is a season of hope.

For at this moment, just outside of New York, a mother laces up her daughter's shoes. And they are ready to start their long walk through this day. The daughter is two and a half. She can say his name, "Dad." She can point to his picture, but she does not know him.

On this day, they go to Central Park to remember with the other families. Then, they head downtown to place a flower where he died-the once tall tower where he left his first, last and only message addressed to her. And they return home still in their Sunday bests after a Saturday of sorrow.

So walk with me through this day.

Today, a town gathers in front of their church. It is a town where so many-53-were taken before their time. For a week after that September day, the Lord's doors were open. The Lord's doors were open for that hour of loneliness just before dawn. That night when the silence inside the house was too much to bear. And for that moment when just missing their wife, their husband and the love of their life was the greatest pain they'd ever known.

But today, they are there to ring a new church bell-a gift born out of their grief. They want it to ring from the bell tower to ensure that "sorrow and sighing shall flee away." That bell will toll for the souls gone home. It will toll for those who still weep. And it will toll for those who rejoice in life's great gifts.

Walk with me through this day.

And across our great river, the men and women who stood at their posts at the Pentagon; who helped rescue the wounded and carried the dying, and who still guard their post at this moment will pause in a sea of stone and valor. They will lay a wreath. They will pray onward soldier you answered your calling here but your work is not done in the Lord's house. And they will pray for those whose wounds have not healed-the burns that cause them great pain every time they reach out to hold their wife's hand until the stars rise and the night falls on this day in September.

So walk with me through this day.

To that field in Pennsylvania where-the mothers and fathers, sons and daughters, friends and neighbors of that day's warriors- will stand in the middle of all things beautiful. They will read the names of those who charged. Those who fought back. Those who never gave up so that evil never had the chance to finish its plan. They come together, as their loved ones did, to find hope in the middle of the Lord's green field.

They will sing. They will pray. And they will lay a wreath where Flight 93 fell. And in a place where smoke once rose, you and I we will see that cedar rising.

Walk with me through this day.

At this hour and all day long, strangers will follow the Lord's wish. In memory and in the hope that goodwill and grace will always triumph out of tragedy, they will give. In "a day's payment of service," New York City firefighters will give and fly to California to help rebuild homes destroyed in the fires. Businessmen from Long Island will give and take sick kids to a ball game. Men and women in Memphis will give and build wheelchair ramps for the disabled. And there are thousands standing in Afghanistan, standing in the very place where evil grew, giving their service to ensure that evil never rises again.

These Americans will give because so many were taken from us. And for them-the three strangers who came together to start this day of service-a mother who lost her son, a brother who lost a brother, and a friend who lost a friend-for them September 11th is never in the past; it is enduring. It is never just an anniversary; it is a time of renewal for each and every one of us to do God's work here on earth.

So walk with me through this day.

At this breakfast, our prayers will be heard and answered for those who still need comfort. They need a hand to hold as they try over and over again to forget the crashing windows, the fire, and the falling steel that took their coworkers but not them. They need the comfort of prayers as they sit in solitude. They have their head in their hands as they wonder like the other tens of thousands who walked out-why I lived and the others did not. And they need to know that we are with them even when it feels like we aren't as they try to rebuild their lives without.

Whether it's one year, two years, three years or until our short time on this earth comes to an end. Those who lost that day will always miss them. Those who worked night and day until the last cart was carried out of Ground Zero will always know they did their best. And those who unfurled their flags, gave blood, comforted a child who lost their Dad, and made that day the defining day for them to leave their mark on this earth-we will always remember that unity of purpose.

Walk with me through this day.

And you will see that while those bricks fell and the sycamores cut down, our people are making those cedars rise.

"And let us not grow weary in well-doing for in due season we shall reap, if we do not lose heart."

And let us not grow weary of taking care of those families. Let us not grow weary of praying for those soldiers who defend us from that evil at this hour. Let us not grow weary for giving up a day in our lives for those who are gone. And let us not grow weary in our determination to never forget, to never grow indifferent to what occurred that dark day in September.

This season of hope does not have to end tomorrow. We do not have to wait for yet another anniversary to come and go. We know what we want in this country. We want that one America.

There have been few times when we saw the possibilities of one America more than on September 11, 2001. All Americans, black and white, young and old, rich and poor, were bound together in tragedy and resolve to ensure that once again good triumphed over evil.

Sitting here today, after so long in the desert, it may seem like a mirage. But we know it is real, and that it is possible because we have seen it. We want one America. We want that hope, that faith, and that purpose without the tears, the pain, and the sorrow.

You know, I have learned two lessons in my life. One is that there will always be heartache and struggle in our lives. We can't make it go away. And the other is that people of good will can make a difference. One lesson is sad and the other is inspiring. And walking together through this day, we choose to be inspired because we know that we can fulfill the promise.

In times like these, if we can work together, comfort together, and help communities rebuild together, then let's do that for all of the challenges that exists right now and build one America.

