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PUBLICATIONS
Inside
Illinois
Vol.
22, No. , Sept. 19, 2002

Campus remembers 9/11 with music,
prayer and hope for the future
By
Sharita Forrest, Assistant Editor
(217) 244-1072; slforres@uiuc.edu
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Photo
by Bill Wiegand
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Old
glory
A color guard squad, comprising UI ROTC students, participated
in the 9/11 remembrance ceremonies by posting a U.S. flag
to begin activities at noon that day.
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In the same hall
where campus and community members had convened one year before seeking
solace in tragedys wake, people gathered again at Krannert Center
for the Performing Arts to commemorate the first anniversary of the
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
During an hour-long commemorative program titled "We Together
2002," the Foellinger Great Hall reverberated with songs, verses
and orations expressing hopes for unanimity and resilience. The performers
included the Black Chorus, the UI Trombone Choir, the Chamber Singers
and the Symphony Orchestra.
Together Encouraging the Appreciation of Multiculturalism (TEAM), a
student group, recited the Twelve Prayers for Peace, which were recited
in Assisi, Italy, on the Day of Prayer for World Peace during the United
Nations International Year of Peace, 1986. The prayers represent the
aspirations of a dozen faiths, including Christianity, Hinduism, Islam,
Judaism and Native African.
Illinois Student Government representatives recited the Maya Angelou
poem "A Brave and Startling Truth."
Keynote speaker Rajmohan Gandhi, director of the Global Crossroads Living
and Learning Community, commended the American people for their response
to the Sept. 11 violence, particularly their striving for healing and
tolerance while concurrently seeking security and preservation of human
rights.
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Photo
by Bill Wiegand
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In
tribute Sue
Wood, UI chimesmaster, prepares to toll the Altgeld chimes
to coincide with the times the two airliners struck the
World Trade Center, a third struck the Pentagon and a fourth
went down in a Pennsylvania field.
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"Similarly,
may I affirm, and I believe the great heart of America will allow me
to affirm, that the existence of terrorism does not eliminate justice
as a value," Gandhi said. "The need to strive for justice
is also, perhaps, a condition of our being as humans. And the need to
be wise in this striving, the need to adopt right means, may be a condition
of our survival as humans."
Citing several friends whose lives were lost in terrorist acts, Gandhi,
who is the grandson of the Mahatma Gandhi, denounced violence as a response
to perceived injustice and said that personal accountability is unmitigated
by nationality.
Furthermore, Gandhi rebutted beliefs that a clash between Islamic and
American cultures was inevitable.
To promote peace and healing, Gandhi said Afghanistan must be rebuilt,
its opposing factions reconciled and amicable relations restored between
Afghanistan and America.
Quoting from Lincolns second inaugural address, Gandhi noted the
contemporary relevance of Lincolns aspirations for healing and
"lasting peace" among all nations.
"And if this return of 9/11 sends our thoughts also to the Middle
East, perhaps we should have the courage with Lincoln to pray for a
just and lasting peace there, with the involvement, perhaps of ourselves
and all nations," Gandhi said.
Alluding to the precarious state of international relations, Gandhi
said the future may be a test of Americas commitment to its principles.
Chancellor Nancy Cantor likewise urged members of the campus community
to use the luxury of academic freedom to foster tolerance and understanding.
"If our experiences of 9/11 have taught us anything collectively
and individually it is that we are all prisoners of our preconceptions,
drawn apart, not together, by what we assume about the motives, beliefs,
ideas and ways of life of others," Cantor said. "We have to
see each other more clearly. We must. Doing that is hard work, and it
comes to us in very personal ways."
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