A Look Inside the 9/11 Memorial Museum

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  • Опубліковано 21 вер 2024
  • On the 21st anniversary of the September 11th attacks, we're going inside the museum that chronicles the lives lost and the heroes that emerged on that significant day.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,8 тис.

  • @arcanesupremacy
    @arcanesupremacy Рік тому +1714

    I went to this museum in 2018, there is a dark, silent room where you can listen to clips of people marking their last phone calls to loved ones. It is absolutely heartbreaking

    • @Spookehh
      @Spookehh Рік тому +106

      I went there in 2016. Was only 4 when the attacks occured. I had never heard a silence so deafening until I entered that room with the audio. It was literally like someone was grabbing my soul and holding it hostage. Easily the scariest, realest moment of my entire 26 years. You could feel death in that room. I got back to the hotel and couldn't sleep. "Why was it this person and not me?" playing over and over in my head. It should be required for citizenship to go in there, I think.

    • @ConanObrien22
      @ConanObrien22 Рік тому +8

      ​@@Spookehhwhat's the name of that room?

    • @Spookehh
      @Spookehh Рік тому +19

      @@ConanObrien22 I don’t know. But it’s on the first floor I believe. It’s almost shaped like the letter C. It’s dark. Pretty small. You press a button to hear the voicemails if I remember correctly. Absolutely soul wrenching.

    • @ConanObrien22
      @ConanObrien22 Рік тому +12

      @@Spookehh hmm interesting. Was it the same voicemail from a person who called his wife to say goodbye when he found out that the plane hijacked? I've never been there I'm not from US, I was 9 when this happened.

    • @KausaleHeitermann
      @KausaleHeitermann Рік тому +8

      ​@@Spookehhwen you vistit Korea you have a room like that but the diffrent you hear the voice of kids that burnd down by Amaricans

  • @klday84
    @klday84 2 роки тому +3373

    I was a high school senior at the time. Our school, as well as many others, went in lock down as we watched it on the news. Every teacher pulled the tvs out so the students can watch. I was an office aid and watched a girl come screaming down the hall towards the main doors. Her father worked at the Pentagon. Her cries were haunting as she pounded on the doors to be let out.
    This is something we had never forgotten.

    • @dianavillafana2663
      @dianavillafana2663 2 роки тому +174

      I was reading this and I wanted to cry. I can't imagine all the pain she went through

    • @StayH0ly
      @StayH0ly 2 роки тому +84

      Is her father okay?

    • @shawnweber6456
      @shawnweber6456 2 роки тому +40

      dam my mom was at work

    • @shawnweber6456
      @shawnweber6456 2 роки тому +44

      I lost someone in it

    • @dianavillafana2663
      @dianavillafana2663 2 роки тому +37

      @@shawnweber6456 I'm sorry that happened

  • @anjadyrting3206
    @anjadyrting3206 2 роки тому +645

    I will never forget. I was 19 and came home from school in the afternoon and turned on the tv. Here in Sweden we are about six hours before the US so when I looked at the news it was morning in new york. And I heard about "the accident", "a small plane hit the world trade center" and I watch the images,horrified but perplexed. I remember thinking "but how can anyone be so clumpsy so they fly in to a building?" and then,bang,the second plane hit,on live television. And I went from "thats strange" to "did the third world war just start?" and began to cry. I was on the outher side of the world and still it impacted me deeply. I cant even begin to imagine the horror for thouse who were there and thouse who lost loved ones.Best wishes from Sweden.

    • @benszone1879
      @benszone1879 2 роки тому +32

      No matter how far we live from each other, we are still human beings.
      Also, I'm sorry about how you felt.

    • @sundaywhiterabbit7679
      @sundaywhiterabbit7679 2 роки тому

      Ministry of Truth
      War is Peace
      Freedom is Slavery
      Ignorance is Strength

    • @anjadyrting3206
      @anjadyrting3206 2 роки тому +21

      @@benszone1879 Thank you,and you are so right. I was offcourse not in any real danger at all,but as a child growing up in europe during the 80ies my mind did not goe to "terrorism" it went to "third world war/nuclear war". Nobody had attacked the US on its soil since Pearl Harbor and for me,as a teenager I wasnt aware of the terrorist threath until that day. Never heard of Usama bin Laden or al-Qaida. And ISIS didnt even exist.The world really changed that day for sure.
      The reason for my tears was the thought of the people in the tower above the planes. I thought "they wont get out". And "they are dying right now". So I will always remember that day,as - Im sure -many people around the world who watched it like me. But I say it again,I couldnt even begin to imagen the suffering for thoose people directly affected.

    • @Propaganda9112
      @Propaganda9112 2 роки тому +1

      Thank you for your entry, Miss.

    • @Jestersson
      @Jestersson 2 роки тому +7

      I was in my doctors waiting room and it came on tv here in the UK. The shock of it was awful. There was around 20 of us all just staring at the tv mouths open nobody speaking. A very surreal moment.
      God bless them all.

  • @whataboutme9899
    @whataboutme9899 2 роки тому +1218

    I never thought I would cry about a 9/11 video and I think everyone does but when I watched one single video about how people we’re saying I love you son/husband/daughter and more then I hear the screams I burst into tears every time no matter how old it gets .rest in peace to all the victims of 9/11

    • @tinyriss
      @tinyriss 2 роки тому +18

      ever year i rewatch the footage as it happened, i bawl like it’s the first time i’ve seen it…every year.🕊

    • @sundaywhiterabbit7679
      @sundaywhiterabbit7679 2 роки тому

      Ministry of Truth
      War is Peace
      Freedom is Slavery
      Ignorance is Strength

    • @jayskicksnfits9372
      @jayskicksnfits9372 2 роки тому +3

      *were*

    • @mariee.5912
      @mariee.5912 2 роки тому +8

      I have watched every year. This year, I didn't. It makes me too sad.

    • @tylerdurden4006
      @tylerdurden4006 2 роки тому +9

      Pray you don't realize that after 2 decades america gave up and became partners with the taliban and gave them Afghanistan and military equipment as gifts for the new partnership so a whole bunch of americans died for nothing.

  • @cranjie
    @cranjie 2 роки тому +895

    I’m a teenager, I wasn’t even alive in 2001, but seeing this makes me sick to my stomach. Rip to all of the innocent lives and the lives of hero’s on that day🕊

    • @datwanlivingston8545
      @datwanlivingston8545 2 роки тому +19

      I was alive in 2001 I was living when 9/11 happened I am 22 years old now I am the same age as the years but yes I was here

    • @Chuked
      @Chuked 2 роки тому +48

      @@datwanlivingston8545 you were 1

    • @rrruuby
      @rrruuby 2 роки тому +60

      @@Chuked bro was in diapers 💀

    • @ninja2135
      @ninja2135 2 роки тому +12

      @@datwanlivingston8545 some Of us were in diapers when it happened like me too

    • @LMV123
      @LMV123 2 роки тому +3

      Same

  • @Littlemoo403
    @Littlemoo403 2 роки тому +627

    21 years i’ve gone by so quick. And this event is still as shocking to watch today as when it happened! Rest in peace to all the victims ❤️🙏🏽

    • @sundaywhiterabbit7679
      @sundaywhiterabbit7679 2 роки тому

      Ministry of Truth
      War is Peace
      Freedom is Slavery
      Ignorance is Strength

    • @VinceHere98
      @VinceHere98 Рік тому +6

      9/11 should never have happened. Even if we were united following the attacks, that unity eventually fell apart as the years went on, and the presidency of Donald Trump obviously didn’t help.
      If this horrible tragedy never took place, we honestly would’ve been better off. The anniversary of 9/11 was once a day I paid my respects to those who lost their lives that day, with hopes of a better future ahead. Now it’s something I dread every year because of the fact that it led us to this mess.

