Feral Jundi

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Call To Action: On 9/11, Remember The Fighting Spirit And Courage Of Civilians On Flight 93

Filed under: Call To Action,Jundism — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 1:38 PM

I am a civilian and on September 11th 2001, my fellow civilians (and citizens) of the US were attacked by terrorists. They were killed at the World Trade Center, they were killed at the Pentagon, and they were killed on Flight 93. My fellow civilians were also maimed in these attacks, and they live with those mental and physical scars every day.

On September 11th 2001, we lost many. This may have been an attack on US soil, but this was not just an attack on the US. Civilians were the main target, and the victims held nationalities from all over the world. On that day, a war was declared on civilians.

We also lost soldiers, policemen, firemen, contractors and federal employees. These men and women gave all in the defense of civilians that day. They did their job and paid an incredible sacrifice, and we will never forget what they did for us.

But my fellow civilians did not go quietly either. On Flight 93, after recognizing what the intent of the terrorists were, they decided to fight. On that flight, civilians came together to stop the evil that hijacked their plane. They charged the cockpit, wrestled control of the plane from the terrorist, and were able to prevent that plane from crashing into the capital of the United States. During that struggle, the plane crashed into a field in Pennsylvania and terrorists and civilians alike all perished.

This is something to ponder. A group of civilians on a random flight, coming together for one cause to stop evil and survive. No one trained them to do what they did, no one briefed them on what to expect, no one told them to sacrifice for this country…..but they did. They decided to fight for their lives, and they were intent on stopping this evil from achieving it’s goal.

I think it is still important to pay tribute to all that died.  It is a significant world wide memory that is forever seared into all of our brains. But what is even more important to me is to remember this event as a day where civilians were empowered to fight back, and make a difference.

It is human to be sad about such loss, but we should also celebrate the fighting spirit of these civilians. It is that fighting spirit, courage, and resolve that we can all use in our daily lives, and in our world wide war against this enemy. Every flight, every subway, every public gathering should be looked at as an opportunity for civilians to stand up to our enemy. We physically ‘stand up’ by having the courage to fight this enemy where ever they may be, and we mentally ‘stand up’ by not living in fear. And of course morally, we maintain the high ground when the enemy intentionally targets our civilian populations.

We are stronger. We are more determined. We will never forget, and this ends when the enemy is reduced to a pitiful memory. It also ends when the enemy is not able to count on the fear of civilians, or that the enemy fears the very population that it targets. Not only must we never forget the loss on this terrible day, but we must also celebrate the fighting spirit and courage of these civilians on Flight 93. –Matt

Flight 93 National Memorial Campaign here.

 

3 Comments

  1. This is an awesome post! Thanks for sharing.

    Comment by John — Saturday, September 10, 2011 @ 8:00 PM

  2. Thanks John. Flight 93 is an inspiration to us all. It is America's 'Remember the Alamo'.

    Comment by Feral Jundi — Sunday, September 11, 2011 @ 12:47 PM

  3. I agree – we, as rugby players, first heard the events within flight 93 the next week as rumblings within our brotherhood. More poignant was NOVA playing the next week up at Ruggerfest in Aspen in the place of NYAC who had been decimated by the loss of firemen in the towers (~ 5 of there starting 15 I believe) – they stood in because NYAC could not come. Your posts really are well thought out and are geared towards the thinking man.

    Comment by John — Monday, September 12, 2011 @ 6:50 PM

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