Posts Tagged ‘world trade center’

MonSep10

Warren Co. remembers 9/11 with memorial

Posted by rrichardson September 10th, 2012, 1:49 pm Post a Comment
Warren County 911 Memorial

Warren County Sheriff’s Chief Deputy John Newsom announced last year that Warren County planned to build a 9-11 memorial. The memorial will include a piece from one of the fallen towers of the World Trade Center. Enquirer file/Cara Owsley

Paul McKibben reports:

Warren County will dedicate its memorial to 9/11 on Tuesday, the 11th anniversary of the terrorist attacks in the United States.

The memorial includes two 9-foot tall piece of granite and a piece of an I-beam from the World Trade Center in New York City.

It also has benches, a flag pole, lighting and a sidewalk that connects it to a fire memorial at the county government complex.

The memorial recognizes two victims with Warren County ties with their names on a bench. Another bench remembers United Airlines flight 93, which crashed into a field in Pennsylvania after being hijacked.

Wendy Faulkner of Mason and Robert Peraza of New York City died in the World Trade Center attack.

Faulkner, 47, worked as an executive at Aon Insurance Group and was at a meeting in the south tower.

Peraza, 30, worked at Cantor Fitzgerald as a bond trader. The firm had offices in the north tower. His parents lived in Mason at the time.

The program begins 9:45 a.m. Tuesday at 500 Justice Drive, Lebanon.

Former Cincinnati Bengal and current Warren County resident Anthony Munoz will be the program’s keynote speaker.

The granite memorial will be revealed at 9:58 a.m., the time when the south tower of the World Trade Center started to collapse.

The memorial, which cost about $100,000, was paid for with private dollars.

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WedAug29

Share your stories about Sept. 11

Posted by rrichardson August 29th, 2012, 9:35 am Post a Comment

Sept. 11, 2001 – a day that, more than 10 years later, still affects our lives and our nation.

Two wars followed; one in Iraq is only now winding down, and another in Afghanistan continues. The War on Terror still goes on.

From our politics to our travel to our sense of security, 9/11 has touched our lives personally and collectively.

The Enquirer is preparing a special Forum report on the impact of 9/11, and we would like to hear from you.

How has 9/11 affected your life?

How has it changed the way we see ourselves as a nation and a community?

How has it changed our public conversation and our priorities?

Please send us your personal stories and thoughts. Include a photo and a sentence about yourself and email to letters@enquirer.com or mail to Enquirer Opinions Page, 312 Elm St., Cincinnati, OH 45202.  You can also submit stories on Masonbuzz using our Send us a Story link.

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WedDec7

9/11 photo of grieving father becomes symbol for nation

Posted by rrichardson December 7th, 2011, 8:30 am Post a Comment
Robert Peraza - 9/11

Robert Peraza kneels by his son's name at the north pool of the 9/11 memorial on Sept. 11, 2011. Peraza, a former Mason resident and Procter & Gamble retiree, is the father of Robert David Peraza, who was working on the 104th floor of 1 World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001. The photograph has become among the most viral photographs of the year, according to media sites. (Getty Images / Justin Lane)

A photograph of a father’s private moment mourning the son he lost on 9/11 is among the most viral photographs of the year.

Robert Peraza - New York Post

The photo of Robert Peraza in prayer by his son's name at the north pool of the 9/11 memorial was published on the front covers of several U.S. newspapers. The photo is now being counted among the most viral of the year.

When former Mason resident Robert Peraza knelt to say a prayer at his son’s name on the 9/11 Memorial in New York City on Sept. 11, photographer Justin Lane caught the moment.

The photograph quickly became, as many have described it, an iconic symbol of a nation’s grief.

The Enquirer was among numerous media outlets to publish the picture, which appeared on the cover of the Washington Post, the New York Daily News and the New York Post to name a few.

The grieving father’s moment has since become one of the most viral photographs of the year, according to Buzzfeed.com, a website that aggregates news stories that have gone “viral” or are widely distributed online.

Peraza, a Procter & Gamble retiree, is the father of Robert David Peraza, 30, who was working as a bond trader for Cantor Fitzgerald on the 104th floor of 1 World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001.

He had been selected as a reader at the tenth anniversary ceremony, but took a moment to walk near the memorial’s North Pool before the memorial opened to family members.

