Counterterrorism Expert Bill Braniff Presents "Understanding Al-Qaeda": Watch Now (Updated)

Learn about Al-Qaeda's history and ideology from counterterrorism expert Bill Braniff, the director of external education at West Point's Combating Terrorism Center.  Braniff offered an insightful and engaging  lecture on May 19 as part of the 9/11, Today and Tomorrow speakers series at the 9/11 Memorial Preview Site, 20 Vesey St.

Braniff's lecture is now available online through  THIRTEEN Forum.  You can watch his talk and past "9/11, Today and Tomorrow" events here.

Don't miss the upcoming speakers series event , "Escaping the Taliban," on  Wednesday, June 23.  David Rohde, a two-time Pulitzer prize winning reporter for the New York Times, has covered conflicts in Afghanistan, Iraq and other countries. From November 2008 to June 2009, he was held captive by the Taliban before escaping. He is the co-author of the forthcoming book “A Rope and A Prayer: The Story of A Kidnapping.” A five-part series that Rohde wrote on his captivity and escape for the New York Times was recently awarded the 2009 George Polk Award for foreign reporting. RSVP now to guarentee a seat for this fascinating lecture.

All 8,000 Tons of Memorial Steel Now Installed at the WTC

All 8,000 Tons of Memorial Steel Now Installed at the WTC

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The 9/11 Memorial is just 472 days away from opening on September 11, 2011. The construction momentum is mounting with the achievement of a new milestone -- 100% of the Memorial's structural steel is now in place.  This steel, weighing more than 8,000 tons, is more than was used to build the Eiffel Tower.  To date, more than 85% of the project's concrete has been poured. The total amount of concrete will be 49,000 cubic yards, equaling twice the volume of the Macy’s building in Herald Square, New York.

About 400 construction workers are on site daily, getting the waterfalls' mechanical pumps installed, waterproofing the Memorial Plaza, and prepping for the installation of hundreds of oak trees starting later this summer.

As seen in the recent aerial photo posted above, the Memorial site is marked by real, visible progress. You can track the project's construction through EarthCam's live webcam.

The First of 400 Oak Trees Will Be Planted at the Memorial This Summer

The first of what will become a grove of nearly 400 trees on the Memorial Plaza, will arrive this summer at the World Trade Center site. Joe Daniels, 9/11 Memorial President, and the Port Authority of New York & New Jersey, today announced this upcoming milestone.

 

Approximately a dozen trees will be brought in before the 9th anniversary of 9/11 and the planting of the trees will continue in stages. Work is now beginning to prepare the Memorial Plaza for the swamp white oak and sweetgum trees. The plaza will be raised approximately six feet from its current level to create a suspended paving system containing soil and irrigation for the trees. The Memorial Plaza will be one of the most sustainable, eco-friendly plazas every constructed. The project is pursuing the Gold certification under the LEED for New Construction program of the U.S. Green Building Council.  For now, the trees are being stored at a New Jersey nursery and are currently 32-feet tall. They are expected to grow an average of two feet per year.

As the New York Times reports, "The saplings, said Joseph C. Daniels, president of the 9/11 memorial, will be “the start of transforming the memorial site into a new green space in the heart of the World Trade Center.”

Google Earth Offers Special Preview of 9/11 Memorial

For the first time, people everywhere can take an incredible virtual tour of the 9/11 Memorial, complete with the towering skyscrapers planned for the 16-acre World Trade Center site in the lower Manhattan skyline.

The National September 11 Memorial & Museum and Google Inc. proudly introduce  a 3D model that demonstrates  how the 9/11 Memorial will appear once it’s completed.

The 3D model of the memorial park can be explored in Google Earth on the 9/11 Memorial web site.  The integration of the Google Earth plugin by the 9/11 Memorial organization provides a new and easy way for people anywhere in the World to explore the memorial virtually. The dimensionally accurate 3D model replicates key components of the memorial that include the signature memorial pools, the arrowhead-shaped museum pavilion, the plaza and hundreds of swamp white oak and sweetgum trees. It plots the memorial in the actual location in which it’s being constructed and shows where it will sit in relation to other buildings and structures in lower Manhattan.

