Taken
from: CBS
news
Two Horrors, A Common Bond
OKLAHOMA
CITY
by Jennifer Brown
April 19, 2002
The quiet lasted 168 seconds — one
tick of the clock for each person who died in the Oklahoma
City bombing.
Seven years have now passed since the Alfred
P. Murrah federal building exploded on an April morning.
For survivors and victims' family members coming to mark
the anniversary Friday, the silence was part of a subdued
ceremony near an elm tree that survived the April 19,
1995 blast.
"On this seventh anniversary of one
of the greatest tragedies in our nation's history, we
pray for the continued healing of this great city,"
said pastor Richard Del Rio of New York.
"Time has passed, but the pain is still
evident for some of those who survived."
Linda Lambert, chairwoman of the Oklahoma
City National Memorial Trust, said those affected by the
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks will come to know what those
here have already learned.
"While we never get over these tragedies,
we do get through them," she said.
Bob Bender, the chief executive officer
of the Greater New York chapter of the American Red Cross,
stressed the similarity between the two tragedies.
"The only difference between New York
and here is the scale," he said. "The events
are exactly alike, exactly alike."
He said that the thousands of Teddy bears
sent by Oklahomans to New York became a symbol of the
empathy the nation felt for those touched by Sept. 11
attacks.
"We had the Teddy bears in our family
assistance center, we lined the walls with them and those
Teddy bears really had a significant meaning," he
said.
The stuffed animals were put in cots used
by rescuers.
"It was surprising how these big burly
guys and gals went to sleep with their Teddy bears,"
he said.
Gov. Frank Keating said the Oklahoma City
bombing and the Sept. 11 attacks leave a never-ending
pain.
"This place seven years ago was indeed
a place of unspeakable pain and agony," he said.
"The pain and agony has not completely abated and
the pain and agony will never completely diminish nor
should it."
Bombing survivor Vicki Hamm, who attended
the ceremony, said she still experiences deep emotions
whenever she visits the memorial.
"It is a little easier, but it's still
hard," said Vicki Hamm, a bombing survivor. "My
knees get weak because these feelings come back. The bombing
is something I will live with for always. I try to accept
that. I don't want to forget it."
Some victims of the bombing have developed
deep friendships with families of the Sept. 11 dead.
Ken Thompson, whose mother died in the bombing,
embraced Cathy Miller, who lost her father Sept. 11 when
Miller arrived at the airport in Oklahoma City so she
could attend the ceremony.
The two have talked almost daily since Miller
e-mailed the Oklahoma City National Memorial two days
after her father was killed.
"It's overwhelming, but it feels good
to be here," Miller said.
Susan Walton arrived Friday to mark a day
she's grateful not to remember. Walton was making a deposit
at the credit union on the third floor of the Murrah building
at the time of the explosion. She has had 26 surgeries
to repair her injuries, and will have more.
"I consider myself lucky because I
have no memory of that day," she said.
It's been an eventful year for bombing survivors
and families of victims.
In June, 232 watched a closed-circuit broadcast
and 10 watched in person as Timothy McVeigh was put to
death in a federal prison in Indiana. Then the new Oklahoma
County district attorney announced he would prosecute
co-conspirator Terry Nichols, already serving a federal
life prison sentence, on state murder charges that could
bring the death penalty.
On Sept. 11, many bombing victims relived
their own tragedy. They sent teddy bears to New York.
Some flew there to hold the hands of victims' families
as they visited the World Trade Center site.
The Oklahoma City National Memorial has
created an exhibit focusing on the shared experiences
of terrorist victims in Oklahoma City, New York, Washington
and Shanksville, Pa. The exhibit, which opened Friday,
includes photographs and artifacts from the four cities,
as well as information about nine rescue workers killed
at the trade center who helped rescue Oklahoma City victims.
The wife and 7-year-old son of William Lake,
one of the rescuers, planned to attend a special preview
of the exhibit.
"I am a little nervous about looking
at the photographs," Dorothy Lake said. "It's
going to be painful."
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