By: Kayla Webley
There was perhaps no place more fitting to go than the place where it all began. As President Obama wrapped up his remarks, confirming the death of public enemy No.1, Osama bin Laden, a few people started to gather at New York's Ground Zero. They kept coming. By the time a man shimmied up a light post around midnight and sprayed bottles of champagne over the crowd, several hundred people had gathered.
The word for the night was 'closure.' It sprung from almost every persons' lips who came to the hallowed ground of the World Trade Center to mark an end of sorts to our nation's most painful open wound. While capturing bin Laden won't likely change much of the operations of al-Qaeda, tonight that didn't matter. What mattered was the people who gathered to celebrate the conquering of the person who killed many of this city's loved ones.
A crowd at New York's Ground Zero cheers the news that Osama bin Laden is dead. |
One man, wearing what can only be described as stunner shades, clad in an American flag hat and t-shirt, broadcast "Born in the USA," on a makeshift boombox he held high above his head. Another man scrambled up a pole to address the crowd: "I have something to say. You see what the enemy can do," he said, gesturing at the empty hole where the Twin Towers once stood. "We will go further."
As the hours ticked by, the usual antics were to be expected. There were the sellers hawking American flags for $5 a pop, the trampled cardboard cases of Keystone Light (evidence of the drunken college kids who stumbled around looking for more) and the few who took things a little too far, climbing things not meant to be climbed. But, in looking for the quieter ones, the people standing solemnly to the back of the crowd, it was easy to spot those who had come to Ground Zero not for the boisterous celebration, but to reflect on the magnitude of the night.
Among them was Mickey Carroll, a 29-year-old firefighter from Staten Island who lost his father, also a firefighter, on 9/11. He couldn't quite sum up the emotions he felt. "It's hard to explain. I feel anxious. I feel excited," he said. "This is something that this country, these families, my family, has been waiting for for so long."
Jamie Roman, a 17-years-old from Astoria, Queens who came to Ground Zero with her mother, echoed that sentiment. Holding a T-Shirt tightly to her chest, she fought tears as she remembered the man it memorized. She spoke of Christopher Santora, a close family friend, who at 23-years-old was the youngest firefighter to have lost his life in the attacks. "This is a little bit of closure," she said. "We finally have some peace in our lives."
Photos: Osama bin Laden dead
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