Tags
9.11, Bogside, Boston, Boston Marathon 2013, Enniskillen, Mr. Rogers, Newtown, Northern Ireland, Omagh, Red Sox, Sandy Hook, terrorism, Troubles
Until September 11th, I had taken for granted the sense of security I felt as a woman who had traded in Northern Ireland for America. Foolishly, I had too quickly dropped my guard, almost forgetting anything can happen. I grew complacent and smug, confident that – unlike her mother – my American daughter would never have to look twice at an unattended shopping bag that had been simply forgotten by someone in a hurry, or that she would never find herself standing stock still with her arms over her head to be searched before proceeding through airport security, or wonder while poring over international headlines, how a complete stranger could hate her because of her nationality; or, that she would find out on Facebook that two bombs exploded at the finish-line of the iconic Boston Marathon, killing three people and injuring more than 140. Little Martin Richard, the eight year old boy killed in the blast had just hugged his father who moments earlier crossed the finish line. Anything can happen – it always does.
Even though it is a big American city, I always think of Boston as a small town, buzzing with excitement when the Red Sox are at Home as they were today. The weather was perfect for the home game and for the Marathon – warm and dry, the promise of victory hanging in the air. Before those two bombs exploded at the finish line, with the kind of chilling choreography eerily reminiscent of explosions that time and again shook Northern Ireland to its core, Boston was celebrating with winners already across the finish line, and Red Sox Nation jubilant with the walk-off win.
I imagine some people in the crowd guessed or hoped those blasts were just celebratory fireworks, the way we convince ourselves it’s only a car backfiring on the freeway and not a gunshot, or it’s just a clap of Monsoon thunder, not a bomb going off on the railway line. But then there was that plume of grey smoke, the unmistakable stench of it, the scream of sirens, the blood on Boylston Street, and the sickening, renewed fear of being under attack, once again in the aftermath of those two planes crashing with such force into the heart of a city, on another clear day that had been full of possibilities, the Manhattan skyline sparkling in the sunshine.
Anything Can Happen by Seamus Heaney
After Horace, Odes, I, 34
Anything can happen. You know how Jupiter
Will mostly wait for clouds to gather head
Before he hurls the lightning? Well just now
He galloped his thunder cart and his horsesAcross a clear blue sky. It shook the earth
and the clogged underearth, the River Styx,
the winding streams, the Atlantic shore itself.
Anything can happen, the tallest towersBe overturned, those in high places daunted,
Those overlooked regarded. Stropped-beak Fortune
Swoops, making the air gasp, tearing the crest off one,
Setting it down bleading on the next.Ground gives. The heaven’s weight
Lifts up off Atlas like a kettle lid.
Capstones shift. Nothing resettles right.
Telluric ash and fire-spores boil away.
Anything can happen. The Boston Marathon is but another stark and sobering reminder of this truth. Still, no one would have expected it. No one would have expected Newtown and the harrowing irony of the Marathon’s 26th mile marker dedicated to the victims of the Sandy Hook Elementary Shooting.
Looking on, from my living room on the other side of the country, I should know by now that the finish line of a signature race is, for some person or people, not an unexpected place at all; rather it is “a legitimate target.” And, with over 25,000 assembled for the event, the potential for a tremendous loss of life. A profound sense of sadness and weariness accompanies this awareness, because it reconfirms what I know, that it is impossible to defeat terrorism. At the same time, it is impossible to live in constant fear of it, otherwise you might never go outside, as my mother often told me when I was a young girl growing up in Northern Ireland.
Usually, we were at a safe distance from “The Troubles.” Except every night when we turned on the news or the odd time that our kitchen window shook because a bomb had exploded somewhere close – the time the car-bomb exploded outside Halls Hotel, or when my brother, as a journalist, had to interview the grandmother of three little boys murdered, burned to death on July 12, 1998. Richard, Mark and Jason, just eleven, nine, and seven years old, had been asleep when a petrol bomb was thrown through the window of their home. Or an otherwise typical Saturday night out in Belfast, when my college friend Ruth and I returned to her brother’s house, only to find out that her car had been stolen and set ablaze as a barricade across town somewhere.
Years earlier, I remember watching grainy black and white images on a tiny television set, the evening news, and a reporter in the street relating the events of a Sunday in 1972, when during a Civil Rights march in Derry’s Bogside, British soldiers shot into a crowd of unarmed and peaceful civilians, killing thirteen of them. Bloody Sunday. As a young woman, visiting home from America, I remember the bombing of Omagh and being horrified that it could happen after what had happened in Enniskillen.
Never again? Think again.