    • @davidmudry5622
      @davidmudry5622 Рік тому

      Why is there no WTC7 Exhibits in the museum? ua-cam.com/video/LJPuWy9utss/v-deo.html

    • @quinntang3315
      @quinntang3315 Рік тому

      @@VinceHere98 God of our Savior in heaven, please change the past so that My sister, Jennifer tang and her friend, Dylan Lewis will be reborn back in June 20th, 1993 and I will be born without autism, spectrums, disabilities and disorders as my new life in reality on earth on June 20th, 1997 to avoid IEP Meetings and Summer School by watching educational channels on tv, speak with my first words and playing toys, interventions and games, when I can be a 2 year old in 1999, spend more times with my sister, my aunt, my uncle, my mom, my dad, my mom and dad’s friends, my cousins and my grandparents in Sterling and new friends who are typically average ability kids in Sterling Elementary School when I can be a 5 year old in 2002 so they can learn to spell my name with words, draw and paint a picture, read and write on a book, make money, doing chores and jobs at my old house, 216 W Balsam RD, Sterling, VA, exercise inside and outside in the community, singing a song, counting numbers, go out to play and eat and go to Sterling Middle School and Parkview High School to study algebra, biology, English, chemistry and geometry with me when I was a 12 year old in 2009 and a 15 year old in 2012 and get IPhone 1 when I can be a 10 year old in 2007 as a second chance before we all died and Rest In Peace in heaven in the future and change and altered timeline history back in 2001 so the US Government can create a diversion by calling the Airport Security to defeat Osama Bin Laden and the 9/11 terrorists to hijack airplanes and destroyed the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in New York, The Pentagon in Washington DC and Stonycreek Township in Somerset County at Pennsylvania.

    • @user-vy1cw7kx4u
      @user-vy1cw7kx4u Рік тому

      Это сделали, сами же американцы, причём специально, чтобы вторгнуться в исламские государства

  • @christophermyers3758
    @christophermyers3758 2 роки тому +410

    I went to NYC for the first time in August 2017, and made a visit to the 9/11 Memorial Museum, and vividly remember seeing everything in this video... the beams, columns, the staircase, the smashed fire truck, the bullhorn used by President Bush speaking to all the first responders, and even part of the crushed communications antennae from the North Tower! Unbelievable that it once was mounted on top of a 110 story skyscraper!
    It was quite emotional and overwhelming at the scale of the exhibits. Seeing the personal items, and all the photographs was heartbreaking. The massive "blue" wall, though beautiful in color is also startling to realize how that day started out like a normal sunny day, which in a brief time changed our country forever. One of the most unsettling pieces, was part of an airplane fuselage with the broken window. It was chilling to realize that someone was sitting in that seat, looking out the window in horror, about their fate. 😭
    Regarding the part of the exhibit about the terrorists that stands out for me is, the video timeline of all the terrorists as they came to the U.S. years before, where they lived, went to colleges, took flight training, then one by one ended up getting to NY for that fateful day. I learned that one of terrorists had trouble learning English, and went back to the Middle East?!
    I was at the Memorial Museum for
    3 hours, plus the time walking around the Plaza where the Towers once stood. Even standing in front of the granite edged reflecting pools, looking into the "void", I kept looking UP visualizing "THEM" in front of me!
    I highly recommend everyone visit this complex on your next trip to NY. I'm working on my 2nd trip, and will go again, to acknowledge and honor "both" Towers!
    RIP to those lost... 🙏

    • @sundaywhiterabbit7679
      @sundaywhiterabbit7679 2 роки тому

      Look closer at 9/11 until you can clearly see the lie that it is.

    • @dvchel
      @dvchel 2 роки тому +12

      Yep. That's why you gotta have strong borders. Know what kind of people come in who want to commit evil.

    • @christophermyers3758
      @christophermyers3758 2 роки тому

      @@dvchel
      The borders were useless on 9/11, as the terrorists had already BEEN in the U.S. for a couple of years, attending colleges, and flight training classes.
      Nobody DROVE here! 🤔

    • @Stantheman848
      @Stantheman848 Рік тому +1

      Building 7

    • @itzamia
      @itzamia Рік тому

      @@Stantheman848 When the twin towers collapse on building 7 setting it on fire while making it structurally unsafe from the debris, it was amazing it stood that long before it collapsed.

  • @daisyy99
    @daisyy99 2 роки тому +202

    I was an elementary teacher at the time, second grade. The students asked if they could pray. I said yes. My cousin was in the Pentagon, and my son's father in law was on a plane going to DC. I didn't know til the end of the day that they were ok. The circumstances and loss of life was shocking. RIP.

    • @prandomable
      @prandomable 2 роки тому +11

      I was in the 4th grade that day. My teacher was lame, she didn't even tell us (the students) that 4 planes had crashed. I didn't even know about it until I came home that afternoon from school and saw my dad had the TV turned on. I was on the S. Tower observatory myself just a year before the attack in summer of 2000.

    • @prandomable
      @prandomable 2 роки тому

      Your cousin was at the Pentagon that day. Question. Were there ANY plane parts debris even found or seen??? Why are there sooo many conspiracy saying that no planes even hit the Pentagon? And that it was a missile??

    • @quinntang3315
      @quinntang3315 Рік тому

      @@prandomable God of our Savior in heaven, please change the past so that My sister, Jennifer tang and her friend, Dylan Lewis will be reborn back in June 20th, 1993 and I will be born without autism, spectrums, disabilities and disorders as my new life in reality on earth on June 20th, 1997 to avoid IEP Meetings and Summer School by watching educational channels on tv, speak with my first words and playing toys, interventions and games, when I can be a 2 year old in 1999, spend more times with my sister, my aunt, my uncle, my mom, my dad, my mom and dad’s friends, my cousins and my grandparents in Sterling and new friends who are typically average ability kids in Sterling Elementary School when I can be a 5 year old in 2002 so they can learn to spell my name with words, draw and paint a picture, read and write on a book, make money, doing chores and jobs at my old house, 216 W Balsam RD, Sterling, VA, exercise inside and outside in the community, singing a song, counting numbers, go out to play and eat and go to Sterling Middle School and Parkview High School to study algebra, biology, English, chemistry and geometry with me when I was a 12 year old in 2009 and a 15 year old in 2012 and get IPhone 1 when I can be a 10 year old in 2007 as a second chance before we all died and Rest In Peace in heaven in the future and change and altered timeline history back in 2001 so the US Government can create a diversion by calling the Airport Security to defeat Osama Bin Laden and the 9/11 terrorists to hijack airplanes and destroyed the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in New York, The Pentagon in Washington DC and Stonycreek Township in Somerset County at Pennsylvania.

