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    9/11 ruins find homes in Canada

    A rusted metal beam from New York City's fallen World Trade Center will soon stand in the middle of a Kitchener, Ont., park. It's 3.43 metres long and the very specific size is no accident.

    "There was 343 firefighters killed on that day so we asked for something that was 3.43 metres," says Kevin Schmalz, former chair of the Kitchener Fire Memorial Committee.

    The city's 1,360-kilogram piece, which is having a protective coating applied before going on permanent display, is one of at least 11 remnants from the ruins of the Twin Towers that are destined for or have arrived in communities across Canada.

    The communities stretch from coast to coast and include Nanaimo, B.C., Calgary, Belleville, Ont., Cornerbrook, N.L. and Berwick, N.S.

    For a decade, the charred, mangled remains of Ground Zero and the emergency vehicles that rushed to the scene sat in a cavernous hangar at New York's JFK International Airport.

    The Port Authority of New Jersey and New York has been in charge of the eerie artifact warehouse and is now sending about 1,200 pieces from Hangar 17 to places around the world to be used in memorials commemorating the 9/11 attacks.

    Pieces of the towers are travelling to all the American states and countries as far away as China.

    "I am more surprised we were able to get a piece. Certainly, a lot of fire departments in the States were able to get pieces," said Deputy Chief Steve McMahon of the Berwick and District Volunteer Fire Department in Nova Scotia.

    Berwick obtained a 40-kilogram I-beam that is planned to be part of a memorial garden built outside the fire station.

    U.S. officials vetted hundreds of applications, granting pieces of steel remnants to sites based on their plans for how they would display it in a publicly accessible memorial.

    When applications for the remnants opened several years ago, Schmalz of Kitchener says "we jumped at the chance."

    "Everybody locally seems quite excited about having the piece," he adds. The piece was welcomed to the city in August and will be unveiled as part of a larger firefighters monument in October.

    A 1,270-kilogram, 4.7-metre long piece from Ground Zero is destined for the Military Museums of Calgary, where it is hoped it will serve as a reminder of the significant turning point for armed forces in Canada and abroad.

    "Really when you look at what has created missions around the world, this was a catalyst for the activity that the free world is engaged in today," said museum executive director Tom Doucette.

    Most organizations receiving Ground Zero artifacts in Canada are either fire stations or related to the trade. For many firefighters, the toll 9/11 took on their comrades was unforgettable.

    One Waterloo Fire Department station, No. 4, is awash in symbolism of that day. The station was built at the address 911 University Ave., is adorned with a painting of two New York firefighters working in the rubble and opened its doors on Sept. 11 last year.

    "It sort of has become one of those landmark occasions in history that is too obvious to ignore or too important to forget," said Larry Brassard, Waterloo deputy chief of emergency operations. "So we wanted to memorialize that and keep that alive because it could happen anywhere, any day.

    "For people to forget about that event would be a tragedy."

    Waterloo hoped to have the World Trade Center remnant in time for its new station's unveiling last year, but only received the piece this summer because of red tape. It's in the process of finding a way to incorporate it.

    In Prince Edward Island, the provincial firefighters association also has big plans for its one-metre-long, 31-kilogram beam. It recently went on display at the Confederation Centre in Charlottetown, but will eventually be displayed at a new fire school being built in Milton.

    Pieces of steel are also headed to Newfoundland and Labrador, where communities were directly affected by the Sept. 11 attacks. Thirty-nine airliners carrying 6,500 passengers diverted to Gander when U.S. airspace was shut down after hijacked planes attacked the Pentagon and World Trade Center.

    One organization cancelled its request for a steel remnant recently. The group said it was backing away because the process had taken so long and it no longer felt its space would be publicly accessible enough to showcase the piece.

    This is not the first time steel remnants from Ground Zero made it off site.

    Less than a year after the 9/11 attacks, 10 large steel girders were shipped to the International Peace Garden, at the North Dakota-Manitoba border, where they stand as part of a 9/11 memorial.

