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Remembering September 11th: conversations about then and now

St. Louis City Hall on Sunday, September 11, 2011. (photo by Libby Franklin)
St. Louis City Hall on Sunday, September 11, 2011. (photo by Libby Franklin)

Over the past couple of weeks on , we've had a handful of conversations about the impact of September 11th on the people of this region.  Though we in St. Louis were hundreds of miles away from Ground Zero, the events of that day have changed all of us.

Here's a quick roundup of the conversations you can find in our archives:

  • Freelance writer  stopped by to discuss his special series for the ,   Jason's been reporting on the millions of dollars of Homeland Security money that's been spent here in Missouri.  Nick Gragnani, of the joined Jason and Host Don Marsh for about disaster preparedness.   Rosenbaum and Gragnani agreed that a lot of regional readiness work remains unfinished.  Gragnani concluded, "Are we better off?  Yes we are.  But we're not there yet."

 

  • Director Rhonda Hamm-Niebruegge  a variety of airport issues, including changing security measures put in place since 9/11.

 

  • Today's young adults were young children with the Towers fell.  What's it been like coming of age in a post-9/11 world?  How has it shaped their ideas about our nation?  About themselves and their goals?  who've grown up with a new American reality.  Hanan Abdel-Rahman was the only Muslim and the only Arab-American in her St. Louis elementary school in September 2001.  She remembers a lesson she learned very quickly, "they were watching what they saw on TV.  They were associating terrorism with Islam.  But when they looked at me...wearing a jijab...I realized at a young age that I had to represent Islam the right way."

 

  • new season is dedicated to "provoking emotions, reactions and a conscious decision to pursue life, liberty and justice for all rather than life based on fear and complacency."  Their opening production,  Inalienable Rights: From Pearl Harbor to 9/11,  examines two national tragedies and the racial profiling that happened in the wake of each.