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Political, religious tensions mark ninth anniversary of 9/11 | Political and religious tensions, besides demonstrations marked the ninth anniversary of the 9/11 terror strikes that had led to the death of over 2,900 Americans in 2001. Though the names of nearly 3,000 victims were read out under
crisp blue skies in Lower Manhattan after the bells of the city’s houses of worship
tolled at the exact moment — 8:46 a.m. — that the first plane struck the north
tower of the World Trade Center, posters and photographs that victims’ relatives
held aloft, bluntly injected politics into New York City’s annual ceremony. The
focus of the two posters was the controversy surrounding the proposed building
of a mosque and a Islamic convention center near Ground Zero. According to the
New York Times, differences were evident from the outset.Thousands filled the
makeshift plaza beside a construction site sprouting cranes and American flags
on a crystal-clear morning a few degrees cooler than the one nine years ago. They
carried cups of coffee and wore T-shirts emblazoned with the symbols of the
response
agencies that had paid so dearly. Until midday, they placed flowers at ground
zero. During the ceremony, knots of protesters wandered the area, sometimes
arguing.
In the afternoon, a few blocks away, police officers and barricades separated
demonstrations, both for and against the Muslim center, that each drew about 2,000
people. Around the country, people debated the meaning of 9/11 and the
appropriateness
of political rallies and protests on its anniversary. The day also drew an array
of national and international figures. At the Pentagon, in a memorial honoring
the nearly 200 victims of the attack there, President Obama said that those
responsible
had sought to divide the country. “They may seek to spark conflict between different
faiths, but as Americans we are not — and never will be — at war with Islam. It
was not a religion that attacked us that September day; it was Al Qaeda, a sorry
band of men which perverts religion. And just as we condemn intolerance and
extremism
abroad, so will we stay true to our traditions here at home as a diverse and tolerant
nation,” Obama said. In Shanksville, Pennslyvania, where United Airlines Flight
93 crashed after passengers rebelled against the plane’s hijackers, the focus
remained on the victims, with speeches by the first lady, Michelle Obama, and
her predecessor, Laura Bush.
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