4A - The-Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 13, 2001 OP/ED Uwe Eirbtu aa tiI 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 daily. letters@umich.edu EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 GEOFFREY GAGNON Editor in Chief MICHAEL GRASS NICHOLAS WOOMER Editorial Page Editors Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. NOTABLE QUOTABLE Once the shock begins to wear off, America seems fated to a prolonged period of painful self-examination about its security, about its place in the world, about the burdens as well as the benefits of being the sole remaining superpower." - The Economist 5-. ...... ' -. :: .f ... ...., : s .N~. ..c .. ... .l~2 ;. ......................... 1. 0 0 United States of Vulnerability DAVID HORN HORNOGRAPHY nce on a visit to New York, I hap- pened to stay at the Marriott Hotel located next to the World Trade Center. After an evening out, my friend and I thought it would be fun to go down to the Plaza at the foot of the WTC and walk around. The New York skyline is strange. The dis- tance you are from many of its most architec- turally and physically imposing buildings does not necessarily have any relation to your sight- line of the particular building. As you approach the city from northern New Jersey, the skyline begins to emerge from what is sometimes a beautiful blue sky. White clouds rest peacefully above 110 stories of soaring, almost mythical majesty. From certain vantage points much fur- ther uptown, you could peek through buildings and make out the WTC's top-most points. In the other boroughs, a terrace on any of the taller apartment buildings would earn you a relatively unobstructed sightline. But when you're Down- town or Midtown, there are too many other tall buildings, densely packed, and you would forget just how tall the WTC, just a few blocks away, really is. But on this particular evening my friend and I lay, with our backs against its concrete wall, below one of the Twin Towers and gazed up at this surreal road to the heavens that stood above us. On Tuesday night, when I stood at the vigil in the Diag and tried to conjure up how I could possibly approach this unfortunately unap- proachable subject in today's column, I again looked to the sky. And I remembered that night, and my proximity to the crown jewel in New York's million-dollar skyline. Anyway, that's an introduction to a story I can't really tell, a point I can't really make. It is probably callous to discuss architectural loss in the midst of the worst terrorist attack ever, but the loss of the WTC - the building itself - from downtown Manhattan is more than an architectural loss. It is the loss of a crucial ingre- dient of our civilization's stew of achievement. And callous as it may be, it is as far as my com- prehension of what happened Tuesday morning has taken me. The numbers - of bodies, of dol- lars - will start to become known, and hopeful- ly then I can begin to appreciate the scope of what happened, its sickening horror and the ensuing grief. But for now, all I can deal with is what I see on the television. Even now I understand that the devastation of Tuesday marks the loss of a security and piece of mind that we - America, Americans - never deserved to have. Part of me is keeping myself from becoming too rattled, maybe too outraged, by acknowledging that the action taken by the terrorists on Tuesday was not com- pletely unwarranted. We don't deserve some- thing as severe as what happened in New York and Washington. No nation, no people, does. But there was an important lesson that our nation's leadership, and our nation's general consciousness, needed to learn. It is that we are not immune from international scrutiny. I am not bothered by that statement's obviousness. But it is one that everyone in this country - from President Bush to you and me - need to realize. We try to forget about the way this country behaves internationally - that we too often behave as terrorists. We are encouraged to ignore that behavior by the national media, by government propaganda, by schoolbooks and by each other. This world is not safe, and this country is certainly no exception. It wasn't Tuesday, it isn't today, and it won't be in 50 years - unless things change. The laundry list of American misdoings is for another time in another column - probably one that is not Hornography. If the leadership of our country has its way, a dangerous cycle will be allowed to continue. It is one in which America makes enemies abroad, via broken treaties, unattended summits and tyrannical international policing. Terrorism fol- lows, allowing leaders to call for appropriations to "fix" our national defense. The cycle needs to end, and it ends at the beginning. Funding the military at this point is a band-aid solution to a more complex problem. The problem can be traced back to our cockiness and arrogance in international matters, and it needs to end. When we celebrated my mother's birthday, we celebrated it in the city she had grown up in - a city thousands of miles and decades removed from Pearl Harbor. It was a city that was safe - but safe only in our minds. This wave of terrorism may not be over - let's learn from Tuesday and not fall back asleep; not con- vince ourselves that what happened two days ago can't happen again today. We won't panic, but we won't become complacent, either. This is a frighteningly imperfect world, which fosters an environment where something like what hap- pened in Manhattan and Arlington can happen. But we as a nation play a major part in that world, and our actions can shape it. My condolences are with the friends and families of the victims of the WTC and Penta- gon attacks, and my faith is in an American peo- ple and an American government that can learn, change, and improve. David Horn can be reached via e-mail at hornd@umich.edu. S' LETTERS TO THE EDITOR .. . Reflecting on Tuesday JOINT STUDENT STATEMENT 0 In light of Tuesday's tragedy, we stand unitc in condemnation of these heinous attack Together, we must grieve and ultimatel overcome. This crime forces us to contemplat every held belief about ourselves, our commun ty, our nation, and our world. This attack could make our world appear dar and dismal, or could be an opportunity for cohe sion and growth. It is vital that we stand togethe as a united community, held together by th bonds of humanity, love, and compassion. By virtue of the community in which we are part, the value of diversity has been deepl embedded within all of us. The University o Michigan is unique, special, and a place whic we are proud to call our home, as a result of th diversity, but also tolerance. This tolerance ha never been more crucial than now. The micro cosm that we call our home can serve as an inter national example of diversity, tolerance an peace. It is in our hands. In solidarity RACHEL TRONSTEI: Presiden LSA Student Governmen As'Ai TARSIP