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9/11: As the decades pass, the act of remembering evolves

SHANKSVILLE, Pa. (AP) - The hills in Shanksville seem to swallow sound. The plateau that Americans by the millions ascend to visit the Flight 93 National Memorial, to think of those who died in this southwestern Pennsylvania expanse, sits just above much of the landscape, creating a pocket of quiet precisely where quiet needs to be.

It is a place that encourages the act of remembering.

Twenty years have passed since United Flight 93 made its final descent, chaos unfolding aboard as buildings burned 300 miles to the east. Nearly one-fifth of the country is too young to remember firsthand the day that changed everything. Yet at the memorial's overlook, near the patch where the plane hit, remembering is the whole point.

Remembering is not merely a state of mind. As those who beseech us to never forget the Holocaust have long insisted, it is an act. And when loss and trauma are visited upon human beings, the act of remembering takes many forms.

Remembering is political. Those who disagree about the fate of Confederate statues across the American South demonstrate that, as do those who dispute how much the war on terror and its toll should be part of discussions about 9/11 memories.

Remembering arrives in ground zero ceremonies and moments of silence and prayers upon prayers, both public and private. It shows itself in folk memorials like those erected at the sides of lonely roads to mark the sites of traffic deaths. It is embedded in the names of places, like the road that leads to the Flight 93 memorial - the Lincoln Highway. It surfaces in the retrieval of 'œflashbulb memories'ť - those where-were-you-when-this-happened moments that stick with us, sometimes accurately, sometimes not.

There are personal memories and cultural memories and political memories, and the lines often blur.

And for generations, remembering has been presented to us in monuments and memorials like Shanksville's, fine-tuned to evoke memories and emotions in certain ways.

Yet while monuments stand, remembering itself evolves. How 9/11 is remembered depends on when 9/11 is remembered. What, then, does remembering come to mean on a 20th anniversary of an event like 9/11, even as its echoes are still shaking the foundations of everything?

'œOur present influences how we remember the past - sometimes in ways that are known and sometimes in ways that we don't realize,'ť says Jennifer Talarico, a psychology professor at Lafayette College in Pennsylvania who studies how people form personal memories of public events.

Evidence of that is obvious in the past five weeks in Afghanistan, where a 20-year war waged in direct response to 9/11 ended pretty much where it began: with the repressive and violent Taliban in charge once more.

But even within more static forms of memory, such as the Flight 93 National Memorial, the question of how remembering evolves hangs over so much.

In the visitors' center, visceral, painful artifacts of the moment still bring back the past with astonishing efficiency; twisted, scarred cutlery from in-flight meals is particularly breathtaking. But the variety of remembering that is presented yards away at the quiet overlook and its thoughtful memorial feels more permanent, more eternal.

Paul Murdoch of Los Angeles, the lead architect on the memorial, says it was carefully calibrated to resonate across multiple stages of memory about the event and its implications.

'œYou can imagine a memorial approach that sort of freezes anger in time, or freezes fear. And that can be a very expressionistic piece of art. But I feel like for something to endure over a long period of time, I think it has to operate a different way,'ť says Murdoch, who co-designed the memorial with his wife, Milena.

'œNow we have a generation of people who weren't even alive on 9/11,'ť Murdoch says. 'œSo how do you talk to people of this new generation - or of future generations?'ť

That question is particularly potent on this anniversary. Society tends to mark generations in two-decade packages, so there's an entire one that has been born and come of age since the attacks. That hardly means they haven't been paying attention, though: They 'œremember,'ť too.

Krystine Batcho, a psychology professor at Le Moyne College in Syracuse, New York, studies how nostalgia works. She found something interesting a couple years ago when she was researching how young people encountered stories that resonated with them - both personally and through the news.

Even those who lacked living memories of 9/11, Batcho says, responded with stories about the event. It was remembering as shared experience.

So many first encounters with 9/11 were, in the tradition of an information age, both separate and communal. People in different parts of the country and world, under vastly different circumstances, watched the same live camera angles on the same few feeds and saw the same, now-indelible views of the destruction in the same way. They experienced it apart, but together.

That formed a communal memory of sorts, even if sometimes people who saw the same things didn't remember them the same way - a specific camera angle or vantage point, a key figure's comments, the exact sequence of events. Remembering can be like that, experts say.