    • @user-vy1cw7kx4u
      @user-vy1cw7kx4u Рік тому

      Эта беда, что творит ваше государство, куда вторгает Америка, то там всегда хаос и гибель множество невинных, простых людей

  • @tonita88
    @tonita88 Рік тому +171

    I'm from the Philippines and i vividly remember my grandmother bursting into tears when this reminded her of when the Japanese invaded Manila and her favorite churches she and her father used to go to were all bombed and turned to rubble. I never saw her cry before that, it also left a mark in me after of how much trauma some of our old folks went through during their lifetime.

    • @theilluminatibenefactor
      @theilluminatibenefactor 2 місяці тому +1

      Both the Philippines and the United States of America had their fair share of traumatizing tragedies before and after WWII. Yet they're here standing strong as their own independent countries. 🇵🇭🇺🇲

  • @ShortstopJEsq
    @ShortstopJEsq 2 роки тому +251

    This museum is the truth - it is extremely in depth and done exceptionally well. For those with younger members of the family visiting, the museum has different sections and lets you know when topics might be (definitely) too heavy for them. Take at least three or four hours to do it justice because this place explores EVERY aspect of that day, including events leading up and afterward.
    Just some information for all. This museum has been completed for over ten years now. I was there in 2019 and again a few weeks ago. This video must have been recorded around the time the museum opened in 2011 and is being re-released now under a new UA-cam upload. Being a news network, this video really should have made that clear to the viewer. That being said, please definitely come visit this museum and our wonderful city.

    • @burtpanzer
      @burtpanzer Рік тому

      In your opinion.

    • @johne540
      @johne540 7 місяців тому

      @@burtpanzerwhat’s opinion?

    • @Larry26-f1w
      @Larry26-f1w 28 днів тому

      90% of the bodies were never recovered

  • @4realGTFOH
    @4realGTFOH 2 роки тому +62

    I feel as Americans, we should all make an effort to pay this museum a visit.

    • @TXnine7nine
      @TXnine7nine 2 роки тому +11

      Definitely. along with the Vietnam Wall in DC and the Arizona memorial at Pearl Harbor.

    • @laurenurban3942
      @laurenurban3942 4 місяці тому

      If someone wants to pay my airfare to New York, my hotel room, transportation and meals…..I would love to go visit that museum and pay my respects. I grew up in New York and my dad worked for the port authority for 31 years between Kennedy and LaGuardia airports. I would love to see the Freedom Tower and the museum. The trip of a lifetime it would be.

    • @aussiecoastie72
      @aussiecoastie72 4 місяці тому

      Everyone !

    • @bloba4443
      @bloba4443 3 місяці тому

      Like our own hajj?

  • @dressagerider786
    @dressagerider786 2 роки тому +284

    The retaining wall stood up because my dad a cement inspector worked on the towers there.His name was John Siedentopf and he worked for this lab as a second job to support our family.He was also FDNY.I am so proud that he was fastidious in his work.

    • @nova-cg8bg
      @nova-cg8bg 2 роки тому +28

      @@Guy.WhoAsked It wasn't selfish, they are showing how proud they are of their father. What is wrong about that?

    • @vigo894
      @vigo894 2 роки тому

      The Guy Who Asked: Shut the fuck up.

    • @TheJizZyLord
      @TheJizZyLord 2 роки тому +3

      Ur dad didn’t work on it alone lil bro

    • @SnakierElm62
      @SnakierElm62 2 роки тому

      ​@@Guy.WhoAsked Shut your fucking mouth, let the man be proud, anything is offensive these bloody days, have some respect please

    • @dressagerider786
      @dressagerider786 2 роки тому +5

      No you stupid man he was inspector who approved of the cement being laid, therefore he saved lives and also did his job for the FDNY. Yes I am proud of him.I did not do it so not selfish, he deserves all the praise that I can afford to him.

  • @LadyLenaBeana
    @LadyLenaBeana 3 місяці тому +4

    I was 21 when this happened. I still remember it vividly. The worst part of it as an onlooker, was the feeling of absolute helplessness, because it didn’t matter where you lived, you wanted to go there to help in anyway possible. It was definitely a heart wrenching moment.

  • @soulsavact
    @soulsavact 7 днів тому +1

    I went there in 2022. When youre actually standing there and looking up, you realize just how raw and real it was.
    When I went there, I remember going up to the top of the trade center. The very spot where people saw the sky and the sun for the last time.
    Rest in peace to those who died. Your story will never be forgotten.

  • @ollypoole6612
    @ollypoole6612 2 роки тому +29

    When I went a few years back, I was taken aback by how insane it all was, it really hits home when you see the scale of everything and the devastation that was caused

  • @kgal1298
    @kgal1298 2 роки тому +38

    I visited a year ago and cried. You really should make this a whole day because I only had about 3 hours, but you get sucked into reading the stories on the wall, just regular people going about their day and then this.

    • @UnknownPersononGoogle
      @UnknownPersononGoogle 3 місяці тому +2

      I flew to the USA from the UK for the first time back in May and I visited this museum on my second day in NYC, I spent ages at the one world trade centre and then I went to ground zero and read every name on the waterfalls.
      Eventually went into the museum and was there until it closed and stayed at the memorial until 8pm when it closed.
      I felt like part of my soul was left there, so many people died for what? Just people going to work dying because of terrorists.

  • @katsuyasim5700
    @katsuyasim5700 2 роки тому +23

    I can't believe 21 years have passed.
    Time flies like an arrow.

  • @CM-ho5ic
    @CM-ho5ic 2 роки тому +20

    We moved our oldest daughter home that horrible day & remember getting gas while news was blaring from fuel pumps. We kept our youngest home from school, it was important we were all together. Bless all those involved & still healing, may we never forget 9/11/01 🇺🇲

    • @Crystal_1992
      @Crystal_1992 2 роки тому +2

      @Jake Folk my school was on lockdown .. I live an hour from where flight 93 crashed

  • @zoexyxo
    @zoexyxo Рік тому +11

    On the morning of September 11 2001, hundreds of parents kissed their children goodbye as they went to school and went to work at the World Trade Center. That was the last their children saw of their parents.
    20 years later the children would visit the new complex, memorial and museum.
    May they all Rest In Peace

    • @marquisgt
      @marquisgt 11 місяців тому +3

      What beautiful words! Are you published anywhere???

    • @zoexyxo
      @zoexyxo 11 місяців тому +2

      @@marquisgt no~ and thank you!

