Anyone
knocking around Manhattan in those days knew people who perished, but for me it
all comes back to the priest and the fireman.
Even
ten years later I can look offstage and imagine where each would be – Father
Michael Judge standing by the bar, impeccably coiffed, surrounded by friends;
and Richie Muldowney NYFD, darting around the room bantering with all and
sundry, crooked smile lighting up the joint.
Though
both frozen in time they summon up the city as it used to be. For New York
changed ineffably on 9/11when the spirits of so many unique people departed.
They’ve been replaced, of course, great cities do that, but it’s not quite the
same, is it?
I
often thought of Mychal as a mirror, he was so empathetic he seemed to reflect
your own hopes and fears. I never knew anyone who helped so many people; he was
always concerned, forever providing a shoulder.
I guess he came to see Black 47 to
let off a little steam. I’m not even sure he liked our music – his own taste
ran towards the more conventional – but the rhythms, juxtapositions and overall
message fascinated him and, anyway, he liked to be in the thick of the action.
Richie
was hard-core Black 47. He knew all the words, the players, the other fans. He
delighted to show up unexpectedly at out-of-town gigs; the moment you saw him
you knew it would be a good night. To think such an irrepressible spark was
extinguished so early.
I
remember jaywalking across Times Square the first September Saturday the band
returned to Connolly’s. The “crossroads of the world” was so deserted in those
immediate post-9/11 nights it felt like a scene from a cowboy movie where
sagebrush is blowing down the street.
But
cops, firemen, emergency workers, the mad, the innocent and those who just
couldn’t stay at home needed somewhere to go – to let the pressure off – and
that was the band’s function.
Those first gigs were searing. You
couldn’t be certain who was missing, who had survived, who was on vacation, who
just needed a break from it all. When a familiar face walked through the door
the relief was palpable, someone else had made it.
The atmosphere – though on the
surface subdued - was charged with an underlying manic energy, a need to
commemorate, celebrate, to show that life was going on. That would be some
small revenge on the bastards who had caused all the heartbreak.
And yet, what an opportunity was
missed in those first weeks. That smoldering pit down on Rector Street had
galvanized the country. We were all so united; we would have done anything
asked of us.
Republican, Democrat, Independent,
we all came together as Americans. We would have reduced our dependence on
foreign oil, rejuvenated poor neighborhoods, taught classes in disadvantaged
schools. You name it - nothing would have been too big, too small either.
But no sacrifice was asked, much
less demanded. Instead, 9/11 was used by cheap politicians to get re-elected;
patriotism was swept aside by an unrelenting xenophobic nationalism that
brooked no dissent. The US was converted into a fortress and the lights were
dimmed in the once shining city on the hill. Worst of all, our leaders sought
to use the tragedy as an excuse to invade Iraq.
Look at us now, dysfunctional,
walled off from each other and the rest of the world. That began when the
national will for a positive response was squandered in the aftermath of 9/11.
Though he was finally hunted down,
sometimes it seems as though Osama Bin Laden won, for we’ve become a fearful,
partisan people, unsure of ourselves, uncertain of our future.
But then I think of Mychal and
Richie, their smiles beam across the years and I know that the current national
malaise is just a patina that covers the soul of the country – it can be wiped
away. It’s not permanent. We have greatness in us yet.
That’s the hard-earned lesson of
9/11 and will always be the message of the priest and the fireman.
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