Google Earth enables visitors to pan over the tree-filled plaza, flying through a canopy that will shade an eight-acre public park space. They can peek through windows of the museum pavilion and see two seven-story-steel "tridents" that will greet future visitors entering the 9/11 Memorial Museum. Information about the memorial park, including videos and photographs can be obtained by clicking on one of several informational placemarks.

DNA.info's Julie Shapiro reports,  "Google donated the time and materials to build the virtual tour, which combines Google Earth technology with models of the memorial and rebuilt Trade Center site, so the billions of people who won’t be able to visit the memorial can still get a chance to see it, said Bruce Polderman, a Google product manager."

The 3D model provides a sense of scale for the two signature memorial pools - each about an acre in size - that will feature 30-foot waterfalls flowing within the original footprints of the fallen twin towers.  Visitors can now zoom-in to the memorial plaza and note the intricate detail of each cobblestone, or, zoom-out and hover over the entire site for a view of the 1,776-foot One World Trade Center.

The 9/11 Memorial opens next year, but now you can experience it today through Google Earth.

Delta Air Lines' Special 9/11 Tribute

Delta Air Lines has made a generous donation to help build and sustain the 9/11 Memorial and Museum as a special tribute to honor airline industry employees.   Delta is now one of more than 170,000 individual contributors from all 50 states and 35 countries who have made donations. 9/11 Memorial Chairman Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg thanked Delta Air Lines, saying the gift "reminds us of the critical role that airline industries play to ensure the safety of those who fly."

Delta joins a growing list of corporate supporters that includes the real estate, financial services, legal, tourism, media, labor and banking industries.

In the announcement of the gift, Gail Grimmet, Delta Air Lines Senior Vice President, New York, said, “The impact 9/11 had on our industry cannot be understated.  It affected the lives of our employees in an irrevocable way.  We are honored to pay tribute to those who perished, as well as to the indomitable spirit of Delta’s employees and all of our colleagues across the airline industry. We are privileged to be part of the project that memorializes the tragedy and celebrates our collective spirit as a city and a nation to overcome it.”

Dissecting al Qaeda in 9/11, today and Tomorrow speakers series

Dissecting al Qaeda in 9/11, today and Tomorrow speakers series

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Tonight at 6:30 p.m., counterterrorism expert Bill Braniff will explain the deadly inner-workings al Qaeda as part of the 9/11, Today and Tomorrow speakers series at the 9/11 Memorial Preview Site, 20 Vesey St., in Manhattan.

On June 23, Pulitzer-prize winning New York Times reporter David Rohde (pronounced Road) will headline a lecture on the Taliban. Rohde escaped the Taliban after being held captive from November 2008 to June 2009. RSVP now for next month's event.

Both discussions can be viewed in HD online for free thanks to WNET.ORG’s THIRTEEN Forum. The events will also be available for download through Apple’s iTunes. Braniff's discussion

will be available for viewing on May 26, while Rohde's talk will available June 30.

Don’t miss the next event in this enlightening speakers series. RSVP now for the May 19 lecture featuring a counterterrorism official who’ll detail the deadly inner-workings of al Qaeda. On June 23, Pulitzer-prize winning New York Times reporter David Rohde (pronounced Road) will headline a lecture on the Taliban. Rohde escaped the Taliban after being held captive from November 2008 to June 2009.

Due to limited space, it’s highly recommended that you RSVP online at national911memorial.org/rsvp. A suggested donation of $10 per person will help support ongoing programming. Again, this event and others in the series can be viewed at thirteen.org/forum.

By Michael Frazier, Sr. Communications Manager for the 9/11 Memorial

9/11 Speakers Series provides lesson on understading a relentless enemy - al Qaeda

CBS's 60 minutes recently had a report on homegrown terrorists, American citizens like the recent "would-be Times Square bomber, who have traveled abroad for terrorist training in order to attack  America or its allies."

Recruiting sympathizers is just one page in al Qaeda's war strategy. Learn about other plans and the history and ideology of the terrorist group from counterterrorism expert Bill Braniff, the director of external education at West Point's Combating Terrorism Center.  Braniff is giving a presentation tomorrow, May 19, at 6:30 p.m. as part of the 9/11, Today and Tomorrow speakers series at the 9/11 Memorial Preview Site, 20 Vesey St.  RSVP now for this event.

Braniff conducts cutting-edge research in counterterrorism and trains law enforcement agencies. His expertise helps U.S. officials combat terrorism with a deeper understanding of how al Qaeda operates.

