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New York is still a city where anything is possible

This article is from page 23 of the 2011-09-13 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 23 JPG

WHEN the dust settles – life must always move on. There are few places in the world which greater embody this spirit than New York City. After the terrorist attacks of September, it would have been all too easy for the people of New York to become paranoid, hard and bitter – always looking over their shoulder for the next potential threat.

But a life lived in fear is no life at all and the spirit of the great melting pot which is New York could not exist without trust and an ability to embrace new people and cultures.

While there has been some who have used the events of September 11, according to Shaun O’Connell, New York is still the city where anything is possible.

“In general, I think that New York is still a welcoming place for people from all backgrounds, but maybe I think that some members of the Muslim community might thing otherwise. At any time where there are moments of fear and moments of the unknown there are certain people who will try to capatilise on it,” he said.

“Like the so-called World Trade Center mosque. I used to do martial arts training in a building two doors down from this Muslim community centre, it does not face the site of the World Trade Center and you wouldn’t even know that you are close to it.

“But we had a lot of right-wing people who were making a fuss of this mosque, which was totally disingenuous. The local people down there were already in favour of the mosque – it had passed muster locally. And then, as soon as the election [the 2008 presidential election] was over, no-one was making an issue about this anymore. So some people have tried to use September 11 for their own aims but for most regular New Yorker this is still a welcoming city.”

While the worlded watch on at the large commemorations and even larger speeches over the weekend, the event was marked for the people of New York in one hundred thousand other small ways.

“I think that as important as it to publicly commemorate this event I thin that a lot of people have been marking this event in their own private way. People will look in from afar and see the larger commemoration, but the things that I notice are a lot more personal that that. Like my neighbour, who is a retired fire captain, he lost scores of friends in 9/11 and was forced to search through the rubble and inhale all of that air when we were told it was clean and safe. He has been forced to retire because of what he inhaled during the rescue,” continued Shaun.

“His wife worked in finance at the World Trade Center and she lost a lot of friends on that day too. Most of the friends that I have in the different Irish organisations are either retired firemen or retired policemen, so they all have a story to tell. So while people might look in from afar and see the commemorations, there are so many personal commemorations going on around the city right now.”

Shaun is a member of the New York County Clare Association. His great-grandfather Patrick O’Connell emigrated from Clooncolman nearly 100 years ago and his nephew Buddy O’Connell, lived on that family farm in Clare until he died five years ago.

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