For that child we see every day sitting on the front step, locked out and alone, let's work together to give him a safe place to go with friends and teachers while his mom works.

For that mother who works hard all day-forty hours plus a week- and she still has to sit at the kitchen table and divide her bills into pay now and pay later, let's work together to give her a country that honors work so she can get ahead.

For that whole town that's watched their factory lock its doors, let's work together to make sure that we bring opportunity and an equal chance to their front door.

For that young boy who always sits in the back of the classroom unable to read the basic instructions, but is too scared to ask for help, let's build him a school that's a palace for learning so no child is ever afraid to ask for help.

And for that family we know on every street. The mother and father are working hard. He takes the late-bus to work and she takes the early bus. They're doing what's right, what they're supposed to do to take care of their family. And yet later tonight, they might have to put their kids to bed hungry again because they can't afford dinner on a Saturday.

So let's work together to end poverty. Now some are going to say "end poverty" you can't do that. That's something we've been fighting for centuries. We just have to live with it. Says who?

Anything is possible in this country when you and I work together. If we put a man on the moon; if we conquered diseases like polio; if we can live through a terrible day like September 11th , then we can build the Lord's house in every heart and home across this land.

Some days sorrow just storms in doesn't it. You wake up one beautiful morning and the kingdom is at hand. You're on your way to work, to school, or to fly west to see your family. You're washing down the fire truck or walking the halls in the Pentagon. You're waving good bye to your young son on his first day at his new job. You're just talking on the phone with your child. And then sorrow hits.

It never asks if it can drop by. It doesn't knock. And it never asks if you're ready. It just hits and knocks everything down. And the next day, grief washes over thousands and sorrow surrounds us.

But we know how to beat it back. In America, we always rise up. Sometimes not on the first day or the second day, but we begin to rise up and build something new.

This is who we are, and this is the eternal spirit of America.

That is why that young girl who never knew her father, will feel the comfort of millions as we walk with her through this day and her life. That is why the men and women at the Pentagon will feel the prayers of millions as they salute their fallen. That is why the families in Pennsylvania will know that we weep with them. That is why the firefighters and police officers who miss their brothers will know that we miss them too. And that is why a new bell tolls in a church on the other side of the Hudson River.

You and I, we hear it. It tolls once for the dead. It tolls a second time for the mournful. And the third time, it tolls for us. It tolls for us to seek joy in our families, comfort in our children, and hope in our neighbors.

Each time that bell tolls, it calls us to a greater purpose. It calls us to never forget. It calls us to do the Lord's work here on earth. And it calls on us to always remember that when we walk through this day together-the cedars will rise, the stones will go up, and this season of hope will endure.

Thank you and God bless you, the families and friends who mourn, and our great United States of America.




To me, it is a timeless (and timely) message of peace and hope, something we need today.
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nan Donating Member (22 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-11-06 11:34 AM
Response to Original message
1. We do need this today.
John Edwards' words of two years ago fit as well today as they did then.
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newyawker99 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-11-06 03:49 PM
Response to Reply #1
9. Hi nan!!
Welcome to DU!! :toast:
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Catchawave Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-11-06 12:49 PM
Response to Original message
2. One of my favorite speeches
Thanks for posting this :hi:
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sparkleon Donating Member (51 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-11-06 02:39 PM
Response to Reply #2
6. 9-11
Will be remembered forever in history by those living now, and those to come. It's like WW2, when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor...I was a child, but I remember the faces of the people around me and the look of bewilderment. That holds true today of 9-11.

May we never have another war, another terrorist attack, may we live in peace among us ourselves. God Bless.
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newyawker99 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-11-06 03:50 PM
Response to Reply #6
10. Hi sparkleon!!
Welcome to DU!! :toast:
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Impashund Ubique Donating Member (98 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-11-06 12:50 PM
Response to Original message
3. What's wrong with him? Isn't he going to try to scare us?
Edited on Mon Sep-11-06 01:00 PM by Impashund Ubique
Aren't "fear" and "terrorism" all we need to take away from 9/11? :sarcasm:

Seriously: Wow, this is truly a soulful piece that illuminates the spirit that resides deep within America ... and which will hopefully see the light of day when the ignorant man I call president - who perhaps cannot even begin to comprehend the meaning of Edwards' words - crawls back to Crawford.
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nan Donating Member (22 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-11-06 01:46 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. Love it!
The sarcasm is great!

Sure wish I had enough posts to recommend because I would definitely recommend this diary.
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Impashund Ubique Donating Member (98 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-11-06 03:38 PM
Response to Reply #4
7. It should be recommended.
Whatever your opinion of Edwards, these are inspiring words that, unfortunately, remind us once again of what has been lost in the past 6 years as we have suppressed the spirit that is at the foundation of this country. Hope not Fear.
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ultraist Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-11-06 02:04 PM
Response to Reply #3
5. "a soulful piece" indeed
In America, we always rise up. Sometimes not on the first day or the second day, but we begin to rise up and build something new.

