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The Student News Site of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School

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The Student News Site of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School

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Never forget. Steadily standing at attention, Lt. Col. Sydney Aresta and Capt. Angelyse Perez guard the 9/11 memorial during A lunch.
Suzanna Barna
Never forget. Steadily standing at attention, Lt. Col. Sydney Aresta and Capt. Angelyse Perez guard the 9/11 memorial during A lunch.

Rho Kappa 9/11 Memorial delayed by Irma

While Florida faced Hurricane Irma, 9/11 passed in the midst of chaotic clean-up efforts. In Broward County, schools closed from Sept. 7 until Sept. 15, canceling Marjory Stoneman Douglas’s usual 9/11 assembly overlooking the courtyard.

When school resumed, administration sought out Rho Kappa in order to brainstorm a 9/11 memorial to remind the students to never forget the tragedy.

“I am from the New York area, so I knew a lot of people that worked in the towers, and I know a lot of people that were associated with and lost people in the towers, so it’s something that I keep close and dear to my heart, and I wanted to do something to honor them,” Rho Kappa President Alex Martinez said.

Located in the center of the courtyard on Fri. Sept. 22, the memorial consists of a silver-painted, wooden three-dimensional model of the World Trade Center created by a local, independent carpenter, Carlos Vale. Frames surround the base, encasing the names of all the 9/11 victims with a message that reads “[t]his memorial is dedicated to all of the brave men, women and children, who lost their lives on September 11th, 2001. We thank them for their courage and valor. May their souls rest in peace forever.”  

Rho Kappa teamed up with Junior Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (JROTC) in order to have an honor guard protect the display. Standing at attention or in parade, two JROTC members bordered the exhibit throughout the day.

“[9/11] reminds us that we’re part of a global community, both in a positive and negative way,” Rho Kappa advisor Ray Posada said.

The central location of the memorial attracted students to observe the display and encouraged them to take a moment of silence in honor of the victims of the 9/11 terror attack.

“It wasn’t just about the attack, it was about the unity and understanding that occurred after it,” Posada said.

As the world becomes increasingly interconnected, the memory of 9/11 reinforces the necessity of understanding and tolerance while proving the irreversibility of violence.

 

https://eagleeyenews.smugmug.com/911-Edition-2

Photos by Suzanna Barna

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