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9/11 pilots, crews get recognition
Airline workers gather to honor the memories of colleagues who died in the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
By LAURA MOYER
Date published: 8/25/2006
WASHINGTON--Firefighters and rescue workers weren't the only heroes of 9/11.
The pilots and crew members of the hijacked jets were every bit as heroic, their colleagues say, but have never gotten due recognition.
Yesterday, several American Airlines flight attendants and the author of a new book about the industry's recovery from the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, met to call attention to those they say were the day's first heroes.
They met in the Pentagon's center concourse to sign and mail pre-ordered copies of "Reclaiming the Sky: 9/11 and the Untold Story of the Men and Women Who Kept America Flying."
The book focuses on airline employees who lost their lives that day, and devotes a chapter to Ken and Jennifer Lewis of Culpeper. The Lewises, a husband and wife, were attendants on American Flight 77, which hit the Pentagon.
"I think people forget that the pilots and the flight attendants were the first people attacked, and the first people who fought back," said American Airlines retiree Toni Knisley of La Plata, Md. "They were the first ones who went to war that day."
Knisley was an administrator for American on Sept. 11, and she recalls talking by phone with attendant Michele Heidenberger just before Flight 77 took off.
She soon received word that flight attendant Renee May had phoned her parents from the plane and reported that the flight had been hijacked.
The rest of the day was horrible and chaotic for everyone in the airline industry, Knisley recalled yesterday. She spent the day in a secure room at Dulles International Airport making and receiving some of the worst phone calls of her life.
Late that night, long after all air traffic had been grounded throughout the country, she stood outside on the Dulles tarmac. It was eerie, she said, "the most deadly silence."
Still in shock from the attacks and still grieving their lost colleagues, airline personnel nevertheless had to steel themselves to fly again, said American Airlines flight attendant Debbie Roland of Fauquier County.
The book, she said, is "an opportunity for us to have a voice and let the public know what we were going through."
Colleagues memorialized each of the Flight 77 attendants in a way that seemed appropriate for their interests.
The memorial for the Lewises is a garden with a bench inscribed "Kennifer" in a section of Culpeper's Yowell Park.
Date published: 8/25/2006
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