    • @marquisgt
      @marquisgt 11 місяців тому +1

      @@zoexyxo Hope you don't mind, but I've taken it upon myself to submit your comment for consideration in the quarterly publication "Internet Voices & Technological Savants". I'll let you know if it get's printed!

  • @jakelyman5366
    @jakelyman5366 2 роки тому +25

    If you’ve never been to that museum I highly suggest you put it on your bucket list. Absolutely the most humbling and mind blowing experience I’ve ever felt.

    • @fourtysevennn
      @fourtysevennn 2 роки тому +2

      How long does it take to complete a walk around the museum? looks pretty empty like it doesn’t have much stuff to see

    • @jakelyman5366
      @jakelyman5366 2 роки тому +5

      Took me and my fiancé 5 hours. There’s a lot in there that you can not take any electronics with you in. From this video it looks like renovations, most of the things have been taken out. That museum is packed with memorabilia and storied pieces from the attacks. A lot of it you need to just look and soak it in.

    • @unpolarizedtoast
      @unpolarizedtoast 2 роки тому +1

      @@jakelyman5366 I believe that this is a re-released video, now being out up onto UA-cam.

    • @maidenless1156
      @maidenless1156 2 роки тому

      Does it humble you more knowing 9/11 was orchestrated by your own government? Lmao

    • @marzipom5630
      @marzipom5630 Рік тому +3

      @@maidenless1156 you should change your name to mindless 1.

  • @nigelbevan8449
    @nigelbevan8449 2 роки тому +82

    I'm British and live near Bristol in Great Britain, this is so moving to watch... My heart goes out to the victims families on this sad day for you and the people of The United States Of America... God bless you...

    • @removed7331
      @removed7331 2 роки тому +4

      thank you for clarifying, that you a British man, indeed live in Great Britain. I couldn't have guessed otherwise

    • @nigelbevan8449
      @nigelbevan8449 2 роки тому

      @@removed7331 Are u takin the piss???

    • @Stantheman848
      @Stantheman848 Рік тому

      Shame they never caught the culprits or had any investigation.

    • @dala5568
      @dala5568 Рік тому +2

      @@removed7331 I’m British and live in the US. Get it now?

    • @melgonz.6962
      @melgonz.6962 Рік тому

      ​@@Stantheman848 They killed Osama Bin Laden, what more do you want? Are you just slow or legit dumb?

  • @bruhdoe2984
    @bruhdoe2984 Рік тому +21

    I’m not even an American let alone a New Yorker yet this tragedy never fail to make me sob like a baby. So many lives just perished like that, it hurts man

  • @Bondek1996
    @Bondek1996 Рік тому +7

    Sep11 was the start of my final day in secondary school here in UK. From when a fighter jet screamed over school it's all ingrained in my memory never to be forgotten.

  • @laureng7536
    @laureng7536 11 місяців тому +20

    when I was 12 my family went to this museum. I have a lot of family so though I wasn’t born when it happened, it affected my family. When we went into the area that was the darkest moments and I started sobbing and had a panic attack. It was horrifying hearing the phone calls, videos, etc. it’s hard to imagine living it, when it’s terrifying learning about it. I will never forget the tragedy.
    Edit: My aunt who lives in New York today has mentioned how when she walks by the memorial, it’s hard to see how people sit there having picnics or laughing knowing that the ground is blood soaked.

  • @peterflagle5446
    @peterflagle5446 2 роки тому +14

    I went there a few years ago. I spent the whole tour with tears in my eyes

  • @the_gigachad_
    @the_gigachad_ 2 роки тому +67

    Today we honor the 343 firefighters, 71 LEOs, 10 paramedics, and 2,977 civilians who died that day. May you rest in peace, brave souls. You shall be remembered, just like Techno and Her Majesty The Queen.

    • @asresbenayalew3092
      @asresbenayalew3092 Рік тому

      This makes the death toll much higher than 2,996 people which I think is the widely accepted figure. Am I missing something here?

    • @chrisedrev9519
      @chrisedrev9519 Рік тому +1

      @@asresbenayalew3092 Yes, he made a mistake. The 2,977 victims include the 424 emergency workers, as well as the airplane victims. And the extra 19 on top are the highjackers.

    • @asresbenayalew3092
      @asresbenayalew3092 Рік тому +1

      @@chrisedrev9519 Thank you for the clarification.

    • @chrisedrev9519
      @chrisedrev9519 Рік тому +2

      @@asresbenayalew3092 No worries. For some reason I got sucked into reading about this event and reliving it today. Truly surreal.

    • @asresbenayalew3092
      @asresbenayalew3092 Рік тому +1

      @@chrisedrev9519 Call it morbid curiosity & you might be right, but I often try to relive the horror of that day from everyone's POV - the passengers & crew, the people in the buildings, the first responders, the air traffic controllers, the families, the news reporters, New Yorkers & Americans as a whole, and even the hijackers. No natural or manmade tragedy that occurred during my lifetime has affected me like 9/11.

  • @TMCremixes
    @TMCremixes 2 роки тому +88

    This museum was so well done and delicately and intricately executed. I remember being absolutely absorbed in the experience when I went there in 2016, to the point where when I came back up the escalators and stood in line to grab a muffin and a coffee in the café, I felt extreme guilt. How was I just ordering a muffin on a normal day like this, in this very spot, where so many people lost their lives. It was absurd.

    • @MrEp5
      @MrEp5 Рік тому +4

      ikr you almost dont even want to breathe

  • @MofongoJones
    @MofongoJones 2 роки тому +13

    I was in kindergarten here in Puerto Rico! They brought a tv to the classroom, I will never forget it!

    • @zoy13
      @zoy13 2 роки тому +1

      Couldn't comprehend what was going on when this happened.

  • @vacantduck5496
    @vacantduck5496 2 роки тому +125

    my best friend who was only 9 months old at the time 9/11 happened lost both her parents to the attacks and was left in an orphanage until she went to middle school and met me. her life ended in 2017 when she committed suicide after being put through all the trauma she went through: loosing her parents, loosing her best friend, and being raped by her ex boyfriend. I hope Shes in a better place and with her parents. RIP Adriana and RIP to all the victums of the 9/11 attacks

    • @removed7331
      @removed7331 2 роки тому +26

      There's literally no need to bring any of this up, especially in a fucking UA-cam comment section of all places. Do you think she would have wanted you telling the fucking world about her trauma? Have you no human decency?

    • @dw1232
      @dw1232 2 роки тому +3

      God Bless.

    • @Moltenbramley
      @Moltenbramley 2 роки тому +12

      9 months old and never got fostered, after both parents died in 9/11 she would not have been short on offers. I’m not saying your lying but your story seems sus.

    • @famulanrevengeance3044
      @famulanrevengeance3044 Рік тому +9

      @@removed7331 who do you talk to about this lol? atleast someone is remembering her, and i'm sure this person just wants to get something off their chest

    • @Dr.Ticklebum69
      @Dr.Ticklebum69 Рік тому +1

      @@removed7331 its all for clout.

