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Featured
Article
America's
New Sacred Site
by Cliff Wassmann
Born
and raised in New Jersey
I watched in horror,
as did all Americans on Sept.
11, 2001. Like everyone else I also felt the need to
go back and help. Not
being a construction worker or having any other skill
that was particularly needed there wasn't anything I
could do but watch helplessly over the next six months
as the World Trade Center site was excavated. During
that time thousands made pilgrimages to site, each for
these own reasons, so many in fact that the City of
New York set up special viewing platforms
and with timed entry to handle the crowds.
Although
I am a photographer whose specialty is photographing
ancient ruins and sacred sites around the world, I felt
no desire to photograph this site and add to the nations
collection of destructive images the came out of the
attack. But then something changed.
On
the sixth month anniversary a coalition of city eaders,
architects and lighting engineers came together with
the simple concept of installing spotlights near the
site that would, for 30 days only, recreate the towers
in beams of light. When the 88 lights that formed the
new Towers of Light were turned on that first
light I realized that it marked a turning point in the
painful process that started on 9/11 and a now a compelling
new, more hopeful image had arisen from the destruction.
It was now time to back and photograph this new sacred
place.
By
the time I had made the travel arrangements only 4 nights
remained for the memorial light display and they were
only illuminated until 10:30 each night, which meant
that I could only photograph them from one location
each night. The first night was clear and I was able
to capture a beautiful image of the massive beams rising
into infinity over downtown. It was a spectacular site
to see. From Liberty State Park in New Jersey where
I chose to shoot that first night the view was incredible
and hundreds of people came down just to stare across
t he
river at the twin beams. There were also scores of other
professional and amateur photographs shooting the display.
I wasn't expecting to create an image any different
than that of the thousands of other photographers that
sought to preserve the event.
The
next several nights brought clouds and rain, which made
it difficult to capture the ethereal beams. On the final
night the weather cleared a bit and the City of New
York announced that the lights would be illuminated
until they faded in to the dawn. Things still were not
going well. The rains had cleared the skies so much
that the beams of light appeared very weak. After trying
several locations without success, I decided to go to
one final location, a location that held a unique memory
for me.
For
the turn of the century we had celebrated in Times Square,
and that first morning of 2000 I wanted a special shot.
With the city asleep we drove downtown past the deserted
financial district and the giant twin towers and across
the Brooklyn Bridge. For my Millennium picture
I wanted the classic view of these 20th century icons
rising over the bridge completed over a century ago
in 1883. A bridge now to the 21st century. I got the
shot, added it to my collection and forgot about it.
I couldn't imagine that only 21 months later I would
watch this view change forever.
It
was about 1:00 AM by the time I got to that location
again. The lights of the bridge sparkled and reflected
in the water below. And where the twin towers once stood
the twin beams rose silently in the sky. A few people
milled about but soon left as clouds and rain started
falling. I was about to leave to when something magic
began to happen in the sky. The mist in the air gave
the lights something to illuminate and they began to
glow brightly. And fast moving low clouds passed through
the beams creating various shapes that quickly appeared
and disappeared. For a fleeting moment while my camera
shutter was open, a faint heart-shaped spot formed on
the clouds over the city.
The
rain grew heavier so I left and drove back across the
bridge. The road home took me right past where the spotlights
were installed. Despite the rain the area was filled
with people standing under the lights that appeared
much different when viewed from so close. Like curtains
they shot straight up into the sky. Looking up you could
see birds circling through them. And falling down over
the tear drenched faces of the crowd the rain fell,
each drop glowing with the lights' illumination.
While
another Towers of Light are not planned to be
part of what ever permanent memorial is ultimately built
on the site, they will forever be remembered as the
turning point in the painful process that started on
September 11, 2001. During wartime cities were told
to turn down the lights and what does New York do? It
sets up the brightest lights in the country, a beacon
that could be seen from 20 miles away! It was, at once,
a defiant gesture and spiritual recognition of the lives
lost. And we will remember.
© Copyright 2002 Cliff Wassmann. No
unauthorized duplication without written consent.
To view other works of Mr. Wassmann please visit his
site at www.aku-aku.com
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