Posted: 10 Sep 2017 11:20 AM PDT
It was around the time
of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, that memorials stopped being remembrances
of virtue, and became therapy sessions. The old statues of determined men
gave way to empty spaces to represent loss. Their lessons of courage and
sacrifice, were replaced by architecture as therapy session, clean
geometrical shapes, reflective pools and open areas in which to feel grief at
what was lost and then let go of it.
September 11 memorials
have inevitably followed this same pattern, empty spaces, still pools of
water groves and names tastefully inscribed in row after row. How do you tell
the Ground Zero memorial from the Oklahoma City memorial? The Oklahoma City
memorial has one reflecting pool and the September 11 memorial has two pools.
There is no larger meaning to these memorials and there isn't supposed to be
one. A hundred years from now they will be nothing more than giant pools
surrounded by trees with nothing to say. These new memorials are not
about teaching us to remember... but about helping us to forget.
To find a memorial that actually in some way addresses what happened on
September 11. you would have to leave New York to go across the river to New
Jersey where the much maligned Teardrop hanging between a torn tower at least
represents something concrete, even if it is more grief and pain. Unlike the
useless winged shapes of the Staten Island Memorial and the Pentagon
Memorial, it at least acknowledges that something terrible happened here and
transforms into a symbolic image.
But the abstract symbolism is still the problem. There's an American eagle
overlooking the Battery Park World War II memorial a few blocks from Ground
Zero, but to find an American eagle on a memorial to the attacks you have to
travel 30 miles across the river to Allendale, New Jersey.
The official September 11 memorial has sustainable architecture, but Dumont,
NJ with a per capita income of 26,000 dollars managed to acquire and place
one of the steel beams from the World Trade Center as their memorial.
The closest to a traditional memorial that tells you what actually happened
and why it matters, as opposed to handing you a three acre handkerchief of
empty spaces and waterfalls, is across the street from the monstrosity of
emptiness. Just turn your back to it, cross Liberty Street and walk up to
Firehouse Ten where the FDNY Memorial Wall depicts the events of the day in
bronze. You may have to dodge some trucks and search for it underneath the
scaffolding, but it's there.
That's more than can be said for the identity of the attackers which is
invariably absent, except as a crescent that pops up ominously in memorial
design after design, entirely by accident of course. But the memorials are
not about history, they exist only to allow us to release our grief and move
on by expressing life-affirming sentiments in response to this
"tragedy" through community service that helps others.
From cries for revenge to serving soup to the homeless at a community
kitchen-- that is the intended trajectory. If it hasn't worked as well as
intended, as shown by the people who gathered to loudly celebrate Osama bin Laden's
death, instead of sighing at the cycle of violence, this is the long game.
The Pew polls show a steady growth in the number those who believe that
American wrongdoing led to the attacks-- from a third after the attacks, to
43 percent today. Give the enemy another decade to do its work and those
numbers will be in the sixties. And their game is simple enough, remove the
actual history and the images of the massacres-- and replace it with an
emphasis on foreign policy. Mix in news stories about Islamophobia, stir the
pot a little and you're done.
Numbers like that are why Obama was able to win and why Ron Paul is polling
better than ever. When revisionist history becomes mainstream, then people
will accept anything so long as it sounds good. So long as it lets them
forget.
Alongside the usual Noam Chomsky 9-11 essay collections and conspiracy theory
books on display on Amazon and at every bookstore; those who want purely
fictional history can get pick up a copy of Amy Waldman's The Submission
about a 'secular' Muslim architect's 9/11 memorial and the bigotry he
experiences from the right-wing.
Or if they want to dig through the remainders bin, there's John Updike's next
to last novel, Terrorist, an overwritten teen novel by one of America's most
famous literary authors, who shares his protagonist's hatred for the country.
"They can't ask for a more sympathetic and, in a way, more loving
portrait of a terrorist," Updike said of his book. 'They' being the
literary critics, not the Taliban who don't need to rely on the author of
'Rabbit Run' for that sort of thing.
Finally there's 'Forgetfulness' by Ward Just, whose title encompasses the
literary goal of the left in the story of a man who loses his wife to
terrorists but avoids the "climate of revenge" and the "anger
of the sort that swept all before it... the anger of the American . . . after
September 11". Instead he learns to relate to the men who murdered his
wife.
Forgetfulness is the underlying theme of everything. Stop being angry. Stop
being vengeful. Forget!
It is the commandment that echoes from the empty spaces and the
revisionist histories, the slabs of events gouged out and dumped as landfill
in Staten Island or sold off in bulk to China. The endless degradation of
memory turned into a national ritual. A way to test ourselves to see how much
better we feel about it-- how much more we accept what happened on that day
as being in the past.
Drown history in enough reflecting pools and it stops mattering. Put up
enough empty benches and people will remember to forget. Tell them that
they're courageous for moving on and they'll admire themselves for putting it
all behind them. And if they won't forget, then fill them with grief until
they can't take it anymore and willingly forget.