  • @cynthiato6933
    @cynthiato6933 Рік тому +4

    I visited this museum in 2018, I remember the first thing when I walked into the museum, were quotes of people's reaction to the tragedy. It brought me right back when I was a kid, I was on the other side of the world, we had just finished dinner, and my parent were watching TV, a live report of the attack and crying their eyes out. I was too young to know what happened but now I came in person to understand the worst and the best of people. RIP to all lives lost that day

  • @CoffeeBeanWitch
    @CoffeeBeanWitch 2 роки тому +26

    This monumentally horrendous event only feels like it happened a few years back not 21yrs here in 2022. It still shakes my very core watching it unfold even as a Brit watching afar.

  • @DaveFisher-cq2dr
    @DaveFisher-cq2dr Рік тому +2

    for generations to come, whenever families visit this museum, they'll tell their children that their parents, grandparents and great grandparents remember where they were and what they were doing on that dark, tragic and unforgettable day

  • @Honeywheremysupersuit
    @Honeywheremysupersuit Рік тому +4

    I wasn’t born then, but my mom told me about my cousin who used to live in NY and worked in the World Trade Center. On that day he was running pretty late and on his way, he saw what happened. Today he lives in Texas, but I can’t begin to imagine what would’ve happened that day if he wasn’t running late. RIP to all the lives that were lost that day.

  • @MrChREAL
    @MrChREAL 2 роки тому +32

    I went the the museum and I have never felt so sad in a museum. Rip to the victims

  • @MisatoBestWoman
    @MisatoBestWoman 2 роки тому +3

    I plan to go to NYC and I plan to witness this museum the entire memorial
    NEVER FORGET 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @JesterBandito
    @JesterBandito 11 днів тому +2

    The room with the Firefighter down alarm got me. God, just haunting. Each one a downed man.

  • @TheMilitantHorse
    @TheMilitantHorse Рік тому +8

    My dad was just about 36 when the towers fell. I had two cousins, one in the Marines, one the Army, about this time. My dad wrote me a note (I was barely 2) that day. I remember him getting it and reading it on the 10 Year mark of the event. It's been the only time I've seen him ever cry. A very tough man was brought to tears because of the uncertainty of our future. It hurts me I never got to see this museum when I was in New York. I need to go some time.

    • @melgonz.6962
      @melgonz.6962 Рік тому

      People don't realize that when this happened we didn't know if the USA was legitimately under attack. Most people didn't have cell phones or internet, and the news kept saying there were threats of more attacks after the four planes had already crashed. We were just sitting and waiting to see who would be next. Bombs were a thing back then, the Twin Towers were bombed several years before 9/11. Thankfully it calmed down, but I think many of us, especially in the bigger cities, thought we could be next. Crazy uncertain times.

    • @marquisgt
      @marquisgt 11 місяців тому

      Please share the note!

  • @daniellucia7331
    @daniellucia7331 2 роки тому +13

    I visiting the 9/11 memorial and what got to me was not the design or the architecture or otherwise, it was the silence. Anyone who visited would know there’s thousands of people and it was pure pin drop silence. It was just moving.

  • @gayaneg.3805
    @gayaneg.3805 2 роки тому +42

    I’ve been there in 2016 and had to take a break to catch my breath..it was extremely painful to be there. I can’t even imagine what it’s like for the families of those who died or the survivors.

  • @aka_xtrahernandez4954
    @aka_xtrahernandez4954 Рік тому +14

    I wasn’t born at the time the attack took place, but my father lived in New York for almost his whole life and told me exactly what he seen and when he visited the twin towers after they were destroyed. It made me very sad to the point I almost cried and I am 16 years old.

  • @joyceday115
    @joyceday115 Рік тому +10

    When the man mentioned a picture from a wedding I believe he is talking about the picture I gave of my mother on her wedding day. She died in the South Tower helping a friend on 9/11.

    • @christycollins7390
      @christycollins7390 6 місяців тому +2

      🙏🏾

    • @wilmersaldivar9351
      @wilmersaldivar9351 Місяць тому +1

      R.I.P 🙏

    • @beckyoshell6319
      @beckyoshell6319 9 днів тому

      I am so sorry, Joyce. I'm sure you still miss her very much. May God comfort your heart through the Gospel of salvation in Christ, who is "the resurrection and the life."

  • @JC-td4gg
    @JC-td4gg 24 дні тому +3

    You also need to get the book "Where Did The Towers Go" by Judy Wood, that has numerous pictures and info of this tragic event!

    • @MarkH-cu9zi
      @MarkH-cu9zi 14 днів тому

      The pictures may be good but her claims are nonsense.

    • @JC-td4gg
      @JC-td4gg 14 днів тому +1

      @@MarkH-cu9zi How do you explain the TV tower pulverizing as the towers were going down. Lots of weird stuff happening that day that is not explainable! The planes, are the false flag cause!

  • @rickyism1576
    @rickyism1576 Рік тому +7

    I was a sophomore in high school living on the west coast. Its hard to really absorb the significance of what was happening at that age, but all anyone including the teachers could do that day was just watch the TV.

  • @jakesmook8934
    @jakesmook8934 Рік тому +3

    I was with my father in his downtown work office building. I was 7. Felt sick so my father brought me with him. After the first plane hit we started exiting the city. However seeing it first hand through a glass window is surreal and lives in my head vividly.
    I remember being so confused why it was happening. I couldn’t comprehend it as a child, quite scary.

  • @vrajpatel0407
    @vrajpatel0407 3 місяці тому +2

    Even though I was not a part of this disaster nor my family and friends, it is still very emotional to me. I have read and watched so many videos on 9/11. I really hope people who are still going through depression and trauma gets better! I am definitely going to visit the museum very soon

    • @Larry26-f1w
      @Larry26-f1w 2 місяці тому

      Don’t bother , your indoctrination is complete already

  • @lordmfitzgerald3rd754
    @lordmfitzgerald3rd754 2 роки тому +10

    Such a striking museum.
    It’s kind of bittersweet, but of the other museums we’ve all been in about historical events.
    That fact that all of this is in our living memory is just amazing.

  • @TheProkonover
    @TheProkonover 2 роки тому +7

    21 years... times sure flies. I remember those days, it was a commotion all over the world.

  • @terryfolderson-is5qo
    @terryfolderson-is5qo Рік тому +9

    "No day shall erase you from the memory of time" So poignant! i first heard, when my mother and i went to the dedication ceremony, that my uncle patrick saved upwards of 70+ people including everyone from his floor before the towers fell and, through stories, i even learned that his last sighting was practically carrying a heavyset man who was stubbornly refusing to move faster...firefighters never recovered his body and the only thing i have to remember him is a picture we took at my 10th birthday a month beforehand as well as his pocket bible that he left on his nightstand before leaving for work

  • @Fabxsslays
    @Fabxsslays Місяць тому

    i can imagine those people choosing those shoes that morning, getting ready for a casual day, not knowing that would be the last day they would wear them. so heartbreaking

  • @koalamullet
    @koalamullet Рік тому +8

    Like so many, I remember what I was doing on that terrible day so clearly. I was with friends on a Thai island, I had had a nap in the afternoon and had just woken up from an extremely vivid dream involving World War 3, without knowing what had just happened in NYC. My friends came into my room and told me to come to the restaurant in our resort as everyone was there watching TV. People were understandably freaking out. It affected everyone around the world.

