Pa. locals, Flight 93 families united by history
By JENNIFER C. YATES
SHANKSVILLE, Pa. (AP) - Esther Heymann was overflowing with
grief for her stepdaughter. Standing in a blustery snow,
overlooking the empty field where Flight 93 had crashed a couple of
years earlier, she couldn't stop crying.
The only other person there was a local man, sitting in his warm
car. Every few minutes he'd come out, asking Heymann if she was OK;
mostly, he just let her grieve. Alone.
Finally, the man approached her. His wife was making soup at
home. She should come and have some, get warm, wait for the snow to
stop.
She did, following a man she didn't know through streets that to
him were his neighborhood.
To her, they were the roads leading to her loved one's cemetery
plot.
When the earth and sky tragically collided in these rolling
fields on Sept. 11, 2001, the people who live here and the
relatives of the 40 passengers and crew killed were suddenly and
inextricably brought together. That bond will be sealed further
Saturday when ground is broken for a national park, a permanent
memorial to the victims and a permanent reminder to the locals.
``The families of victims of Flight 93 and the community of
Shanksville have really become one community,'' said Interior
Secretary Ken Salazar, who helped broker agreements between
landowners and the government for the memorial land.
The community began immediately after the crash. Victims' family
members were brought to a nearby ski resort and attended to by
local Red Cross volunteers. School students held a candlelight
vigil on the courthouse steps.
Neighbors comforted neighbors, too. Bob and Phyllis Musser, who
live near the crash site just past a thick grove of trees, brought
turkey sandwiches and coffee to the first responders. They would
later volunteer to man the temporary memorial and talk to visitors.
Known as Flight 93 Ambassadors, the volunteers are locals who
noticed people showing up at the crash site with no idea what they
were looking at. More than 130,000 people visit every year.
Featuring a 93-foot tower containing 40 wind chimes, the $58
million memorial to be built on 2,200 acres here will guide
visitors on a path to the crash site, known simply as the ``sacred
ground.'' It is set to open in 2011, the 10th anniversary of the
attacks.
The Mussers volunteer weekly at the temporary memorial. Bob, 79,
greets visitors and Phyllis, 75, shows photos of each victim and
the path of the plane from her post inside a small, gray, wooden
shed.
United Flight 93 had left Newark, N.J., that morning for San
Francisco when four terrorists commandeered the cockpit. The
hijackers turned the plane around and headed for Washington, D.C.,
before passengers fought back. The hijackers responded by crashing
the plane into the field, just shy of a school.
The Mussers have gotten to know many of the Flight 93 families.
Many, they say, just want to come and sit on one of 40 benches
at the site, each inscribed with a victim's name.
``It's too bad this had to happen, but if it had to happen - it
had to happen someplace,'' said Bob Musser.
In August, the National Park Service reached agreements with
eight landowners to purchase much of the land needed for the
memorial, ending a slow and sometimes contentious acquisition
process. Some landowners claimed the government had not made offers
despite claims that negotiations were ongoing, while the government
at one point said it would seize properties if deals couldn't be
reached.
Aside from that, many locals have been involved with planning of
the permanent memorial. Many are working on an oral history project
to preserve what happened that day.
``I think that the people in this community opened their arms,''
said Mark Miller, who helped his cousin, a coroner, at the scene in
the days and weeks after the crash.
Miller owns the Pine Grill in Somerset, the largest town near
the crash site. Victims' relatives often stay at Somerset hotels,
and Miller has befriended many who regularly eat at his restaurant.
Some are even on his yearly Christmas card list now.
``I think this was a unique tragedy that fell on us but I'd like
to think that we're a friendly community,'' Miller said.
Heymann often eats at Miller's restaurant when she visits from
her home in Baltimore. She has fond stories to tell about the
residents, yet she's hesitant to name names for fear of leaving
anyone out.
Many locals have offered her home-cooked meals or a bed to sleep
in when she visits. One of her friends is a woman who saw her
crying at the crash site on another day and offered her support,
telling Heymann her own story of losing her daughter in a car
accident.
``To have anybody reach out to help hold you up is the best gift
because you really don't even know how far down you are,'' said
Heymann, whose 27-year-old stepdaughter, Honor Elizabeth Wainio,
was on Flight 93.
Ken Nacke, of Baltimore, lost his brother, Louis J. Nacke, 42,
of New Hope, Pa., in the attack.
``I think I go up there now to see my new family as much as
paying respect to the 40,'' he said. ``That town has helped me move
on.''
11/07/09 05:32
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