NYT: U.S. Gov. Should Provide Funding for 9/11 Memorial

NYT: U.S. Gov. Should Provide Funding for 9/11 Memorial

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(Amy Dreher photo)

The federal government should provide continued funding to the 9/11 Memorial “to help keep it maintained and operating in the years ahead,” according to an editorial published in today’s “The New York Times.”

Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii) introduced legislation that would help cover a third of the operating costs. The article opined the bill a “sound solution.”

“In making a plea for Congressional aid for the 9/11 Memorial, Senator Inouye restates an important reality: Sept. 11 brought ‘the most horrific attack on America since the bombings of Pearl Harbor,’” the editorial said, adding “as a national memorial, this deserves continuing federal support.”

By Sarah Lippman, Communications Manager for the 9/11 Memorial

A Dispatch From National 9/11 Flag Tour (Updated)

A Dispatch From National 9/11 Flag Tour (Updated)

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Looking over a photograph of retired Army Col. David Brostrom, whose son was killed in action in Afghanistan, Jeff Parness couldn't help but zero in on Bromstrom's expression.

His lips pursed, Brostrom appears to be fighting back tears, his gaze lost in the field of stars and stripes on the National 9/11 Flag sprawled out before him in Hawaii last month.

"Take a look at the expression on David's face," said Parness, the founder of New York Says Thank You Foundation. "And try to imagine for a second what must have been going through David's mind, and his heart, at that moment."

Parness, whose foundation is taking a U.S. flag recovered from ground zero across the country, added, "This is what the 50-state National 9/11 Flag Restoration Tour is all about."

On Dec. 7, Brostrom did his part to help repair the flag during a stitching ceremony at U.S.S. Missouri in Pearl Harbor. 

Ashen, tattered and blowing in the wind, the torn flag that would become the National 9/11 Flag was recovered after the World Trade Center crumbled. 

For several months, New York Says Thank You Foundation has traveled the country on a tour designed to restitch the flag to its original glory. The first stop on the epic tour was Mena, Ark.  Click here to read more about other stops in the journey. After the flag makes its way across America, it will return to New York City, where it will be added to the permanent collection of the 9/11 Memorial Museum.

The mission of Parness' foundation is the focus of a documentary film to be released this year that is titled "New York Says Thank You."  Here's the movie trailer.

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

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