This wasn’t my war. It wasn’t even my city. And it wasn’t supposed to have been my assignment that day, or for the nearly 10 days that followed. But I was in New York on 9/11 -- definitely the wrong place at the wrong time -- and found I was swept up in the chaos and other forces beyond my control.
I had been there already for days, covering the fashion shows that had been unfolding inside the tents at Bryant Park as part of New York Fashion Week. That morning, as terrorists flew jet planes into the World Trade Center, I was just about to take my seat alongside a catwalk teeming with pregnant models showcasing a new line of maternity wear by American designer Liz Lange, a fashion runway first.
But
I didn’t end up reporting on that.
Liz Lange Maternity Fashion Show |
Instead, my story that day, dictated into a cell phone, among the only ones working in Manhattan that day as evidenced by the numbers of people offering me cash to enable them to make one last desperate call to a loved one, was a first-hand witness account of what I saw erupting in the streets. Citizens who had just started work that morning were screaming, running, bleeding all around me. Many were trying to flee the terror unfolding just a few blocks south of where I was then standing.
Within
minutes of the attacks, I encountered people who had just staggered
up 6th Avenue from Wall Street, seeking refuge amid the shading trees
of Bryant Park. Several had barely escaped with their lives. I rooted
for the cell phone in my purse and quickly dialed my newspaper in
Toronto.
“I’m
in New York,” I shouted. “You’d better use me. I’m at the
centre of a war zone.” I was speaking to an editor on the news
desk.
“Thank
God you’re there,” he said. “We had no idea we had any one on
the ground. Listen, we’ll get details from the wires. But you get
colour. Start talking to people. Can you do that?”
Colour
was newspeak for observed details, live quotes. I looked around me
and saw people limping to benches beneath the trees at Bryant Park.
There were men with ash on their faces, their white shirts dirty and
torn, and their ties askew. They were all Wall Street refugees.
“Yes, I can,” I
said, and clicked shut my phone. I swallowed any reservations I might
have had at the moment in approaching people who looked like they had
just gone through hell, and went straight to work.
“Sir,
hello, excuse me. I am journalist. From Canada. Can I ask you where
you have just come from? Can you tell me what you’ve seen?” From
him I heard that the plane had hit the First Tower with thousands of
people still in them. It was burning and people were jumping out of
the windows to their deaths. He said he saw bodies falling past his
window while he hid under his desk, thinking at first Manhattan was
experiencing an earthquake after he felt the building shaking. He had
gathered as many people as he could, his co-workers and fellow floor
dwellers, to lead them down a darkened stairwell, and just in time.
“The
tower has come down,” he said, quietly, still in shock. “I came
straight here, after first ducking into a church to say a prayer.”
A terrible story. Horrible images. But I didn’t flinch. I didn’t
dare. I knew that what I was reporting on was historic. I wanted to
convey it fully for my readers back home, recreate in words what I
was seeing and hearing and experiencing, first hand.
I wanted to persevere, despite the feeling of nausea rising inside me. And rising not only as a result of what I was witnessing. I was pregnant. It was why I had been at the maternity show that morning. My paper hadn’t been aware of my condition. I hadn’t thought to tell them. I was in the first trimester, barely showing. It was just supposed to be a bunch of fashion shows. Nothing strenuous. And now this. The biggest attack on American soil since Pearl Harbor. I had another child and a husband back home in Toronto. I should have called them immediately. But I had called my paper, instead. Career first. I hadn’t yet broken the habit.
I
thought it would be just that one day, and then I’d be finished.
I’d be home. Safe. Or so I had hoped.
But
then I couldn’t get home.
I
was stuck on the island of Manhattan for more than week. All the
international flights out of the city were halted in the aftermath of
the attacks, and the trains were all full. I called my newspaper to
ask them to help me get home. My editor didn’t return my calls.
And
so I filed more stories – on the series of bomb scares that
succeeded in spooking the city in the aftermath of the attacks, and
on the desperation of the families of the victims who had begun
postering the city with family photos of the missing.
