Pictorial blethers

By blethers

Where were you when ...?

Ever since I was 18 I've been able to recall with total clarity where I was when I heard Kennedy had been killed. More recently, it has become apparent to me that I shall never forget another American tragedy - the attack on the World Trade Centre. And where was I, and how did the news come to me on that day twenty years ago?

I was teaching in the local grammar school. It was the beginning of the afternoon; I had just returned from lunch at home. My Second Year class was settling down, hanging up jackets, getting out books and jotters, looking for folders, chatting gently; I was getting ready to take the register. Then my mobile phone rang, inside my briefcase. It was a great brick of a thing, but there was no phone in the school anywhere near my classroom and I wanted to be contactable. And here I was, being contacted.

The caller was #1 son, at the time a journalist on the staff of The Guardian. He'd just seen this extraordinary thing on the newsroom monitors: a small plane seemed to have crashed into the WTC. He thought I'd be interested. And just as he was speaking, he broke off: Oh - there's another one! It wasn't an accident ...I have to go!" and he promised he'd ring later and hung up and I was left staring at the handset. My pupils, all thirty of them, had also fallen silent, and were staring at me. My face must have expressed something - but what? I couldn't even visualise the WTC towers; they weren't part of my inner movie and at the time I'd not been to New York. 

Feeling stranded at the end of the long English corridor, I decided we needed to be closer to a computer. I lined up the class and told them we were going to get to the library as quietly as possible because really it wasn't their turn ... Kids that age love a ploy, and they passed along that corridor like ghosts. A quick explanation to my friend the librarian had her hunting for news, and gradually - and so slowly, we'd think now - the story unfolded. We told my class; they felt important to be among the first to know. 

I had no class the last period in the afternoon, and crammed into the technician's room to watch the only live TV on that floor. And so it was that I came to see the second tower fall, live on TV. We were so silent. What do you say? Silent and rather fearful. And by the time I was home again, the world knew, and the silence was ended.

We've talked about it ever since.

Blipping the three windows in the narthex of Holy Trinity Church.

Comments
Sign in or get an account to comment.