Physically untouched by all these, but changed nonetheless. Ostensibly, I survived The Troubles. I just managed to avoid being in the wrong place. The images are indelible and iconic: Father Daly waving a blood-stained white handkerchief on the streets of Derry; aging veterans of the World Wars, medals gleaming in Enniskillen; the carnage on Market Street in the heart of Omagh.
When I heard about Boston, I thought immediately of Omagh, when the Real IRA loaded a non-descript car with 500 pounds of explosives, parked it in the middle of the little market town, and detonated it when it could do most harm. Immediately, glass, masonry and metal ripped through the crowd of shoppers, mostly women and children, the sheer force killing 21 people immediately. One of them was a woman, pregnant with twins. Some of their bodies were never found. Hundreds were injured.
I will never forget the Omagh bombing. It was on a Saturday when mothers were shopping for back-to-school supplies and uniforms. Those responsible called in a warning, and with unimaginable cruelty and callousness led the police to divert the crowd not to safety but to where they would be the most vulnerable. It happened during my daughter’s first trip to Ireland. Not quite eight months old, she was the surprise for my mother’s 60th birthday party. I remember that night, holding her tight as I watched the news in my parent’s house, the accounts from witnesses forever changed and devastated by the blood that flowed in the gutters and the bits and pieces of people lying on the street. One of the volunteer nuns recalls the scene before her at Tyrone County Hospital. A war-zone. A killing field:
“Nothing could have prepared me for what I saw. People were lying on the floor with limbs missing and there was blood all over the place. People were crying for help and looking for something to kill the pain. Other people were crying out looking for relatives. You could not really be trained for what you had seen unless you were trained in Vietnam or somewhere like that”
How could Omagh happen after Enniskillen, where over twenty-five years ago at 10.43AM on Remembrance Sunday, the IRA detonated a bomb without warning, killing eleven ordinary people and injuring sixty:
How could Boston happen? And what can we do? Like Newtown and Omagh, New York and Enniskillen, we will find, long before the answers, the highest expressions of humanity and kindess within the hearts of ordinary people who will emerge as heroes. Mr. Rogers calls them “the helpers.”
While we struggle to find the words to explain the inexplicable – again – we can remind our children – and ourselves – of the helpers and their humanity that shines through the darkest days:
When I was a boy and I would see scary things in the news, my mother would say to me, “Look for the helpers. You will always find people who are helping.” To this day, especially in times of “disaster,” I remember my mother’s words and I am always comforted by realizing that there are still so many helpers – so many caring people in this world.
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Renn said:
Mr. Rogers always knew what to say! (I love that quote, and posted it on my FB wall in December after the Newton shootings.)
I applaude you, Yvonne, for taking time to mark this tragedy today with such thoughtful prose, and to put it in dramatic contrast to the many events that have shaken our worlds in the past decades.
I am taking the opposite tact today with HAWMC. (Call me Leo the Lighthearted.)
{{{hugs}}}
Editor said:
His is such a humane and grounding sentiment at a time when we are wondering why and how this could have happened again,and knowing, too, that it will most likely happen again and again.
Terrible.
Marie said:
I agree with Renn – thank you for taking time to mark this atrocity with your usual thoughtful and thought provoking prose (and SH’s poetry).
Editor said:
Marie, thank you. It just broke my heart to imagine those runners at the end, all those thousands descended upon the most Irish of American cities, their day all twisted and turned upside down by such terror. Just terrible.
pinkunderbelly said:
Your mother was right — if we live in fear, we would never go outside. I imagine that’s cold comfort to the mother of that 8-year-old boy or the 10 people who faced amputation because of the blast, but it’s still true. Your recollection of the bombings in Ireland are powerful; I felt as if I were there with you.
Editor said:
Cold comfort indeed, Nancy. And, to this day, when I am at an event where I am in the thick of a crowd, it always occurs to me that we are so vulnerable. But that is what terrorism does.
Catherine - Facing Cancer Together said:
All I can do is shake my head and think of the goodness that went into that marathon. What you’be described is really quite horrifying, and it is heartbreaking that it’s also arrived in North America. Thank goodness for ‘the helpers’
Editor said:
I remember being at a talk where Sherman Alexie made a point I have never forgotten about the duality of things in life – how the same world that gave us Hitler also gave us Bruce Springsteen. Thinking of those that caused this awful thing along with those that are helping …
Editor said:
Yes, we need them, because this kind of thing will happen again and again.
Amanda Church said:
Thoughts and prayers in Boston today, and with the worldwide running community xx
Editor said:
I thought of you, Amanda, and how the joy of crossing that line would be forever mangled with horror. Heartbreaking.