    • @marquisgt
      @marquisgt 11 місяців тому

      If only you had warned America about your dream, many thousands of lives could have been saved!

  • @LiLgPnoy15
    @LiLgPnoy15 Рік тому +1

    I was here Fall 2022. Such an amazing and humbling experience. Much respect to those who helped build this museum.

    • @marquisgt
      @marquisgt 11 місяців тому

      I think I saw you! We're you wearing a blue hoodie??!

  • @Ryan-en4yh
    @Ryan-en4yh Рік тому +9

    I went in 2018 it’s very very eerie and quite depressing with the phone calls of the people onboard the flights calling loved ones etc even though it happened 2 years before I was born I felt it still affected me such a tragic loss

    • @rezakarampour6286
      @rezakarampour6286 Рік тому

      Search on UA-cam . ' Solving 9-11 By Christopher Bollyn .'

  • @danyschcaptain2660
    @danyschcaptain2660 21 день тому +1

    I wasn't born when 9/11 happened but my parents told me they saw the whole incident on the news. My heart sinks just looking at some of the people shown in this video who lost their lives to that horrific day. RIP to all the innocent lives and the lives of the heroes.

  • @_OscarIvan
    @_OscarIvan 2 роки тому +8

    I was in kindergarten. I didn’t understand why my dad picked me up from school early. All I remember is my mom being scared and telling us that our country was under attack

  • @brant9871
    @brant9871 2 роки тому +6

    The part that gave me chills was when They talked about the cross that stood in the rubble it’s like Jesus saying I am with you always ⛪️

  • @hebertomedinasousa4724
    @hebertomedinasousa4724 2 роки тому +4

    I've been there, on 2019 i was in the museum. My family had planned the New York trip for weeks probably 2 months, we stayed there for a week and a half. The ltrip was pretty cool, we went to the statue of liberty, got lost in Times Square, i went to the Bronx, to the Yankees stadium, without knowing that a few blocks from us were the famous Joker stairs (We made our trip on july), i remember we wanted to go to the Mets but the Fortnite world cup took place there so we just stayed in the park. It was fun, but then... thursday happened. It started pretty normal and i was excited to learn new stuff, until the very first second i took a step on the museum's entrance. Entering hurts, but if you go to the basement part, it is complete silence, the only things you can listen are some people crying and the sound of the old TV news reports they were playing around. The images, the environment, there was something in the air that you could feel as a heavy place. It was hard to keep going, especially for my sister who just kept making qquestions over and over and teasing me a little bit. I think that the 2 hours we stayed there were faster than the ones we spent in the American Museum of natural history.
    After that we went to the fountains, wich are the structures of the towers, reading the names and watching how deep the fountains were haunted me. It was a pretty day, the sun made everywhere look nice and cinematic, but there was something in the museum that just made it wrong to smile.
    I mean i wasn't traumatized but it did make a big impact on me, being down there in the museum felt like a big funeral

  • @Surajx18
    @Surajx18 Місяць тому +2

    I extend my heartfelt sympathy to the families of the victims. Though I am from India and have no personal connection to the 9/11 attacks or any of the 3000 lives lost that day, Still I feel a deep emotional connection whenever I think about that day. Over the past 12 years I have watched over 2000 videos about 9/11 from various sources. Born in October 2001 and I can't help but feel as if one of those souls has somehow become a part of me

    • @Larry26-f1w
      @Larry26-f1w Місяць тому

      Did you discover where ninety percent of those three thousand bodies disappeared to in your thousands of hours of video watching? ( asking for a friend in India)

  • @CrystalSanchez094
    @CrystalSanchez094 2 роки тому +12

    21 years... 21 years of pain but unity has gone by so quickly even now the events had shook the world to it's core so many lives were lost, so many families torn apart RIP the innocent victims of 9/11😭💔🙏

  • @TXnine7nine
    @TXnine7nine 2 роки тому +12

    I visited the museum in 2021 the day after the 20th anniversary and oh my god it was incredible. Very well done in my opinion. There was one exhibit that really stuck with me. It was a recording of an FDNY dispatcher from that day going through a list of every unit that was responding. The recording went on for something like 5-10 minutes. It really put into context the immense scale of the response to the events that were unfolding. If you haven’t yet visited the museum or memorial then it’s definitely a must the next time you’re in the city.

  • @Bettina4257
    @Bettina4257 Рік тому +2

    Thank you for the video. I´m from Germany and hopefully I can travel to New York in the future. My first visit would go to this museum. I still remember the day when the attacks happened and I won´t forget it.

  • @danskey.diquinollo1278
    @danskey.diquinollo1278 2 роки тому +5

    I'm not an American citizen but watching the tragedy 😭😭 listining to there last call 😭😭 my tears falls down 😭 and I say there soul are now in a good place with God ❤️❤️❤️rip to all victims

  • @Mazzy_Arts
    @Mazzy_Arts Місяць тому +1

    Went to this museum for school field trip this summer, it was insane!
    Edit: this was my first time visiting the memorial

  • @xronyxnunez9226
    @xronyxnunez9226 7 місяців тому +3

    That museum it’s a Cemetery for the victims who died that day and the family who left behind 🙏🏻🕊️🕊️🕊️ R.I.P to all the victims

    • @Larry26-f1w
      @Larry26-f1w 2 місяці тому

      Cemeteries have bodies buried in them . 90% of the bodies were never recovered so that’s an empty cemetery you’re suggesting

  • @FFEMTB08
    @FFEMTB08 2 місяці тому +1

    The most emotional section for me was a small room dedicated to the jumpers. There were videos and pictures never seen before in there. I made it through the entire memorial without crying, until I walked in that room.

    • @Larry26-f1w
      @Larry26-f1w Місяць тому

      The space with all the fake plants was heartbreaking 💩🪴💩🪴💩🪴🫡

  • @Kari2025
    @Kari2025 2 роки тому +5

    An underground museum in the footprint of the towers is so unique.

    • @cplcabs
      @cplcabs 2 роки тому

      Underground museum not so unique. Being in the footpring of the former WTC towers will of course be unique.

  • @andrewthornhill7042
    @andrewthornhill7042 Рік тому +2

    I visited the memorial a few years back and thought I'd be okay. Nope, totally lost it....

  • @Thedominator-tr2su
    @Thedominator-tr2su 2 роки тому +7

    It’s sad to actually think that this day could’ve actually been worse which is hard to think considering how horrific the events that occurred on this day were

  • @LeftyYoutube
    @LeftyYoutube 5 місяців тому +3

    My father died on 9/11 he was a great pilot and I will always miss him 😢

  • @jackrogers3657
    @jackrogers3657 2 роки тому +11

    Something that they didn't show in the video is a room dedicated to the jumpers. To all those who took their lives because they had no way out. That was the most disturbing room for me.

