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Pentagon Memorial Evokes Emotion as Completion Date Nears
By Donna Miles American Forces Press Service
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WASHINGTON, Aug. 14, 2008 – When Jim Laychak looks out over the 184
benches that serve as the centerpiece for the new Pentagon Memorial, he
sees life. Rays of early-afternoon sunlight reflect on pools beneath
each bench, sending ripples of light dancing across the stainless-steel
benches.
 Jim
Laychak, president of the Pentagon Memorial Fund, is also a brother of
one of the 184 victims of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attack on the
Pentagon. The project broke ground June 2006 and is scheduled to open
during a ceremony next month commemorating the seventh anniversary of
the 9/11 attacks. Defense Dept. photo by Army Staff Sgt. Michael J.
Carden (Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available. |
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“I look at it as these guys talking to us,” Laychak said, referring to
the 184 victims of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attack on the Pentagon
honored at the memorial. “It’s them coming back and saying, ‘We
appreciate what you have done. We appreciate that you will never
forget,’” he said.
Laychak
has worked tirelessly to keep alive the memory of 125 servicemembers
and civilian workers at the Pentagon and 59 passengers and crew aboard
American Airlines Flight 77 killed in the attack. As president of the
Pentagon Memorial Fund, he has been the public face to a project he
said captured broad, collaborative support.
Exactly four weeks
before the memorial’s official dedication, Laychak said today that he
never doubted the dream of creating a memorial to those killed in the
attack would come to fruition. “I didn’t know the path we would take to
get here, but I really believed that we would get here,” he said. “I
knew this day would come.”
Even the big-ticket price attached
to the project -- $22 million for construction, plus $10 million for an
endowment fund, all in private funds -- didn’t faze Laychak. “I knew
the money would come because I knew that we were doing God’s work,” he
said. “It was just a matter of sticking with it and focusing on the
right things.”
Laychak expressed appreciation to those who
donated to the cause, particularly the companies that stepped forward
and provided the biggest contributions. “When we went to them and asked
for support, it wasn’t, ‘Let me think about it.’ It was ‘What do you
need? How much can I give?’”
But beyond contributors, Laychak
said the memorial represents a collaboration by a large group of other
people, as well: Pentagon officials, the design and construction team,
family members and volunteer fundraisers, all working toward the same
goal. “It was everybody believing in that goal and working together,”
he said. “This isn’t an individual achievement. It’s what we have
accomplished as a team.”
The project is slated for completion
Aug. 31, but Chris Hertzler, senior project manager, said it’s two to
three weeks ahead of schedule. “We’re working on the final touch-up,
fixing little nicks and scratches and dings,” he said. “We’re really
pretty much done now.”
Everyone who has been involved in the
effort feels an emotional attachment to it and pride in how it’s
evolved, Hertzler said. “From the families all the way to the guys out
here swinging a hammer, everyone was behind each other, helping each
other out,” he said.
John Foulkes, quality control manager for
the project, walked around the 1.9-acre site with a checklist earlier
today, ensuring last-minute details weren’t overlooked. A landscaping
team spread mulch around shrubbery, an electrician double-checked
lighting, and other workers checked the filters in each reflecting
pond.
Remembering back to the groundbreaking in June 2006,
Foulkes said he’s astounded to see the striking memorial that has risen
from an empty field. “It’s absolutely amazing, absolutely stunning,
especially when you see it at night,” he said.
For Foulkes,
who was working on a construction project at the end of the runway at
Dulles International Airport when Flight 77 took off, completion of the
Pentagon Memorial brings a sense of closure.
Like Laychak, he
said he feels something deep down inside when his eyes fall on the 184
benches. “From a distance, they all look alike, but close up, you can
see that every one is different, just like people,” he said. “It might
be something as simple as the way a stone sits in it, but each one is
unique.”
Foulkes, too, sees that mysterious ripple that dances
through the benches as the sun reflects on the water below. “It looks
like fire,” he said.
Laychak said he hopes visitors to the
Pentagon Memorial will think beyond the flames that poured from the
building when the jetliner slammed into it during the morning of Sept.
11, 2001. Instead, he said, he wants them to honor those who died at
the site -- sharing stories about them and celebrating their lives.
“Life can turn in an instant, so we need to celebrate it,” he said.
Laychak
said he hopes people who visit the site remember how Americans set
aside their differences and united after the 9-11 attacks. “It’s about
remembering how we all felt as a country and how we came together, and
it’s remembering that we are more alike than we are different in this
world,” he said. “So why don’t we figure out how to work together as
opposed to focusing on the differences?”
The memorial
dedication is slated for Sept. 11, and will open to the public that
evening. As many as 2 million people are expected to visit the site
within a year, officials said. |
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| Military Connection's Comments: The Pentagon Memorial Fund campaign raised the money for the construction of the construction and permanent maintenance of the memorial park. The Pentagon Memorial and park will soon be open to the public. The Pentagon Memorial dedication ceremony will be held on September 11, 2008. Seven year ago 184 military and Defense Department civilians and passengers aboard American Airlines Flight 77 were killed by a terrorist attack on the Pentagon. The Memorial remembers and honors those that were lost on September 11, 2001. Jim Laychak, President of the Pentagon Memorial Fund has worked to raise funds and create a fitting memory for the victims of the attack. The Memorial Park will be a place of peace for the victims and all visitors. The Park contains 184 units one for each person that died. Much thought and effort went into the design of the units. |
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