Hero

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Passengers' Actions May Have Helped Curb Tragedy

By Charles Lane
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, September 12, 2001; 3:42 PM


As United Airlines Flight 93 entered its last desperate moments aloft, there was terror and violence on board – but also heroism.

Minutes before the giant airliner smashed into a field southeast of Pittsburgh, passenger Jeremy Glick used a cell phone to call his wife at home in New Jersey and told her that he and several other people on board had come up with a plan to resist the terrorists who had hijacked the plane, according to Glick's brother-in-law, Douglas B. Hurwitt.

"They were going to stop whoever it was from doing whatever it was they'd planned," Hurwitt said. "He knew that stopping them was going to end all of their lives. But that was my brother-in-law. He was a take-charge guy."

Anticipating his own death, Glick, who celebrated his 31st birthday on Sept. 3, told his wife, Lyzbeth, that he hoped she would have a good life and would take care of their 3-month old baby girl, Hurwitt said.

Glick explained to his wife that the plane had been taken over by three Middle Eastern men wearing red headbands. The terrorists, wielding knives and brandishing a red box they claimed contained a bomb, ordered the passengers, pilots and flight attendants toward the rear of the plane, then took over the cockpit.

The story of Glick's words adds to the account of passenger resistance already given by another passenger's mother on NBC's "Today" show this morning. Alice Hoglan of California says her son, Mark Bingham, also spoke of a plan to tackle the hijackers in a last-minute cell phone call to her.

Flight 93 was the only one of four hijacked planes that did not smash into a major target on the ground, and some officials are already saying that the actions of people on board may have prevented an even greater tragedy.

Pennsylvania Rep. John Murtha, the ranking Democrat on the Congressional Defense Appropriations Committee, said at the crash site that he believes a struggle took place in the plane's cockpit and that the plane was headed for a significant target in Washington, D.C.

"There had to have been a struggle and someone heroically kept the plane from heading to Washington," he said.


© 2001 The Washington Post Company



http://a188.g.akamaitech.net/f/188/...ost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A19050-2001Sep12.html
 
A hero indeed.

I can't imagine being on the receiving end of a phone call telling me someone I loved was on a plane that was being hijacked. Although having someone you love die in such a horrible accident is unthinkable, I wonder if it wouldn't be worse to have to hear THEM tell you personally about it?

My thoughts and prayers are with all the families today.
 
I shed a few tears over that one.

And over your ass, but that's a whole different thing.
 
How brave.

So sad, but so honorable. I am really moved by what I read here.
 
Oops i posted about this aslo.

They are HEROS

God Bless them!

Peter :(
 
Can only imagine what his wife felt while on the receiving end of that call. It would of been heart wrenching for myself in a similar situation such as that. This was a very touching article. Thanks for sharing it with the board.
 
Thanks PC. Very moving indeed.
I shed some tears reading that as well.
 
I think my keyboard is going to seize up if i don't stop shedding tears over these posts. I still feel so shocked by this all. Only being able to imagine what these poor people went through and their families left behind. Such bravery. Such loss and sadness but i have great respect for these brave people.
 
A moment of reflection for those who so selflessly gave of their lives so that more would not be lost.

It is indeed a heroic act and may all of them reach a place of peace where no more terrors can assault them.
 
Words can't convey the debt we owe these brave men, but hopefully we will find ourselves worthy of their sacrifice in the coming days.



"Courage is contagious. When a brave man takes a stand, the spines of others are often stiffened." Billy Graham
 
I missed this thread but this is one of the compelling stories I mentioned in my thread. Thank you for posting this, PC.

It is such a bright spot in a dark vacuum of horrific narratives. The thought that these men were willing to sacrifice their own safety and lives in order to prevent a larger loss of life speaks to their character. They knew the outcome was inevitable and decided to go down fighting on the off chance that they could make a difference.

I applaud them and consider them heroes as well. Bravo.

"Being a hero is about the shortest-lived profession on earth. "
Will Rogers

"The beauty of the soul shines out when a man bears with composure one heavy mischance after another, not because he does not feel them, but because he is a man of high and heroic temper."
Aristotle
 
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