    • @tylerdurden4006
      @tylerdurden4006 2 роки тому

      Not the part where 20 years later america gave up and became partners with the taliban and gave them Afghanistan and military equipment as gifts for the new partnership so a whole bunch of americans died for nothing? That part sounds pretty disturbing to me. 🤷‍♂️

    • @jackrogers3657
      @jackrogers3657 2 роки тому

      Sorry to burst your bubble, that didn't happen.

    • @javieremoya
      @javieremoya 2 роки тому +4

      @@tylerdurden4006 wrong video dude…
      You’re the type to be at a memorial and yell “Orange man bad or FJB”

    • @teeth-man
      @teeth-man Рік тому

      @@tylerdurden4006 Died for nothing? They died for nothing either way dawg lol

  • @CharlesBeckerjr
    @CharlesBeckerjr 8 місяців тому +1

    I'd like to visit this place to pay tribute and my respect for those lost that terrible day. I met a fire fighter who was there. And I told him I wish I was there to help you. And he said, " Just be glad you weren't" That still sticks with me. So yeah, after all this time, my heart still goes out. 😢 God bless him and all those souls lost that day. 🙏

  • @dash_dash100
    @dash_dash100 2 роки тому +5

    I was born 1 year 4 days after the attacks but still incredibly heart stopping

    • @marquisgt
      @marquisgt 11 місяців тому

      1 year and FOUR DAYS??? I've heard of someone born one year & THREE days after, but FOUR??! My God, what must that have been like???😮😮😮

  • @by.the.sea.pisces
    @by.the.sea.pisces 2 роки тому +2

    I got to go in 2019, I can’t explain the atmosphere in there. I felt so much awe and deep pain and got emotional taking everything in ❤

  • @loganeberhard4369
    @loganeberhard4369 2 роки тому +22

    First off I just want to let everyone know that this comment is not about 9/11 but I will say rip to everyone who died but my real comment is asking Carl when he's going to be going back to 10 minute videos because I'm pretty sure he said that they go back to 10 minute videos in August and its September 11 so I hope you weren't lying Carl because I actually enjoy the 10 minute videos but besides that I hope that everyone who does possibly read this comment besides Carl azuz I hope you have a great rest of your day today and tomorrow.

  • @redmondpeters6221
    @redmondpeters6221 Рік тому +18

    When you memorialize something you don't just remember the victims. You also remember the perpetrators of these terrible things so that you don't allow these things to happen ever again. Yes there's controversy. But as the saying goes 'those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it'. That's why we remember the evil that caused things like 9/11. It makes us able to stop them.

  • @lessthanthreemetal
    @lessthanthreemetal Рік тому +1

    There is an unsettling feeling that hangs over you while inside.

  • @oddities-whatnot
    @oddities-whatnot Рік тому +7

    Horrific, an unimaginable nightmare for all those innocent people caught in this atrocity. I can still remember sitting at my desk in Stockport, England and a colleague leaning over a balcony and telling us all below what happened. The rest of my day was just a blur.

  • @V4riousMind
    @V4riousMind Рік тому +1

    i am from Germany.
    At that day and time, i was to little to witness/later remember what happend.
    But my parents did. Everyone knew where they were. i talked about this many times with my parents.
    After the memorial day, i came back and i am still shocked and can't describe the feelings.
    one day i want to visit this museum to learn more about that day.

  • @nluvwithrobin
    @nluvwithrobin 2 роки тому +4

    I visited here back in April, I did not know that about the blue wall...was a very somber visit, but so glad I went

  • @jessicafeeney3996
    @jessicafeeney3996 Місяць тому +1

    It’s truly amazing that wall held and Lower Manhattan wasn’t flooded 😳

  • @mayray6434
    @mayray6434 2 роки тому +5

    we live in sad times and danger all around ,we need to keep eyes wide open and stay safe
    take care all you are in my thoughts ❤️❤️❤️

    • @youfis12
      @youfis12 2 роки тому +2

      Also very sad to the people dying in the Middle East

    • @debbiekerr7659
      @debbiekerr7659 Рік тому

      @@youfis12 And Ukraine

  • @Kristenoyinbo
    @Kristenoyinbo 3 місяці тому

    I was 16 my birthday was sep 10 so just turned 16 in Sydney Australia when my mums best friend ran into my room crying saying 'there has been an attack' I won't ever forget school that day. We all went home early were glued to the tv in class hugging each other.

  • @perspectiveflip
    @perspectiveflip Рік тому +3

    Do they also display the intact hijacker passport in the museum?

    • @blyat4842
      @blyat4842 8 днів тому

      What do you mean by intact? It was ever much destroyed but legible

  • @Jasminexleee
    @Jasminexleee 3 місяці тому

    Went today after working a convention in the area I just sensed early so much energy left my event and there was a beautiful service happening outside. Still very emotional to be around.

  • @sebastianorozco1114
    @sebastianorozco1114 2 роки тому +3

    I’ve been here. It’s very heartbreaking

  • @cherylcalogero3330
    @cherylcalogero3330 5 місяців тому +2

    Heart breaking, tragic, moving, may those murdered on that day rest in eternal peace

    • @Larry26-f1w
      @Larry26-f1w 2 місяці тому

      They would if only someone could find them ! 90% of the bodies are missing still today !

    • @cherylcalogero3330
      @cherylcalogero3330 2 місяці тому

      @@Larry26-f1w 🥺😢

    • @Larry26-f1w
      @Larry26-f1w Місяць тому

      Fake sympathy is like fake plants 🪴💩🪴💩🪴( not useful to anyone)

  • @theriddled214
    @theriddled214 2 роки тому +11

    People say that we shouldn't care about 9 11 much anymore because it was already such a long time ago, but the reason why I think it's still an important day is because it teaches this country that we are way more than a country and with all this hate with each other like politics and racial rights, we still love each other deep down

    • @owenh2395
      @owenh2395 2 роки тому +1

      who said that☠️

    • @GalacticAnimationsYT
      @GalacticAnimationsYT 2 роки тому

      @Jake Folk stop using a tragic terrorist attack where thousands died to push your hateful propaganda you will never know if that would've been the case and it isn't even possible to have any country in the world that's full of white people completely not even Hitler could accomplish what you want and it's very damning that you share the same views as a war criminal

  • @Flexin010
    @Flexin010 2 роки тому +1

    Went there last year. What a jaw dropping experience. I didn't get to go inside. You can feel something when your there looking at the waterfalls.

  • @kimebron928
    @kimebron928 Рік тому +4

    21 years ago gone by so quick but never forget so horrible and sad day even is still shocking to watch today as when it happened 💔 rest in peace to all the victims

  • @chloemccloud9320
    @chloemccloud9320 Рік тому

    i went this year and i loved it we need to pay respect to the loved ones who died in that tragic day

  • @MagicofKeelanWendorf
    @MagicofKeelanWendorf 2 роки тому +6

    I remember being in elementary school not knowing what was happening but I remember my teacher crying. I grew up in a town called Whiting, Indiana and little did I know that because we have a huge BP refinery in our backyard that it was a possible target. I remember my mom coming to get me and her being so scared and I just didn’t understand in the moment.

