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9/11 marked with mourning and service
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-09-11 23:10

NEW YORK: Cold rain mixed with tears as mourners collected under umbrellas and a dreary sky Friday to mark the eighth anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks with old rituals and a new purpose - honoring the spirit of those who rushed forward to help.

9/11 marked with mourning and service
A woman is comforted as friends and relatives of the victims of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks gather for a commemoration ceremony at Zuccotti Park, adjacent to ground zero, on the eighth anniversary of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, Friday, Sept. 11, 2009 in New York. [Agencies]
9/11 marked with mourning and service

Skies were gray in New York City, at the Pentagon and at the crash site of United Airlines Flight 93 in a Shanksville, Pa., field, where now-familiar ceremonies honored the nearly 3,000 people who were lost. Friday was also the first time the anniversary was observed as a national day of service, following an order signed this year by President Barack Obama.

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"From this day forward, we will safeguard the memories of those who died by rekindling the spirit of service that lit our city with hope and helped keep us strong," New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said at a ceremony in lower Manhattan.

Obama and first lady Michelle Obama observed a moment of silence in honor of 9/11 victims outside the White House as a single bugler played taps. A Washington rain came to a stop as the observance began at 8:46 am, the moment the first jetliner struck the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001. Later, in the rain, he placed a wreath at the Pentagon.

9/11 marked with mourning and service
U.S. President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama greet family members of the victims of the September 11 attacks on New York, Washington, and Pennsylvania and Pentagon staff during a ceremony marking the eighth anniversary at the Pentagon near Washington, September 11, 2009. [Agencies] 
9/11 marked with mourning and service

The nation, he said, came together as one after the terrorist attacks, "united not only in our grief but in our resolve to stand up for the country we love."

At a plaza adjacent to ground zero in New York City, families gathered, with umbrellas whipping inside out, while the names of the Trade Center victims were read, pausing for moments of silence at the minutes the jetliners crashed into the towers and the buildings fell.

People involved in volunteer work across the nation joined relatives of victims to read the names of those lost in the twin towers.

One reader represented a group called New York Says Thank You, which sends volunteers from New York City each year on the attacks anniversary to help rebuild communities around the country affected by disasters as a way to send thanks for the help that came to New York City after Sept. 11.

Other readers were from local soup kitchens, advocacy groups and well-known service organizations including the American Red Cross and the United Way.

As has become tradition, relatives who read names called out greetings and messages of love to the lost.

"We miss you; life will never be the same without you. This is not the rain," said Vladimir Boyarsky, whose son, Gennady Boyarsky, was killed. "This is the tears."

Philip Hayes Jr. noted how his father made the ultimate sacrifice when he responded to the site that morning, even though he had long been retired from the Fire Department.

"We love you, Dad and we miss you," Hayes said.

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