Presiden Muslim Students Associatio This statement was co-signed by th following student groups ACLU of the University of Michigan Adventist Students for Christ Alice Lloyd Hall Council Alpha Epsilon Delta Alpha Iota Omicron Alpha Kappa Psi Alpha Phi Omega Alpha Sigma Mu American Movement for Israel American Society of Mechanical Engineers Arab-American Anti-Discrimination Committee Black Student Union Black Volunteer Network Billiards Club Biomedical Society for Under-Represented Engineers d Gamma Sigma Alpha Gender MOSAIC Q&A Get Outdoors .y Graduate Org. of Students in Higher Education e Headnotes Homecoming Committee Indian American Student Association Interfraternity Council *k Islamic Education Society Israel-Michigan Public Affairs Committee - Jewish Business Students at the Business School er Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Sigma Chapter e Kinesiology Student Government Korean Students of Culture La Familia a La Voz Lambda Theta Phi Latin Fraternity y League of Women Voters )f Lebanese Student Association h Malaysian Students Association Medical School Student Council is Men Against Violence Against Women as Michigan Argentine Tango Club - Michigan Cycling Club Michigan Internship Fund Michigan Journal of International Law d Michigan Sailing Team Michigan Student Assembly Minority Youth Striving to Incorporate Cohesiveness Mortar Board Y, Musicology/Ethnomusicology League of Students N Muslim Engineering Students Association t Muslim Law Students Association it National Council of Negro Women nt National Society of Collegiate Scholars Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Phi Chapter N Organizational Studies Student Assembly t Orthodox Christian Fellowship >n Pakistani Students Association Persian Students Association Pharmacy Student Government Council e Phi Alpha Delta s. Pierpont Commons Program Board Pre-Med Club Project SERVE Public ealth Student Association Puerto Rican Association Punjabi Student Organization Rackham Student Interdisciplinary Group Residence Hall Association School of Nursing Doctoral Student Organization Shipman Society Shotokan Karate' Sigma Phi Omeg'a Society of Biology Students . Students Against Violence Everywhere Students Allied for Freedom and Equality Student Association for Health Policy Studen Mediation Services Palestinians unfairly being typecast as supporting attacks To THE DAILY: One cannot express enough horror and dis- belief at the events that we have been witnessing over the past 48 hours. However, I would like to wam of the repercussions of irresponsible jour- nalism in the case of the unfolding tragedy in the United States. Reporting on the fact that some Palestinians may have been celebrating the attacks on the U.S. is not representative and very dangerous. It will only fuel the backlash and attacks that Arab-Americans are sure to face and have already been facing in the U.S. I live in East Jerusalem and have friends throughout the West Bank who reported quiet. For the most part Palestinian are glued to their television sets like the rest of the world. There were a few Palestinian youngsters in the streets and that's what the media has chosen to focus on. I do not doubt that some Palestinians, who see American support for Israel as the main cause of their continued suffering and oppres- sion would feel like the United States was get- ting a dose of her own medicine. But without attempting to explain the oppressed mentality that would drive a human being to celebrate such a human tragedy is not fair. Myself and other American citizen friends here in the Occu- pied Palestinian Territories have been receiving numerous phone calls from Palestinians con- cerned about our families and friends, and expressing their shock, condemnation and con- dolences. Whereas my mother in Michigan reported a verbal attack at her workplace and my sisters in University are afraid of the looks that they have been receiving from their fellow classmates. Please be more careful with your reporting. I ask that you cease referring to Palestinians cel-" ebratiig. It is not relevant. It is not represent- tive and it is mo::st irresponsible. My prayers are withsythe;victims, their'fami- 1 1 P11 . A .. . -. will soon learn of someone that was killed, or hopefully of someone that escaped nar- rowly. To those of us who already have, my deepest and most sincere condolences. I lost an old karate partner who has known me since dia- pers. My friend's cousin was late for work that day and was opening the door to one of the towers as the plane struck. In his case, it was better late than "never." Even those of us from the northern sub- urbs and cities on Long Island will soon hear of tragedies whom we know of only as fami- ly of that girl we were friends with in grade school. For those of us who call Manhattan or D.C. home, we responded as if our homes were tresspassed, our families violated and our possessions destroyed. For those of us who don't live in those two cities, I sense the general reaction will be almost as equally passionate, whether in grief or in anger. This makes me very proud, and I find my grief has to share my heart with something that could very well be patriotism. Waking up the day after this cowardly terrorist act, I had a reaction similar to the morning of Sept. 11; I cried. Trying to under- stand what moves a man to unabashed tears, I realized that this is the first time our genera- tion has banded together for a patriotic cause. We were really too young to remember the Gulf War, or maybe the only way that war penetrated our homes was through the televi- sion set. All I know is American blood has been spilled on American soil, and while it may be my backyard that runs red, it filled my eyes with tears and my heart with pride to see the bonding of my generation Americans at the Diag Vigil Tuesday night. I now under- stand;. my tears do not taste simply like tears of sorrow; They are symbols of a patriotic strength, confidence and fearlessness I never knew existed Harassment of Arab, Muslims students must end TO THE DAILY: It has been brought to our attention that in response to Tuesday's tragic terrorist attacks, Muslim and Arab students have been harassed and subject to threatening remarks. As of right now, we do not know the per- petrators of these heinous acts and ask the community not to jump to conclusions. We urge everyone to keep an open mind and not to lash out at students who neither condone nor were in any way involved with these ter- rorists attacks. Furthermore, we urge students and com- munity members to stand together against all forms of terrorism. All citizens of the world deserve freedom from fear. Our thoughts and prayers go out to the victims and their fami- lies on this tragic day. ERIC BUKSTlN SHARI KATz DAVID LIvSIuz SAMANTHA ROLLINGER JEREMY MENCIIK Bukstein is chair of IMPA C and vice-chair ofthe Hillel Governinz Board. Katz is chair of the Hillel b