But by all means avoid outrage, keep messy emotions like anger out of the
way. Anger is not part of the healing process, which begins with an empty
bench and ends with a visit to a mosque to reconcile with your killers. It
retards the process, it says, "Hey wait, we're not done here yet!"
It says, "These bastards are still walking around here plotting to kill
us." It says, "They're building a mosque right here to look down on
your reflecting pools." And all that is most unhelpful.
Let's take a brief detour from all the forgetting and travel up Broadway some
eighty or so blocks to Central Park. There at the entrance to the park stands
the Maine Monument to the hundreds of dead in the destruction of the USS
Maine. There are no reflecting pools or geometrical shapes here. Instead
there is a warrior, the figure of justice and the representation of the dying
avenged by Columbia Triumphant, standing atop, cast in bronze out of the guns
of the lost ship.
The New York Times, being what it always was, sniffed at it as a "cheap
disfigurement" and the history of the war has since been revised to
American jingoism and the sinking of the Maine is invariably described as an
accident. If this goes on, we will no doubt live to see experts promoting the
theory that it wasn't the suicide attacks that killed thousands of Americans
on September 11, but the flaws of the buildings.
Yet the Maine Memorial is still there towering above them all. In bold text
so different from the carefully selected fonts of modern memorials it
proclaims unashamedly; "The Freemen Who Died in the War with Spain that
Others Might be Free." And of the men who died on the Maine it declaims:
"Valiant Seamen who Perished on the Maine by Fate Unwarned, in Death
Unafraid."
There are mourning figures on the memorial and there is grief and pain, but
it takes place in the context of a larger struggle. The struggle against
those who committed the crime and the triumph of a nation against those who
would attack it.
It is inconceivable that anything so bold and proud would ever go up at
Ground Zero. The culture that represented virtues through the figures of men
and women has given way to one that represents abstract feelings in
geometrical shapes and reflecting pools. It is why we have no new buildings
like the Empire State Building, and why we won't even be able to replace the
stark geometry of the WTC with anything but smaller 'green' buildings which
exist as a calculated show of ugliness and a rejection of human aspiration.
On the way back from Central Park, stop by the Bank of America Tower, the
second tallest building in New York, the most ecologically friendly tall
building in the world constructed by Obama's BOA pals. And I defy you to
spend more than a minute looking at it and then describe it. It isn't just
ugly, it's forgettable. Your eyes move past it even as they look at it. Its
peak is a deliberate mockery of symmetry and order.
Then pass by the New York Times Building, the fourth tallest building in the
city, in hock to Mexican-Arab billionaire Carlos Slim, built through eminent
domain land seizures with money from the Lower Manhattan Development Fund,
even though it's firmly in midtown. Then repeat the same exercise with
this glorified apartment building. Again you come away with nothing, because
nothing is there.
Finally after you pass by the Bloomberg Tower, even more devoid of
personality, the jumbled twin towers of Time Warner Center opposite the Maine
Memorial, and the rest of them all, return to the site of the former Twin
Towers, and look up at the Woolworth Building, once the tallest building in
the city. It hasn't been for a long time, but yet it is. It stands as a
monument to human endeavors. And that is what makes it human.
Let us consider what memorials are for and what skyscrapers are for. Are they
meant to be empty spaces or are they ways of reminding us who we are?
We don't need more holes in the ground, more places to feel empty and alone.
What we need are things to aspire to. The World Trade Center's towers were
not targets of convenience, no more than the Saudi and Emirati skyscraper
building spree is. Towers are symbols of achievement. They are guardians of
the skyline who remind us of what we can accomplish.
The terrorists and the memorialmakers have a common purpose-- to make us
forget what we are capable of. To drown us in our own pain and grief, to make
us drink of the Lethe waters of reflecting pools until we forget who we are.
The terrorists and the memorials have done their best to break us. But it is
not in grief that we must remember the day. Grief is for the foregone
conclusion. But though thousands upon thousands are lost-- we are not yet
lost. And the war is not over.
The holes in the ground are not symbols of grief, or empty places in our
hearts, they are open wounds inflicted on us by our enemies. Filling them
with water will not change that, only anesthetize the pain of a fatal injury.
To forget that is to sink into a mirage and die in delirium that we are
recovering.
The
attacks of September 11 are not a time for reflection, or personal
remembrance, but a sharp reminder that we are bleeding. And we can only bleed
for so long before we die. There are worse things out there than four
hijacked planes used as missiles. There are actual missiles and suitcase
nukes, nerve gas, toxins and whatever else can be dredged out of laboratories
by Western trained researchers.
And even worse than these is the endless struggle, the constant waiting for
another attack, the security measures meant to keep us safe while imprisoning
us in our own security, the waiting for the day when an attack succeeds. The
day we die.
September 11 is not the day we cry, it is the day we get angry. It is the day
we remember who our killers were, how many have been lost, and how little has
been done to bring down the ideology responsible as completely as they
brought the towers down. It is the day we remember not to forget. It is the
day we remember that the war has just begun and that until it ends, there can
be no comfort or solace. The fight goes on.
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