The speakers series events are being filmed in HD for THIRTEEN Forum. The programs are available online the following week for streaming or podcasting at http://www.thirteen.org/forum/. The debut event in March featured touching 9/11 audio recordings from StoryCorps. If you missed the debut, watch it and other programs here or at WNET.ORG.

Video of Braniff's lecture will be available through THIRTEEN Forum on May 26.

By Michael Frazier, Sr. Communications Manager for the 9/11 Memorial

WTC steel arrives at Louisiana firehouse after years-long wait

WTC steel arrives at Louisiana firehouse after years-long wait

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A 20-foot beam from the remains of the destroyed World Trade Center was greeted with bowed head, tears and prayer when it was recently received at a fire district in Louisiana.

According to a St.Tammany News report by Suzanne Le Breton, Fire District 12 Deputy Chief Steve Krentel has been trying to get a piece of WTC steel for use for a memorial for years. The beam reportedly arrived this month on a trailer, draped in an American flag, "serving as a reminder of the many coffins holding firefighters and other first responders that were laid to rest in the days and months following September 11."

The beam is to be used as a centerpiece for a proposed memorial proposed at the fire station at the intersection of Louisiana Highway 36 and Louisiana Highway 32 in Covington, La., about 42 miles north of New Orleans on the other side of Lake Pontchartrain. The fire district plans to erect the memorial featuring the beam in time for the upcoming anniversary of Sept. 11

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which is building the National September 11 Memorial & Museum, is seeking proposals from public and city agencies and not-for-profit groups interested in acquiring a piece of 9/11 World Trade Center steel for public display. Tons and tons of WTC steel are being stored at a JFK airport hangar.  Communities across the country are receiving pieces of remnant steel.

Several large pieces of WTC steel will be part of the exhibition experience of the 9/11 Memorial Museum, which is scheduled to open in 2012.

By Michael Frazier, Sr. Communications Manager for the 9/11 Memorial

Even from afar, progress of 9/11 memorial clearly visible

Even from afar, progress of 9/11 memorial clearly visible

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Even from thousands of feet in the sky, the two acre-sized 9/11 Memorial pools can be made out.

Photographer Joe Woolhead routinely snaps pictures (like the one above) of the construction progress at the World Trade Center site. Find more of his photos here or visit www.national911memorial.org.

The Memorial is on track to open in 2011. The memorial pools are fully framed in steel, while nearly 100 percent of the steel for the project has been installed.

More than 60 percent of concrete has been poured. When construction’s completed, the total amount of steel will equal 8,151 tons – that’s more than what was used to build the Eiffel Tower.

By Michael Frazier, Sr. Communications Manager for the 9/11 Memorial

'Dear Hero' Collection comes home to NYC

'Dear Hero' Collection comes home to NYC

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In case you missed it. Children from across the globe handmade most of the 3,000 heartfelt gifts that make up the one-of-a-kind “Dear Hero” collection, which is comprised of poignant letters, heartfelt drawings and other tokens of gratitude delivered to firehouses across New York City after the 2001 terrorist attacks.

The items were sent to the city's fire companies and firefighters as a show of gratitude, and to recognize their heroic efforts and sacrifice.  On 9/11, 343 members of the city's Fire Department were killed.

Tanya Hoggard, a Delta airlines flight attendant who volunteered at the World Trade Center during the recovery,  is behind the collection of the items. She began preserving them in early 2002 as fire stations began dismantling displays of the letters and drawings. Hoggard named the tokens the Dear Hero collection because that was often the salutation used by children in their notes and letters. The collection has been stored in Cincinnati, Ohio, and has returned  to New York City after nearly nine years.

The National September 11 Memorial & Museum recently acquired the items and have added them to the permanent collection.

"For me, this is what I've been waiting for," Hoggard recalled. "Ideally, there will be a person who can one day show his or her own child what they sent to a rescue worker after 9/11."

In addition to numerous letters and artwork from children, the items include a U.S. flag fashioned from paper and $1 bills, ceramic angels, decorative quilts and a large wreath covered with dozens of small white teddy bears. Some items came from abroad, such as a flag signed by residents of Italy, a banner from Pakistan and a string of 1,000 origami cranes from Japan symbolizing world peace.

By Michael Frazier, Sr. Communications Manager for the 9/11 Memorial

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