    • @maylyntran8842
      @maylyntran8842 2 роки тому

      what is a BP refinery?

    • @MagicofKeelanWendorf
      @MagicofKeelanWendorf 2 роки тому

      @@maylyntran8842 BP gasoline makes gasoline for cars in my backyard

    • @chadjenkins4876
      @chadjenkins4876 2 роки тому

      At first, it was unclear just how many attacks could be happening. Many bigger buildings in larger cities evacuated just in case. I was in middle school and we all went home to be with family

    • @marquisgt
      @marquisgt 11 місяців тому

      I heard the target list for that day was... WTC, Pentagon, & some random BP refinery in rural Indiana!!! It's a miracle you are alive today!!! 🙄🙄🙄

  • @BlackGirlLovesAnime6
    @BlackGirlLovesAnime6 10 місяців тому +2

    The blue sky art is even more sad knowing that Virgil is no longer with us 😢

  • @niara6
    @niara6 2 роки тому +7

    I wanna go there someday .

  • @Larry26-f1w
    @Larry26-f1w 2 місяці тому +2

    Does the museum have an exhibit that explains how 90% of the bodies were never recovered?

  • @xiemangun6389
    @xiemangun6389 2 роки тому +3

    😭😭😭
    Never forget..
    Always love them all the victims..
    ❤️❤️❤️
    God bless us..
    🙏🙏🙏
    🙌🙌🙌

  • @Atisdel_Entertainment_Official
    @Atisdel_Entertainment_Official 11 місяців тому +2

    I wasn't alive when any of this happened, so I can't imagine something so harrowing occurring
    RIP to all the victims and families affected. It's a truly heartbreaking event

  • @KyloRen4238
    @KyloRen4238 2 роки тому +4

    10 ways to give people hope.
    1. Give people hope with acceptance.
    The need for acceptance is met when we willingly and unconditionally love someone. Can you look beyond a person’s faults and still care for them? There’s not a better way to give a person hope than by accepting them for who they are, not for what they do.
    2. Give people hope with love.
    The need for love is met by expressing care through physical touch and tender words. Tell people you love them. Tell your spouse, your children and your colleagues. Tell people in the hospital, at weddings, at funerals. Try calling someone today and say, “I wanted to give you a quick call to tell you thank you for being part of our church family and for being a good friend. I love you, and I’m proud to call you friend.”
    3. Give people hope with appreciation.
    The need for appreciation is met through expressing thanks and praise, especially in recognizing someone’s accomplishments. I recently heard a senior pastor praise the youth pastor in front of the congregation about his summer program, and the young pastor was beaming from ear to ear.
    4. Give people hope with approval.
    The need for approval is met by building up or affirming a person and acknowledging the importance of the relationship. An employer I know called out a young man in an employee meeting: “Josh, the way you organize the storeroom has made everybody so pleased. We can find things now. You are making everybody’s work so much easier. Thank you so much.” The boss made a big deposit.
    5. Give people hope with connection.
    The need for connection is met when we enter another person’s world. There is no substitute for spending time with someone. And it’s not just time-it’s time and really listening to people from your heart. If you will truly listen to someone, whether they are happy or sad, they will feel blessed. Pastor David Augsburger says, “Being heard is so close to being loved that for the average person, they are almost indistinguishable.”
    6. Give people hope with comfort.
    The need for comfort is met by responding to people with appropriate words and physical touch. If a person is grieving, there really are only two things to say: “I’m so sorry,” and “I love you.” Place your hand on the shoulder of a person in pain and tell that person you’re on his side.
    7. Give people hope with encouragement.
    The need for encouragement is met by urging people to hang in there, to persist toward the goal they so want to achieve. Send notes, phone someone, pray with someone, take someone to dinner or a movie. People are dying for someone to say, “I’m so proud of what you are doing. You make this world a better place to live in.”
    8. Give people hope with respect.
    The need for respect is met by honoring and regarding people as important. Do you show deference to your spouse’s opinion? Do you listen to your children? Do you respect people’s time? Do you respect people from different backgrounds and religions?
    9. Give people hope with protection.
    The need for protection is met when we establish harmony in relationships and show people they are free from fear or threat of harm. Are those for whom you are financially responsible secure in knowing that you will provide for them? Do you relate to people in a consistent way? Do you treat your employees the way you want to be treated? Do people know what to expect from you? Can they read you?
    10. Give people hope with support.
    The need for support is met when you come alongside someone and give them your complete attention. Anticipate and notice when someone is experiencing periods of stress. Are you willing to use your personal resources to help someone, if need be?
    None of these 10 means you will have fewer problems in your relationships. They don’t mean you won’t have to have hard conversations or set clear boundaries or keep forgiving those who hurt you.
    Real encouragement seems to always happen right smack in the middle of life’s messes. Writer Peter Scazzero is right in saying, “Jesus modeled incarnating love when He took on flesh, entered our world and walked in our shoes. His love compelled Him to cross two worlds, heaven and earth, and live among us. In order for us to love others as Jesus did, we too need to cross into other people’s worlds, enter life in their shoes, while holding on to our own world as well.”

    • @marquisgt
      @marquisgt 11 місяців тому

      #11 - shut the hell up already!

  • @aigriffin42604
    @aigriffin42604 2 роки тому +10

    We miss you Carl Azuz!

    • @fuzeblitz6326
      @fuzeblitz6326 2 роки тому +1

      What happened to him?

    • @aigriffin42604
      @aigriffin42604 2 роки тому

      @@fuzeblitz6326 Idk!

    • @fuzeblitz6326
      @fuzeblitz6326 2 роки тому

      @@aigriffin42604 I was just reading on it. It's saying he left CNN. I wonder why. I've always enjoyed watching him!

    • @Red_Nine5
      @Red_Nine5 11 місяців тому

      ​@@fuzeblitz6326theres a new world news channel that Carl Azuz is on.

    • @jamiethomas3768
      @jamiethomas3768 9 місяців тому

      @@fuzeblitz6326me too.

  • @victoriaR587
    @victoriaR587 Рік тому +1

    I wasn't even alive at the time. I have so much respect for those who died, those who fought, those who survived.

  • @NoahRonaldo22
    @NoahRonaldo22 2 роки тому +4

    I wasn't Even Born Yet When This Happened Now that I'm In High School I Still Never Forget That Day #NeverForget911

  • @allie9594
    @allie9594 5 місяців тому

    I was in first grade when 9/11 occurred. My teacher, in the middle of explaining something on the white board, ran to her desk in tears and answered her cell phone. The school alarm had went off and we were told to hide under our desks. The TV was turned on to the news and I remember seeing the horrors on what was broadcasted. I'll never forget the cries from my classroom that morning.