These
intimate portraits of people smiling out at the camera from birthday
parties and bridal showers, holding their dogs or hugging their moms,
were laser printed onto pieces of 9-by-11 inch sheets of paper that
had been hastily taped or thumb-tacked to telephone poles, shop
windows, the New York subway. These were the human face of the news
story that had gripped the world. I walked by those pictures and
absorbed the fear and sorrow, feeling it weigh me down as I wandered
alone through the city.
The
city that never sleeps was completely empty of yellow cabs, cars and
buses, the streets eerily silent and still. Scared New Yorkers
cowered in doorways, clutching tiny American flags. Dark-skinned shop
and restaurant owners with origins in the Middle East were instantly
the target of people’s ire and frustration. In SoHo, a man of
Lebanese background told me a stylish woman had walked into his shop
on the afternoon of 9/11 to tell him he was no longer welcome there.
“She said people like me are the problem. But I am American!”
In
the days that followed, I also stayed glued to the television,
watching news coverage of the event on American television from
inside my tiny boutique Hudson Hotel room. Seemingly intelligent
commentators were saying, “But why do people hate us so much?”
They really hadn’t a clue. It was a question also asked outside,
all around me, on the street. One time, when I let it slip that
American foreign policy appears to have upset people around the
world, inspiring them to retaliate; I was treated with suspicion and
dismay.
But
I also witnessed hope and resistance. Ladies still lunched on
Saturday at Bergdorf’s. The children in Central Park continued to
cast their toy boats into the wind, confident they’d sail back.
Yet
it wasn’t exactly life as usual: I overheard a trio of nurses
talking while on a break from working in the makeshift morgues that
had sprouted up in the wake of 9/11. They were near the Central Park
basin, huddled on a bench, dragging exhaustedly on their cigarettes.
One described in vivid detail how people had been incinerated alive
while stuck inside the towers that day. In my mind’s eye I saw the
blackened corpses, heard the screams.
I
remember putting a hand on my belly. The baby was still barely the
size of a tennis ball. Not yet kicking. It gave me hope to carry on;
to displace thoughts of death with thoughts of life. It is what I had
been able to do on the night of 9/11 when Broadway had insisted on
keeping its doors open, its marquees bright.
I
was alone on the night of the attacks, and not a little scared. When
I heard the theatres were opening on The Great White Way as an act of
defiance against the terrorist attacks, I answered the rallying call
of art by seeing Contact, a hit play without words in three
parts. The last part examines a man on the brink of suicide who
encounters a woman in bright yellow dress dancing in a bar. He knows
that to live he must reach out to her, join her in her dance of life.
He does, and the show ends on a high note. The entire audience rose
to its feet that night to let out a collective cheer. The cast came
out to take their bow, hoisting aloft the Red, White and Blue. The
house erupted into a rousing version of “The Star-Spangled Banner.”
I didn’t know the words, being Canadian, and so didn’t sing
along. But I was buoyed by this spirit of resilience, and for days
afterwards, the idea that salvation is possible only through contact
with other human beings was a theme that resonated within me. It was
something I repeatedly encountered on my wanderings through the city.
Many
people I met in New York in those days believed whole-heartedly that
we’d all not just survive but endure this unexpected attack on all
our lives if only we banded together to support each other through
it. Certainly the people who had lined up in front of The Children's
Health Services Building in Midtown Manhattan, a makeshift depot for
people seeking information about missing loved ones in the days
following the attacks, believed this. They were certain their loved
ones, even if they had jumped out the windows, had managed to carry
on. They begged me to bear witness to their stories:
“Tell
them in Canada about my brother, Juan. The bus boy at the top of the
Tower. He was there for the breakfast. Maybe he got out. Maybe he is
walking around outside with a concussion and doesn’t know where he
is. Maybe you can help us find him.” Stories that seared my heart.
New
York, in the wake of 9/11, was to me something straight out of Kafka.
The city where I had travelled to frequently in the past, loving its
energy, its verve, its variety had overnight become a cramped and
claustrophobic place where people were transformed, their emotions
pulled inside out, in the struggle to come to terms with what had
suddenly befallen them. In just three days – encompassing the
crucifixion, the burial and gradual (but partial) resurrection of
Manhattan – I experienced the full spectrum of human experience and
emotion, and also random acts of kindness.
