By John Corry on 9.11.02 @ 12:03AM
The difference between New York and Washington, then and now and probably on next September 11 too.
I was living in Washington, but now I am back in New York, and
while I do not regret my years in Washington at all, New York is
where my heart is. The people in my life I love most are there.
There is also the city itself. You live in New York by choice; it
is where you put down roots. Washington, though, always seemed to
me to be full of people who lived there not because they enjoyed
the place, but because they wanted to be close to government and
power. Their jobs, and, more often than not, their identities,
depended on it, and their connection to the city itself seemed
tenuous. I speak now as a New York chauvinist, of course, but I
think last September 11 was indicative.
I was in Washington then, and watched television all that
morning. By early afternoon, however, I could no longer stand my
own passivity. I am not a professional patriot -- Washington,
incidentally, abounds with them -- but my country was under attack,
and I had to make a gesture. I left my apartment on Connecticut
Avenue, and walked downtown towards Independence Avenue and the
symbols of America's greatness. I would join the crowds I was sure
to find on the Mall or near the White House. They would be holding
hands, waving flags, and probably singing "God Bless America."
But it did not work out that way at all. As I walked down
Connecticut Avenue all of Washington seemed to be walking or
driving the other way. Downtown was emptying out. The Mall was
deserted, and our national monuments abandoned. Washington felt
like a ghost town. Rather than taking to the streets, the patriots,
I imagine, were all in the supermarkets stocking up on batteries,
candles, and bottled water.
That was on a Tuesday. Meanwhile, in New York all that day and
the next, bridges and tunnels were shut down, and air and road
travel suspended. I could not get there until Thursday.
I found a somber city, although the remarkable thing was how
much of life was going on as usual. New York had suffered a great
blow, but even though the toll in lives and treasure was still
unknown, it was clear the city would recover. The people who live
there actually liked the place and they simply would not allow it
to fade away.
A smart friend mentioned to me in the weeks after September 11
that while the attack had left Washington depressed, it had made
New York angry. I think there was something to that, and certainly
anger is a useful emotion.
Meanwhile, in the endless recycling of September 11 stories for
today's anniversary, I note a small item in Newsweek.
Mental-health officials, it seems, estimated that 1.5 million New
Yorkers would need psychological counseling after September 11, but
only a tenth as many showed up to receive it. That made sense, of
course. Mental-health officials and much of the media to the
contrary, people were getting on with their lives.
topics:
Television