The Accidental Amazon said:
Yvonne, thank you. Boston is my hometown. It helps to know that you know exactly how I feel. For twenty years, I worked in the city. For the latter half of those years, I lived in it, too, about 4 miles from the scene of the explosions. For a year after that, I lived across the Massachusetts Avenue Bridge in Cambridge, about 3 miles from the scene in the other direction. After the explosions, the Mass. Ave. Bridge, which leads into that part of town, was closed. I can picture the Marathon Route, the streets, the buildings, the people, very clearly in my mind. Too clearly perhaps.
I almost made the hour’s drive up there yesterday to see friends in Boston, but a necessary errand kept me in Rhode Island. Instead, I spent the afternoon trying to find out if anyone I knew was among the injured. An old friend of mine, who has run the Marathon herself, had gone to watch the runners, but thankfully was all right and made it home. Several friends who ‘almost went to watch,’ didn’t & are safe. As far as I know, no one I know is in the hospital. But I am shaken.
Patriots Day is one that we Massachusetts natives celebrate proudly, the day we think of Paul Revere’s midnight ride, the day we think of the birth of our country, of our fight for independence from Britain, of the Redcoats heading to Lexington to arrest John Hancock & Sam Adams, of ‘the shot heard round the world.’ Trauma doctors who were interviewed yesterday described the scene and the injuries as being like a war zone. We won the war that Patriots Day commemorates. What ‘war’ was yesterday’s horror supposed to signal?
Today, I’m trying to focus on the goodness of so many people who responded instinctively to help. I’m grateful that so many first responders were already there, that the injured could be taken to so many world-class hospitals within minutes of the site, that there were not more deaths, more injuries than there were.
A war zone? I don’t know whose war or why, but thank heaven most of us are helping, not fighting. Love to you, dear one. Kathi
Editor said:
Oh, Kathi, I am so sorry. Sorry that your city will never rest easy again, that the spectre of this will rise up every Patriots Day, that the effects of it will ripple far out into the lives of all the people who call Boston home. I understand. I do. If I close my eyes, I can hear the sirens and the cries of the woman, “Where’s mammy?” in the moments after the Omagh bombing. I can feel the boom of the explosion, even though I was nowhere near it.
The immediate street closures and “security” that doesn’t make us feel very secure at all. You and all the people you know who “could have ben there” but for a change of plan. The sickening unreality that it really happened. Here. In America. Again.
And then the kindness of strangers who will come from near and far, not sure what to do, but they will be there. The expressions of sympathy and humanity from all over the world will fill books of condolences, and it will be just enough to keep us from literally falling apart.
Until the next time. Because, that is the nature of terrorism.
I am so sorry.
xo
Jan Baird Hasak said:
Like Kathi, I am trying to focus on the helpers and not the meaningless and senseless killings. Your prose always touches me. Thank you, Jan
Editor said:
Thank you, Jan.
Yes. Were it not for the many beautiful acts of humanity, it would be hard to step forward from yet another senseless assault on what should have been an extraordinary day.
So very sad.
Editor said:
Thank you, Jan, always for taking a moment to stop by. If we don’t focus on the helpers, we are lost, I think.
xo
betty watterson said:
What a very sad day for Boston, thought and prayers are with the families of the dead and injured, . Never thought Id hear of another bomb like Omagh, unfortunately thats the awful price of terrorism, Thanks Yvonne for this very sad blog, God bless. Mam xxx
Editor said:
And, it will happen again. So distressing for so many.
xo
Editor said:
Oh mam,
Isn’t it just heartbreaking. I keep thinking about how when I first came to America, I really believed I was coming to a place where there would never be the bombings and the bullets that destroyed so many lives in our country.
xo
Victoria said:
Thank you for telling your story and for the news of what happened. I went straight over to the New York Times website to get the story. This is the second time (the other was 911) where I had to watch events unfold from across an ocean. So distant and yet so close because it is happening in MY country.
As the news spreads around the world, the world will be watching America’s reaction to this act. And we (the Americans abroad) will be asked a lot of questions about what happened – the context of what they are probably reading right now in the local papers- and what we think. We are the unofficial ambassadors of our nation in our host countries and we take that responsibility very seriously – especially in times like this And the sub-context of all the conversations will be – what will the United States do in response to this?
I don’t have an answer for the last but what I hope and pray for is that we show the world the best of all that we are: a nation of “helpers.”
Editor said:
I understand, Victoria. Watching on TV and being far from home creates a sickening “unreality,” doesn’t it?
While I don’t think there is anything anyone can do to prevent such a thing from happening, you are so right about the response to it. Back home, we always braced ourselves for the invariable declarations of responsibility and then the reprisal bombings and shootings. But holding the ordinary people up were the helpers. They will do the same here.
I am so sorry.
y