Set as Homepage - Add to Favorites

精品东京热,精品动漫无码,精品动漫一区,精品动漫一区二区,精品动漫一区二区三区,精品二三四区,精品福利导航,精品福利導航。

【ポルノ映画 japanese 動画】Enter to watch online.Twenty Years Later, Images of 9/11 Still Haunt Survivors
Robert “Bobby” Ideishi in 2011. (MARIO GERSHOM REYES/Rafu Shimpo)

By ELLEN ENDO, Rafu Shimpo

It has been 20 years since Robert “Bobby” Ideishi, 66, escaped from the World Trade Center in New York City on Sept. 11, 2001. Many thoughts flash across his mind from that day, yet one image has lingered all these years — the face of a firefighter, a captain, who spoke to him as they passed on the stairwell.

“What floor did you come from? Did everybody get out?” the captain asked, then he reassured Ideishi. “Just keep going. You’re going to be all right.”

“And I know he died,” Ideishi says. “I think back sometimes on being in the stairwell. I see his face and I think, ‘How sad.’ He was about the same age as me at the time, which was in his 40s. He was so heroic. Doing his job.”

Ideishi also remembers being on the bus, trying to come home to his wife and two daughters, who were 5 and 9 years old. “It’s not a bad flashback, but I gotta think about it every year (on 9/11) for a little while.

“I watch the ceremonies, the roll call of all the names (of those who died). I don’t know why I watch that, but I do it every year. And I do it alone because there are people that I saw that died, especially firemen. All the firemen that came up past us, they all died.”

Scott Ito

Scott Ito had volunteered to serve as a poll-watcher in New York’s Chinatown when on Sept. 11, he heard a loud boom. “It almost sounded like a bomb went off. I think everybody was kind of in shock. We heard someone say that a plane had run into the World Trade Center, and we all thought, ‘That must have been a horrible accident.’ I remember hearing hundreds of police cars racing downtown.

“Then when the second plane hit, everybody knew that there’s something wrong going on. After that, people were really freaked out. People were crying and really upset. We looked up, and we could see flames coming out of the building,” Ito recalls.  

According to Ito, there were a lot of rumors that it was terrorism. He headed back to his office and was told to go home.

“You just felt like the end of the world was coming,” Ito said. “I saw people walking from Lower Manhattan like zombies, men in suits covered with dust.

“One thing I had immediately thought of was being Japanese American and what the Japanese Americans had gone through (at the outbreak of World War II).  I was worried about the Muslim community here in New York City.

“I remembered all the hysteria around Japanese Americans and wondered what was going to happen to the Muslim American community,” Ito explained.

“The images that stay in my mind are the pictures posted around the city of people looking for their loved ones — on telephone poles, subway walls, etc. I remember just walking around.

“After a while, people just left the pictures as tributes or memorials to loved ones and friends who had passed away. It was very moving.”

Ito has two daughters who hadn’t been born yet when 9/11 happened. “I guess I’ve kept it buried inside me,” he admits. He and his family visited New York about three years ago and visited the memorial to the 9/11 victims.

For Ideishi, the desire to share what he learned on 9/11 became a calling. His daughters were in grammar school at the time. Their school asked him if he would speak to the students, to reassure them that he was okay and that the country was okay. Since then, he has willingly donated his time to share his experience “throughout California, for Boy Scouts, civic organizations, Kiwanis, Elks Clubs, a panel for the Japanese American National Museum, and for churches I don’t even belong to.”

Ideishi said he hopes that people will reflect on what they felt that day, “and I don’t mean the anger part. I mean the part that says, ‘Okay, I’m willing to help, be kinder’ … I hope reflecting back on that day will help people understand.

“I hope it will soften the cemented beliefs that you have right now, whether it’s the pandemic, whether it’s political, whether it’s immigration, vaccination, whatever it is…”

Robert Ideishi’s first-hand account of 9/11, first published in 2001, will be posted onThe Rafu Shimpo’s website.

0.1823s , 10092.25 kb

Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【ポルノ映画 japanese 動画】Enter to watch online.Twenty Years Later, Images of 9/11 Still Haunt Survivors,  

Sitemap

Top 主站蜘蛛池模板: 色噜噜狠狠色综合久夜色撩人 | 成年美女黄网站久久 | 国产精品自产拍在线观看免费 | 无码日韩人妻精品久久蜜桃免费 | 日韩aⅴ人妻无码 | 99热国产成人最新精品 | 国产丝袜二区在线播放 | 成人无码看片在线观看免费 | 日韩在线人妻 | AV久久无码精品热九九 | 国产精品视频一区二区三区三级 | 亚洲国产第一区二区香蕉 | 丁香五月天刺激中文字幕亚洲天 | 国产欧美一区二区三区观看 | 国产精品美女被啪啪啪 | 欧美特黄一级视频 | 激情综合丁香 | 亚洲自拍中文字幕 | 二区三区欧美精品在线观看 | 国产一区二区三区不卡在线观看 | 无码精品日韩中文字幕 | 2024精品亚洲国产色在线 | 2024中文字幕无码免费 | 国产卡一卡2卡3卡乱码 | av片在线观看国产三级在线观看 | 亚洲色无码中文字幕日韩精品一区二区三区 | 日本无码潮喷a片无码ai换脸 | 成人无码区免费A片在线软件 | 精品熟女一区二区 | 老色批影院 | 日韩精品一区二区三区欧美肥女人作 | 成人网站站美女拍拍拍免费视频 | 亚洲欧美日韩第三区 | 国产卡二卡三卡四卡免费网址 | 麻豆一姐视传媒短视频精选 | 国产成人成网站在线播放 | 无码国产精品一区二区 | 二区欧美无遮挡中文字幕人成人 | 伊人网综合| 久久久无码一区 | 日本丰满妇人成熟免费中文字幕 |