[CPProt.net] Sept. 11 families protest museum, memorial plans before U.S. terrorism attacks anniversary

MSN CPPnet (Ton Cremers) museum-security at museum-security.org
Sun Sep 11 06:20:09 CEST 2005


Sept. 11 families protest museum, memorial plans before U.S. terrorism
attacks anniversary

02:25 2005-09-11

Holding up pictures of their loved ones and signs that read "Preserve Sacred
Ground," more than 500 relatives of Sept. 11 victims rallied at the World
Trade Center site Saturday against a proposed museum. 

Family members worry the International Freedom Center will take attention
away from those who died in the attack. They said the museum should not be
allowed to show exhibits about struggles for freedom around the world. 

"These are important stories to tell," said Jack Lynch, whose firefighter
son Michael Lynch is one of the 2,749 people who died at the trade center.
"Elsewhere, not at America's memorial." 

The rally by more than a dozen family groups came a day before the fourth
anniversary of the terrorist attacks. A bouquet of white flowers and several
single, red roses were tucked into the metal fence surrounding the site,
while huge American flags hung outside nearby office buildings. 

"The IFC threatens to turn ground zero into a place of endless controversy
rather than a place of honor," said Anthony Gardner, whose brother Harvey
died at the trade center. 

The Freedom Center and another museum, the Drawing Center, were chosen more
than a year ago to occupy cultural space at the site in a building close to
the planned "Reflecting Absence" memorial. 

But rebuilding officials said last month that the Drawing Center would look
elsewhere for a home and that the Freedom Center would have to submit more
detailed plans and respond to family objections to ensure its place at the
site. A mediator has recently been recruited to help museum officials and
the families communicate. 

"We respect those family members who believe that the World Trade Center
site should be limited to the memorial and memorial center museum, even as
we and other family members believe that a living memorial, reflecting our
common resolve to preserve freedom, should also have a place on this sacred
ground," Freedom Center chairman Tom Bernstein and vice chair Paula Berry _
who lost her husband on Sept. 11 _ said in a statement Saturday. 

On Sunday, the city planned to observe moments of silence at 8:46 a.m. (1246
GMT) and 9:03 a.m. (1303 GMT) to mark the times that each hijacked jetliner
struck the twin towers, and at 9:59 a.m. (1359 GMT) and 10:29 a.m. (1429
GMT), for the times each tower collapsed. 

More than 600 family members who lost brothers or sisters will read the
victims' names at the site, while Gov. George E. Pataki, Mayor Michael
Bloomberg, former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani and Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice all planned commemorative readings, AP reported.


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