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Firefighters
everywhere are connected. It really doesn’t matter if you work as a
volunteer in a small community, as a wildland firefighter, or if you pulled
on your gear and answered the call on September 11th and headed
to the World Trade Center or the Pentagon. Firefighters share a common bond
that has a lot to do with helping others, the chance to make a difference,
and as we all realized again, the necessity of sometimes risking life
itself.
"It’s my job," is what one exhausted, ash-covered New York firefighter told
a news reporter just before heading back in to the rubble. The reporter
later tried to get in touch with that firefighter. She couldn’t find him.
We join with
hundreds of millions of others around the world who mourn the malicious
destruction of life in New York City, northern Virginia, and Pennsylvania.
Words cannot begin to capture the dimension of our sorrow. Nor can they
adequately express the respect we feel and honor we give to the
firefighters, police officers, emergency workers and civilians who
heroically entered doomed buildings to perhaps save just one more life.
Their heroism
will be a beacon to all firefighters of this and future generations. Their
sacrifice will not be forgotten. Honoring them is something we will do each
time the fire call comes. It’s our promise to them.
We understand.
Remembering what happened on September 11th is now part of our
job as well. |
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