Thirty some thousand feet beneath that prayer we were told that there
was an unidentified jet over Pittsburgh airspace. We didn't know for
sure. Then someone ran down the hall and said to me "Fire. Fire and
smoke in Somerset County!" Then we knew for sure. I wondered how many
more planes were going to crash that day and thought of Susan and the
kids. Quietly in my mind, "Lord protect us, protect my family." There
was that name again.
From next to me a deep resonant voice said: "Why us? What does all of
this have to do with America?" It was one of the news men. "Christopher
Columbus," I said "1492...Ferdinand and Isabella ended the Muslim
occupation of Spain and send Christopher Columbus out to find a shipping
route which will enable the Christian West to outflank the Muslim
domination of shipping lanes." Blank stare. "The Crusades," I said.
"'That's how they think of us...we're crusaders."
I wondered about the date. Susan called soon after. "Are you okay?" "No,
pretty rough day, how about you and the kids? Indoors, okay?"
I talked to my oldest, Christopher, and asked him to research the date
to see if anything in history seemed relevant to this attack. These old
grudge holders were big on dates. G.W. Bush laid down an ultimatum to
Saddam on 9/11/1990, the "This Shall Not Stand" speech. Maybe there's
something there. Then another: Truman lays foundation stone for
Pentagon. Neither factoid really clicked. Years later, I would learn
that September 11th was an extremely important day in the history of the
Crusades: it was the high water mark and the beginning of the great
decline of the Muslim empire. In 1683, the Muslims stood at the very
gates of Vienna, the furthest they'd ever gotten. September 11th is the
day that reinforcements arrived from the Christian King of Poland. The
Muslims were defeated and began a long period of contraction and
retreat. The Catholic apologist Hilaire Belloc (a close friend of G.K.
Chesterton) said:
"Vienna, as we saw, was almost taken and only saved by the Christian
army under the command of the King of Poland on a date that ought to be
among the most famous in history-September 11, 1683."
I wasn't sure then, and I'm not sure now, which of these dates held
significance in the minds of the terrorists. Mark Twain once said
"history doesn't repeat itself, but it does rhyme." September 11th 1683
was when the West began its military ascent over the East. The
terrorists wanted to tip things in the opposite direction. Perhaps
that's why they chose that date. It certainly does sound like it rhymes
to me.
But I knew none of this at the time. What I knew was that a plane had
crashed in Somerset County. There was a fire ball, smoke, and a crater.
The black box was driven 25 feet into the earth, the plane and its
inhabitants had disintegrated over an area of almost a hundred acres. In
fact, the Lutheran minister who owns that patch of land no longer thinks
of it as his campground, but as a cemetery.
Remarkably, not everything disintegrated: there was an open Bible in the
middle of the field. Where steel had been shattered, a book remained
intact. The first responders were not able to find any piece of metal
larger than a pie plate, and yet they found a Bible. Where human flesh
had been instantly cremated, paper was only slightly singed. The Bible
was seen by the fire chief, two state police officers, and some members
of the national guard, in that order.
Tom Lavis from the Tribune Democrat told me that story, and confirmed it
for me again this week. He spent weeks working to confirm the facts. Tom
ran into numerous roadblocks, cops under a gag order, the FBI (which was
sharing nothing with the public), and the parents of the Japanese
student to whom the Bible belonged, unable to speak English and too
grief-stricken to talk to the press. Tom wrote a column, which was faxed
to me, because the Tribune-Democrat did not have it available on the
web. Tom wasn't a particularly religious guy and wasn't trying to make
spiritual hay out of the open Bible. But it was there, and that was
extraordinary, and that makes it a story, especially when almost no
other object survived.
There were only two objects that could be recognized in the field by the
crater: a burning tire and an open Bible. The pages were 'white as snow'
according to the fire chief, and opened to 1 Kings 12-16, which tells
the story of Israel after the golden age of David and Solomon, when the
nation began a long period of oscillation between good and bad kings.
Someone bagged the Bible and tagged it and by the time it reached the
coroner, it was opened to Psalm 121, the Vis Montium, a funeral Psalm.
"I shall life up mine eyes unto the hills from whence cometh my help. Me
help cometh only from the Lord" -- that name again -- "from whence
cometh my help."
My first reaction to Tom's story was a flinch. A part of my limbic
system said "Stay away from this stuff; it's kind of like when some
woman finds the image of the Virgin Mary burned into her lampshade." But
another part of me lowered its pride and prayed "Lord, I think this is
important and that people around the world should know about it. If it
is, please help me to do that, because I don't know how to." Eight years
later, a newspaper friend contacted me and asked me if I knew of any
interesting spiritual elements to the story of the crash of Flight 93 in
Shanksville. I told him that, as a matter of fact, I did. This article
is the result.
I didn't know anything about that Bible as I drove home from the radio
station after that long day. I just know that I felt defeated and
exhausted. But as I stepped through my gate I saw our porch filled with
makeshift flags, drawn with crayon and marker and pen, taped to pencils
with duct tape, and there written in the script of my children were
signs that said "God" -- that name again -- "Bless America". I wept
then. I weep now.