Reporting 9/11...
Suddenly summoned to witness something great and horrendous,
we keep fighting not to reduce it to our own smallness. From
the viewpoint of a tenth-floor apartment in Brooklyn Heights,
where I happened to be visiting some kin, the destruction of
the World Trade Center twin towers had the false intimacy of
television, on a day of perfect reception. A four-year-old girl
and her babysitter called from the library, and pointed out
through the window the smoking top of the north tower, not a
mile away. It seemed, at that first glance, more curious than
horrendous: smoke speckled with bits of paper curled into the
cloudless sky, and strange inky rivulets ran down the giant
structure’s vertically corrugated surface. The W.T.C.
had formed a pale background to our Brooklyn view of lower Manhattan,
not beloved, like the stony, spired midtown thirties skyscrapers
it had displaced as the city’s tallest, but, with its
pre-postmodern combination of unignorable immensity and architectural
reticence, in some lights beautiful. As we watched the second
tower burst into ballooning flame (an intervening building had
hidden the approach of the second airplane), there persisted
the notion that, as on television, this was not quite real;
it could be fixed; the technocracy the towers symbolized would
find a way to put out the fire and reverse the damage. And then,
within an hour, as my wife and I watched from the Brooklyn building’s
roof, the south tower dropped from the screen of our viewing;
it fell straight down like an elevator, with a tinkling shiver
and a groan of concussion distinct across the mile of air. We
knew we had just witnessed thousands of deaths; we clung to
each other as if we ourselves were falling. Amid the glittering
impassivity of the many buildings across the East River, an
empty spot had appeared, as if by electronic command, beneath
the sky that, but for the sulfurous cloud streaming south toward
the ocean, was pure blue, rendered uncannily pristine by the
absence of jet trails. A swiftly expanding burst of smoke and
dust hid the rest of lower Manhattan; we saw the collapse of
the second tower only on television, where the footage of hellbent
airplane, exploding jet fuel, and imploding tower was played
and replayed, much rehearsed moments from a nightmare ballet.
The nightmare is still on. The bodies are beneath the rubble,
the last-minute cell-phone calls—remarkably calm and loving,
many of them—are still being reported, the sound of an
airplane overhead still bears an unfamiliar menace, the thought
of boarding an airplane with our old blasé blitheness
keeps receding into the past. Determined men who have transposed
their own lives to a martyr’s afterlife can still inflict
an amount of destruction that defies belief. War is conducted
with a fury that requires abstraction—that turns a planeful
of peaceful passengers, children included, into a missile the
faceless enemy deserves. The other side has the abstractions;
we have only the mundane duties of survivors—to pick up
the pieces, to bury the dead, to take more precautions, to go
on living. American freedom of motion, one of our prides, has
taken a hit. Can we afford the openness that lets future kamikaze
pilots, say, enroll in Florida flying schools? A Florida neighbor
of one of the suspects remembers him saying he didn’t
like the United States: “He said it was too lax. He said,
‘I can go anywhere I want to, and they can’t stop
me.’ “ It is a weird complaint, a begging perhaps
to be stopped. Weird, too, the silence of the heavens these
days, as flying has ceased across America. But fly again we
must; risk is a price of freedom, and walking around Brooklyn
Heights that afternoon, as ash drifted in the air and cars were
few and open-air lunches continued as usual on Montague Street,
renewed the impression that, with all its failings, this is
a country worth fighting for. Freedom, reflected in the street’s
diversity and daily ease, felt palpable. It is mankind’s
elixir, even if a few turn it to poison. The next morning, I
went back to the open vantage from which we had watched the
tower so dreadfully slip from sight. The fresh sun shone on
the eastward façades, a few boats tentatively moved in
the river, the ruins were still sending out smoke, but New York
looked glorious.
John Updike from Talk Of The Town The New Yorker, 9/24/01