Much like Pearl Harbor, Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s words,
“…a day that will live in infamy” apply to the horrendous September 11th,
2001.
The day in which Al-Qaeda terrorists crashed into New York City’s twin
towers and killed more than 3,000 people has been marked in history as a day we
will never forget. Even worse, a day that loved ones of victims will not be
able to disregard much less recover from. Stories from 9/11 flood newspapers
still. They include recordings of last phone calls, recovered pictures
belonging to people who were inside of the Twin Towers at the time of the
tragedy, and even papers eerily flying around in the air just like leaves
falling from trees. One story, however, finally has an ending.
Elizabeth
Stringer Keefe found a wedding photo in the messy rubble on 9/11. For 13 years,
she has posted it asking for the owner or friends of the owner to claim it.
After a trending post on Twitter, a friend of the bride and groom came forward
tweeting, “I WAS THERE. I was at the wedding.” Fred Maheis the rightful owner of the photo. He told Twitter, ABC, and many other sources that the photo rested on his desk on the 77th floor of the
second Twin Tower. Heartwarming phone calls between Mahe and Keefe took place
and Keefe tweeted the good news that all members in the picture were alive and
safe. In celebration, Mahe tweeted, “9/11, we remember what we lost. 9/12, we
remember what we have.”
The now completed story of the missing photo shows the
power of social media. Many have now witnessed the true strength of uniting and
coming together to recover what others have lost. FDR’s words may ring in our
ears, but Aesop’s words shake us when he says, “In union there is strength.”
Certainly, for Keefe and Mahe, unity now has a memorable new meaning.
Courtesy of Natalie DiBlasio at http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/09/13/wedding-photo-911/15582497/


How inspiring that this long-lost photograph has finally found a home! It's truly amazing how social media can be used to help people today.
ReplyDelete-Vivie Behrens (6th period)
I saw this on my timeline on twitter and it's crazy and amazing that the owner actually found this! I was wondering, and thinking it would take a miracle for the owner to find this and it truly was!
ReplyDeleteMaddie Murphy pd 6
This is incredible I can't believe that it found its owner and that he was alive. Social media rocks.
ReplyDelete-sophia maas 2nd period
millions! millions! of people on earth and just like that someone was able to find the owner of the picture and its just increadibable how the picture want burned.
ReplyDeletesharon cordon 4th period
this story about the photograph has such a beautiful ending. So glad the people in it are still alive and now have a memory about the memory from the wedding.
ReplyDeleteIm glad that after so many years little things like this are able to stir up emotions and find there ways back to their homes. The upsetting thing about this is that there must have been so many lost memories even after all these years that could not be reunited with loved ones or their rightful place.
ReplyDelete