New
Yorkers whom I had never met before approached me when they saw me
sitting alone in restaurants, urging me to come to their tables, eat
with them, feel part of their human family. “No one should be
alone,” I recall one man saying to me. “Especially at times like
this.”
It was that spirit of resilience that rallied New Yorkers also to donate blood in record numbers, in addition to food and clothing, including booties for sniffer dogs whose paws were being singed as they scampered across molten ground in the vain search for bodies. New Yorkers, normally so protective of one their hard-earned minutes, also gave freely of their time. On the afternoon of 9/11, I also encountered a Wall Street executive (white) personally chaperoning a Wall Street support staff worker (black) into a Chelsea restaurant for lunch. He told me he had found her on the street, crying and covered in dust, her clothes mostly ripped off her middle-aged frame. He had volunteered to take her to the hospital. There, her wounds were dressed and her rags replaced with green hospital scrubs which are what she was wearing when I saw her ordering a plate of spaghetti alla vongole, her unsung white knight urging her to eat.
Outside
on the terrace was a group of beautiful young people. They were
almost insultingly sophisticated, wearing fedoras and diaphanous
dresses, their voices elegant sounding and engaged in philosophical
conversation. I felt as I was witnessing some kind of Last Supper
among the fashionable. Really, that day, none us knew what would
happen next. There was about six of them sitting at that long table,
drinking in the sunlight as well as the chilled champagne.
In
the background of this Evelyn Waugh-like scene was a young black boy
defiantly playing basketball. I will never forget the thud-thud-thud
of his ball against the asphalt of his urban playground. It sounded
to me like a New York version of “La Mareillaise”: an anthem of
resistance in the face of such terrible – and palpable – human
tragedy.
I
held onto that basketball beat for days. I wanted it to be the sound
of life, the life growing inside me. I had grown fearful of the baby
being able to survive 9/11, especially one night when state troopers
had burst into a restaurant where I had just gone for a meal,
ordering me and hundreds of others in the vicinity, to run for our
lives.
There
was reportedly a bomb in the Empire State Building.
I
had been a competitive runner in my teens. I can really burn it. But
I resisted, not wanting to disrupt my pregnancy. But the police were
screaming at me to hurry. I had no choice. I had to save myself. I
looked for the tall-tale signs of blood in my underwear later that
night and saw none. I looked again the next day and the day after.
Still nothing.
I
went to St. Patrick’s Cathedral. I lit a candle. God answered my
prayers: a few days later, I boarded a train to Toronto. It was a
long, 12-hour journey, punctuated by arrests of swarthy-looking men
grabbed from their seats before the train crossed the border. I
passed the time looking out the window at the grass-filled fields and
marshes dotted with herons that lined the way to Canada. Nature
proved a welcome respite from the strife of the city. I was going
home.
At
Niagara Falls there was reportedly a bomb on my train. I disembarked
along with the other passengers. Dogs sniffed me and my luggage. I
called my newspaper to report on what was again happening to me. The
paper called a local radio station. The radio station called me. I
reported live from the scene. Career still first.
As
soon as I got to Toronto, I went to see my doctor. I had risen to the
occasion, pulled it off. I had survived. I said as much to the
clinician peering between my legs, probing my insides. I told him how
on that day the smell of New York burning was the smell of ashes.
Money. Files. Letters never sent. I had stood so close to the inferno
I had felt the heat on my skin. That’s when he said it:
“The
baby’s dead.”
I
had been babbling on, trying to hide my nervousness and mostly from
myself, acting cocky perhaps, not wanting to face my emotions. I had
been blocking them out for days, refusing to acknowledge the fear
that lay coiled like a snake in the pit of my stomach. If I had
wanted to cry in New York I had denied the urge. I had needed to get
through and not crumple. If this makes me sound brave then know that
by cutting off my feelings I felt hollow, empty of purpose, a paper
bag tossed by the wind. In New York, I had absorbed so much sadness
through my eyes, my ears and the pores of my skin. I can still today
smell the ashes, taste the loneliness. And I can still remember what
happened when the clinician coldly pronounced (as clinicians, I
suppose, will do), that my baby was dead. When he said there was no
heartbeat he could have been describing me: with those words my own
pulse stopped. I fell silent as a tombstone.