'œYou would think that the memories would be more cohesive and homogeneous," Batcho says. "It turns out that it's much more complicated than that.'ť

The fundamental tension of this kind of remembering - it feels like yesterday but is also becoming part of history - confronts us in the coming days. Memory becomes history. And history - shared history - is held onto tightly, sometimes rabidly. It's why so many people grasp tightly to comforting, nostalgic historical narratives - even when they're shown to have been destructive.

When memory does become history, it can become more remote, like a Revolutionary War memorial for people whose passions and sacrifices have been sanded down by time. With distance, it can calcify.

That's not going to happen with 9/11 for a long time, of course. Its politics are still roiling. The arguments that it produced - and the ways they sent society hurtling in a different direction - are just as intense as in those early days.

And when a nation pauses to remember the morning 20 years ago when it was attacked, it is not only looking over its shoulder. It is also looking around and wondering: What does this mean to us now?

___

Ted Anthony, director of new storytelling and newsroom innovation for The Associated Press, was AP's director of Asia-Pacific news from 2014 to 2018 and covered the aftermath of 9/11 in Afghanistan and Pakistan from 2001 to 2003. Follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/anthonyted

ADVANCE FOR PUBLICATION ON SUNDAY, SEPT. 5, AND THEREAFTER - FILE - In this Wednesday, Sept. 11, 2002 file photo, from left, Shannon Barry, Lisa Starr and Michelle Wagner, all of Hershey, Pa., comfort each other as they listen to a memorial service for victims of Flight 93 near Shanksville, Pa. President Bush will lay a wreath at the crash site later in the day to mark the anniversary of the terrorist attacks. (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson, File) The Associated Press
ADVANCE FOR PUBLICATION ON SUNDAY, SEPT. 5, AND THEREAFTER - FILE - In this Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2001 file photo, the remains of the World Trade Center stand amid other debris following the terrorist attack on the buildings in New York. (AP Photo/Alexandre Fuchs, File) The Associated Press
ADVANCE FOR PUBLICATION ON SUNDAY, SEPT. 5, AND THEREAFTER - FILE - In this Friday Sept. 11, 2015 file photo, a U.S. flag is draped on the side of the Pentagon where the attack took place 14 years earlier, seen from the Pentagon Memorial. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File) The Associated Press
ADVANCE FOR PUBLICATION ON SUNDAY, SEPT. 5, AND THEREAFTER - FILE - In this Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012 file photo, Pat Wotton, left, is reflected in a memorial to her husband Rodney James Wotton, as she sits with Dorothy Greene, second left, Jean Wotton, Rodney's mother, and Eunice Saporito, right, in Middletown, N.J. The marker for Rodney Wotton is one of 37 in the Middletown World Trade Center Memorial Gardens for those from the town in central New Jersey, who died in the attack on the World Trade Center in 2001AP Photo/Mel Evans, File) The Associated Press
ADVANCE FOR PUBLICATION ON SUNDAY, SEPT. 5, AND THEREAFTER - FILE - In this Sunday, Sept. 11, 2011 file photo, soldiers with the U.S. Army's 25th Infantry Division, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Battalion 27th Infantry Regiment based in Schofield Barracks, Hawaii, hold a ceremony commemorating the tenth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks and soldiers the unit has lost since then in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan at Forward Operating Base Bostick in Kunar province, Afghanistan. (AP Photo/David Goldman, File) The Associated Press
ADVANCE FOR PUBLICATION ON SUNDAY, SEPT. 5, AND THEREAFTER - FILE - In this Wednesday, Sept. 11, 2013 file photo, a U.S. army soldier pauses at a column from the South Tower of the World Trade Center at the Los Angeles Fire Department's Sept. 11 remembrance ceremony in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon, File) The Associated Press
ADVANCE FOR PUBLICATION ON SUNDAY, SEPT. 5, AND THEREAFTER - FILE - In this Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012 file photo, a person stops to read names in New Jersey's memorial to the 749 people from the state lost during the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, as One World Trade Center, now up to 104 floors, is seen across the Hudson River from Jersey City, N.J. (AP Photo/Mel Evans, File) The Associated Press
ADVANCE FOR PUBLICATION ON SUNDAY, SEPT. 5, AND THEREAFTER - FILE - In this Wednesday, Sept. 11, 2019 file photo, a boy waves to passing motorists to commemorate the anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks from an overpass on Interstate 35 near Melvern, Kan. Area residents began manning the bridge with flags and waving to motorists on the anniversary in 2002 and have done it ever since. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel, File) The Associated Press
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