|
he
shockwaves of the violence that rocked America Tuesday are reverberating
through this New England city. Prompted by President Bush's call
to visit a house of worship on Friday, I walked over to the nearby
Temple Israel and stumbled upon the memorial service for Newton
businessman Richard Ross, a passenger on American Airlines Flight
11. Boston-area victims included the likes of the courageous Vietnam
veteran pilot of Flight 11, John Ogonowski the owner of the
apartment in which I live.
At a grim time
like this America needs heroes. One can be found in Jeremy Glick,
age 31, who along with other passengers of United Flight 93 may
have saved the White House and countless other lives, investigators
believe. Glick, according to press reports, furtively telephoned
his wife from the plane. Glick, the father of a 12-week-old daughter,
asked his wife if it was true that planes had already crashed into
the World Trade Center. When told that it was, Glick and his fellow
passengers made a decision to try and jump the highjackers.
"We decided, we're going to do it," Glick told his wife.
The plane crashed into the countryside outside Pittsburgh.
Glick's heroic
end comes as no surprise to those who knew him at the University
of Rochester and afterwards. Glick grew up in Upper Saddle River,
New Jersey. He was well over six feet tall, strongly built and a
judo expert. Glick competed in judo at the highest level
having trained for the Olympics and would have been a handful
for any terrorist. "He was a warm, caring person," says
one of friends, adding he was "a protector, a warrior
very, very unique."
It's worth
one additional fact to the story. Glick was Jewish though
not necessarily religious and not some Mossad tough guy. Glick's
last moments are inspiring because he was a family man, an ordinary
guy an Internet salesman.
All wars have
their heroes and their slogans. Around here in Boston, we
remember the famous naval battle between the HMS Shannon
and the USS Chesapeake of the coast of the peninsula of Hull,
Massachusetts during the War of 1812. The Shannon fired upon the
Chesapeake destroying the foresail and mortally wounding
Captain James Lawrence. While dying, Lawrence implored his men "Don't
give up the ship" a slogan subsequently adopted by the
United States Navy. As America gears up for war with its enemies,
we can look to the example of Glick and his Flight 93 comrades (along
with Barbara Olson and the more than 200 New York City Fire Fighters
and rescue workers). "We're going to do it," they said.
And they did.
|