    But the smaller pieces will serve in communities large and small as concrete reminders of the shared horror of Sept. 11, 2001.

    "No one can ever forget what happened that day," says Brassard.

    What do you feel about this article?

     

    10 comments

    • Canadian  •  8 months ago
      With the word 'ruins' finding a literal home at places of Canada that are more or less places as public as were the places where the towers once stood on and before 9/11, many of we now ten years later might start to feel somewhat less lonesome each one our very own self.
    • Mr. Fed Up  •  8 months ago
      I realize that the Americans and the Canadian firefighters hearts are in the right place but as a Canadian people we are not like Americans. We don't need "Remember the Alamo nor the Maine nor Pearl Harbor" as rallying cries. We don't have Patriotism as our state religion nor do we think that we invented democracy and have the right to rule the world. These pieces of metal should be left where they are and we should get on with our lives and let the Americans over-react, as they have for the last 10 years with the resulting deaths of tens of thousands of innocent people in the middle east. And the deaths of a few hundred of the truly guilty.
      • Drake 8 months ago
        Please move to afghanistan. You are an embarrasment like mcguinty.
      • cowichan63 8 months ago
        I get your point, and somewhat agree. But the events of that day caused consequences for every person living in the modern western world: fear, suspicion, xenophobia, reduced human rights. If nothing else, these fragments at least point to why we accept reduced rights. I do find it ironic to ship pieces everywhere, when so little examination of the wreckage was actually conducted at the time of the tragedy.
      • Drake 8 months ago
        All the more reason to blame the jihadists for what they brought to our shores.
        It caused spin off chaos we still have.
    • venomousbird  •  8 months ago
      "Really when you look at what has created missions around the world, this was a catalyst for the activity that the free world is engaged in today," What, imperialistically dominating the 'non-free' world? Attempting to create a global government?
    • venomousbird  •  8 months ago
      Yeah really, it's like handing out pieces of a coffin everywhere. Is this some sick kind of imperialistic tactic they are taking on now? Part of some occult ritual after the willful murder of 3000 or so of their own citizens? Keep your scrap in your own damn country. Who wants it? This is a really bizarre and morbid piece of news.
    • Don D  •  8 months ago
      How long are the Americans going to keep the 9/11 soap opera going. Lets try and forget about it and move forward. Oh no it is whoa is me.
    • Zap  •  8 months ago
      These idiots are giving away evidence, parts of a crime scene that was never truly investigated. Keep your propaganda crap! The family members of 3000 dead, call "every dam day" for a true and unbiased investigation an this what they give them.
      Upwards of TEN THOUSAND New Yorkers alone (children/husbands/wives/nephews/nieces), are being misrepresented. 9/11 was an inside job
    • Tlyna  •  8 months ago
      There is the dust of human remains still embedded in the ruins from the WTC. They should be buried, maybe in the field at Shankville, PA where Flight 93 crashed.
    • Bill N  •  8 months ago
      Keep you sacred cow south of the border we Canadians don't want it!
    • BAM BAM  •  8 months ago
      No one will ever forget this horrific day. But come on, when I see commercials with tacky fake silver twin towers and certificate of authenticity??10 years ago this horrific thing happened. I understand that, but when this is being rung out over and over and over again, the U.S. sensationalism including tacky memoirs It makes me sick. The US should have marked this day just like remeberance day a national day holiday for reflect. it effected the entire world this should be a day of sanctuary, memories etc, not business as usual. AND STOP THESE COMMERCIALS For TACKY LITTLE MEMOIRS OF THE TWIN TOWERS ......ITS SICK!!
      and please CNN stop using this as a spin cycle ...
    • Drake  •  8 months ago
      Well done America and Well done Kitchener.
      God Bless America.
      Make sure you give a minute of silence sep 11.
      I know as a loyal canadian of contribution in the military that I will pay homage.
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