After days running for my life and that of my unborn child, I was unable to move; I felt anchored to the examining table, my legs wide open, vulnerable and exposed. I blinked rapidly as I looked up at the ceiling, the bright white lights of the closet-like room helping me to see nothing but my pain. My chest heaved. The tears wanted to pour out, now. I wouldn’t let them. I clenched my jaw tight. I would not speak. I waited until this man, this stranger in his white coat and mask, dressed to protect him from me, stepped backward and away from me. He might have tossed me a terse sorry. But I really can’t say. I recall stumbling into my underpants. Pulling on my jacket, I remember the cold touch of the door knob. I remember the pitch down the hallway. Me averting my eyes from anyone in my path, until I got to the woman’s washroom down the hall. I turned on the light. I looked at my face in his gray glass of a communal mirror. And then I bellowed like a cow at slaughter. I clutched the antiseptic whiteness of the sink as I retched. “No. No. No.” I had anticipated losing this child but that don’t make the loss less wrenching. Somehow I walked out of that washroom and found a corner amid the anonymous bustle of a medical building where I could call my husband. As soon as I heard his voice my tears came again. I couldn’t speak at first through the sobs. He called out to me, frightened. “Dead,” I gasped. “The baby’s dead.” “Oh no,” he said. His voice sharp and tinny as a pin. I pushed my face into a wall. I wanted to disappear. He said he was coming to get me. I wondered if that meant I’d be rescued, at long last.
After days running for my life and that of my unborn child, I was unable to move; I felt anchored to the examining table, my legs wide open, vulnerable and exposed. I blinked rapidly as I looked up at the ceiling, the bright white lights of the closet-like room helping me to see nothing but my pain. My chest heaved. The tears wanted to pour out, now. I wouldn’t let them. I clenched my jaw tight. I would not speak. I waited until this man, this stranger in his white coat and mask, dressed to protect him from me, stepped backward and away from me. He might have tossed me a terse sorry. But I really can’t say. I recall stumbling into my underpants. Pulling on my jacket, I remember the cold touch of the door knob. I remember the pitch down the hallway. Me averting my eyes from anyone in my path, until I got to the woman’s washroom down the hall. I turned on the light. I looked at my face in his gray glass of a communal mirror. And then I bellowed like a cow at slaughter. I clutched the antiseptic whiteness of the sink as I retched. “No. No. No.” I had anticipated losing this child but that don’t make the loss less wrenching. Somehow I walked out of that washroom and found a corner amid the anonymous bustle of a medical building where I could call my husband. As soon as I heard his voice my tears came again. I couldn’t speak at first through the sobs. He called out to me, frightened. “Dead,” I gasped. “The baby’s dead.” “Oh no,” he said. His voice sharp and tinny as a pin. I pushed my face into a wall. I wanted to disappear. He said he was coming to get me. I wondered if that meant I’d be rescued, at long last.
I
hadn’t wanted to lose my baby. I had been determined not to,
despite the pressure I was under, quite a bit of it self-imposed, I’m
afraid, by having volunteered to play the role of the keener
journalist. I can’t say for certain that the events of 9/11 did
snuff out the life I was carrying. But I had been in a state of
flight-or-flight for days. The conditions weren’t good for
nurturing life, or so I believe nature herself had determined.
Somewhat like those who suffered as a result of the events of 9/11, I
was a victim of circumstances beyond my control. The randomness of
evil: it can affect you where and when you least expect it.
And
yet, death hadn’t triumphed.
Almost
exactly one year later to the day, I returned to New York once more
to cover the collections, again staged inside the tents at Bryant
Park. Life. Life had gone on. New York had risen from the ashes, and
I was back, five months pregnant with another baby, one that lives:
my daughter, born four months later, just after the start of the New
Year. My newborn. My precious. My own sweet life.
–
Deirdre Kelly is a
journalist (The Globe and Mail) and internationally recognized
dance critic. She is also the author of the national best-selling
memoir, Paris Times Eight (Greystone Books/Douglas &
McIntyre). Visit her website for more information,
http://www.deirdrekelly.com/.
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