This is who we are, and this is the eternal spirit of America.

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MontanaMaven Donating Member (94 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-11-06 03:45 PM
Response to Original message
8. Southerners and the Preaching Style.
One of the wonderful things about Southern speakers, especially the good ones, is that they are not afraid of a preacher style. The rhythms & repetitions, which may sound strange or even phoney to Northerners, are what make this style of speaking with its dialect so powerful and so enticing. When these skills or powers are used for good, they will indeed lift us up. But they can be used for ill as we have seen in the fake Texas twang of George Bush for the last 6 years. Fake dialect, fake style, tone deaf with no melody. I yearn for a man or woman in the White House again who speaks with clarity and conviction and leaves us humming as we leave the church.
From a Northerner (Illinois) who now lives in Montana.
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mnhtnbb Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-11-06 03:50 PM
Response to Original message
11. Edwards is the Republicans' nightmare in 08. He talks Christianity
and Southerners will believe him.
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benny05 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-11-06 05:43 PM
Response to Reply #11
12. They are freddy' o JRE
Edited on Mon Sep-11-06 05:44 PM by benny05
But not a bad thing either...we have a strong. moral leading potential cand for 2008
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machka Donating Member (177 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-12-06 12:18 AM
Response to Original message
13. We will never forget.
Floor Statement by John Edwards
Wednesday, September 12, 2001

Mr. President:

We each awoke yesterday to a much different world than the one we have to accept today.

On the most basic and important level, we have lost the lives of heroes and victims. We know that behind the devastating numbers are real Americans, with real families, with real accomplishments, with real hopes.

We also know - sadly - that we can never reclaim these lives.

We can only honor them and remember them, and in their names we can devote ourselves to taking every action to assure that no further Americans make these supreme sacrifices.

My scripture teaches us to "weep with them that weep, be of the same mind one toward another."

I speak now to the families of those who have been taken.

We in this chamber cannot erase yesterday, although we wish we had a way to do that.

In the difficult days and years that will come, we will keep their lives and their names and their sacrifices in our hearts and we will translate our grief and anger into a determination to prevent this tragedy from being repeated.

I know that it is little solace for real loss, but it is an important commitment I truly believe they would each wish us to make.

We will not forget.

And we will act.

For 225 years now, America has been more than a nation-state; more than a set of borders, or a piece of land.

America is an idea – and that idea is freedom.

Freedom of thought; freedom of movement; freedom to shape our lives and our society in the way we choose.

Yesterday morning, it wasn't just America that came under assault. It was the hopes and aspirations of freedom-loving peoples across this world.

Mr. President, there is a reason America does not bow down to terrorism;

There is a reason we live by the rule of law – and not by the law of the jungle;

There is a reason we will return to our homes and office buildings, and reclaim our skies and our pride;

There is a reason we will marshal all our resources, all our resolve, and the awesome strength of our military to catch these death-mongers, to punish them, to make them pay for their ugly misdeeds:

Because we surrender our freedom to no one.

I commend President Bush for his leadership in this difficult time, and I urge all of my colleagues, on both sides of the aisle, to stand with him.

From time to time, from issue to issue, the votes in this chamber may be divided. But when it comes to defeating terrorism and hate, the United States Senate will not be divided.

Some have wondered, in the aftermath of this tragedy, whether our country will ever be the same again.

Of course, we need to make our airports safer – and we will.

We need to make our flights more secure, and their flight patterns more inviolate – and we will.

We need to do more to root our terrorism in the countries where it is tolerated, funded, and harbored – and we will.

But the strength of a nation is measured not in airport scanners or flight controls. It is measured in the grit and will of our people when it's needed the most.

By that standard, America is the strongest, toughest, most resilient nation on God's Earth.

Scripture also tells us that "whosoever will be great among you, let him be your minister; and whosoever will be chief among you, let him be your servant."

We glimpsed that greatness yesterday, in rescue efforts in New York City and at the Pentagon – with policemen and firemen, military personnel, and so many brave volunteers putting themselves in harm's way to save lives. Too many of them paid the ultimate price for their courage.

My Senate office was practically flooded with calls yesterday from concerned North Carolinians – people who wanted to give blood, to donate clothes and blankets, to open their hearts in this time of solidarity and need.

I am especially proud that a group of Marine medical personnel from Camp LeJeune in Jacksonville, North Carolina is preparing to leave for New York to assist in any way they can.

Today, we cannot help but think: how fragile is the safety and security we take for granted.

But throughout our history, we have weathered war and pestilence; we have met every kind of disaster, both natural and man-made; we have mastered every challenge and conquered every foe.

The spirit of America is strong. The power of freedom will overcome. And by reaffirming that freedom through strength, justice, and compassion, we will honor the memory of those now departed, and give renewed purpose to those who will now carry on.
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