“I was just honoring Rob… I was saying a prayer for his soul,” Peraza, 68, told ABC News. “It was very, very emotional.”

Peraza, a former president of the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce in Cincinnati, and his wife, Suzanne, lived in Mason at the time of the attacks but have since moved to Clermont, Fla.  His son lived in the Mason area in the late 1990s.

It’s been a tough road for the Perazas since the day when two hijacked jets crashed into the twin towers, a third plunged into the Pentagon, and a fourth went down in a Pennsylvania field before reaching its target.

Robert David Peraza

Robert D. Peraza. Photo credit/St. Bonaventure University

“Closure, in my opinion, is a very overstated term,” Peraza told The Enquirer in September as the tenth anniversary of the attacks approached.

“Rob was murdered on that day, and every year we are reminded of that.  The wounds, in a sense, never healed.”

The family established a scholarship fund in Rob’s memory at St. Bonaventure University in western New York State, where he earned his undergraduate and masters degrees.  So far, about $250,000 has been raised.

They still talk about Rob frequently, said Robert’s younger brother, Neil Peraza, 38, of Orlando, Fla.  His three children all know who “Uncle Rob” was.

“After 9/11 my wife and I realized that life continues and you have two children you have to live for,” Robert Peraza told ABC. “Rob was the kind of young man who would have been very upset if my wife and I wilted.”

After the photograph was taken, Robert Peraza, who wore a t-shirt bearing his son’s face,  joined family members of other victims to read the names of the dead and pay tribute to his son.

“Dearest Robert we love you and pray for you every day,” he said.  ”We are with you all the time and we’ll never forget, we’ll never forget, we’ll never forget.”

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MonMay2

Mason family finds justice in bin Laden’s death

Posted by rrichardson May 2nd, 2011, 9:36 am Post a Comment

faulkner1 The husband of a Mason woman killed on 9/11 at the World Trade Center said the death of Osama bin Laden was long overdue, reports the Enquirer’s Jennifer Baker.

Lynn Faulkner’s wife, Wendy Faulkner, 47, died while attending a meeting at the twin towers.  She was one of three employees of Aon Corp. who died.

Her remains have never been found.

“It’s funny. I’ve been trying to really decide how I feel about it,” Lynn said early Monday. “I’ve been known to literally stop to perform CPR on squirrels that I hit my car so I am not a hard person. But I sure don’t feel anything other than it’s long overdue. I’m sure it’s probably the way anyone feels when someone they love has been the victim of a crime. You certainly want the criminal captured, but the crime remains after justice has been done.”

Faulkner said bin Laden deserved to be dispatched to hell a long time ago. He praised US forces who led the assault.

“I think it’s pretty wonderful that the Navy Seals took the trash out finally,” Faulkner said. “God bless those guys. All the folks in the military worked so long and so hard these past 10 years dealing with these monsters. This is a moment they certainly deserved as well.”

He found it ironic that when bin Laden was finally tracked down, he was living in a luxurious mansion in Pakistan.

“The idea that this guy has been traveling and living a very nice (lifestyle) and they’ve had us believing he was living in a cave all these years – and in fact he was living quite comfortably, that was quite interesting.”

Faulkner has never remarried. He raised their daughters, Loren and Ashley, now 29 and 22, on his own – and both are quite accomplished, not unlike their mother, he noted. Loren is a University of Cincinnati medical student, and Ashley is attending graduate school at Kent State.
Ashley Faulkner & President George Bush
Faulkner took a memorable photograph on May 4, 2004, of President George Bush hugging then-15-year-old Ashley while Bush was making a speech in Lebanon. Bush paused to hug the girl after learning her mother had died in the Sept. 11 attack.

Faulkner also remembered the day his older daughter got married. He said it was one of the hardest days of his life.

“It was one of the first things I remember thinking about 10 years ago – how difficult that day was going to be when my daughters got married,” he said. “That’s a day you need your mom. You always need your mom, but there’s certain special moments when you need your mom, and when it finally came, yup, it’s just like I feared. Those things can never change.”

Faulkner said it was appropriate that bin Laden was “unceremoniously dumped at sea like the trash he was. I was kind of amazed. I just heard that a half hour ago. It seems kind of fitting, I guess.”

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