This is a special part of the victims of attacks in 2001 and 1993. Get up-to-date information and plan a visit
I was sitting at the airport in New Jersey to see the television report on photography at the Sandy Hook School in Connecticut, but a few hours ago, they visited the 9/11 monument of Lower Manhattan. Compared to domestic violence, bullying at school, violence at urban areas, I am considering the level of human violence, especially because major news events such as shooting at school are short-lived . What does the Bible think about violence? I think that Christians should have a deeper understanding of the root of violence. For example, media coverage of school shooting is very shallow. It focuses on gun control - this is an important issue - but it is difficult to find the root cause of violence
When discussing a visit to a monument with a friend, he asked: "Why does the 9/11 monument let people handle it casually?" In particular to the Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland Given the recent visit of this, this question is bothering me. Memorial to the monument and the museum. Of course, in a way, these two places are no different. The Auschwitz concentration camp is a fairly non-political evil monument that millions of people have been systematically tortured and murdered for years. The 9/11 memorial is a very political place where thousands of people were killed at an unforgettable moment. At Auschwitz concentration camp, visitors are faced with fearful debris. At the 9/11 memorial hall the evidence at that time was housed in a museum buried among tourists under 70 feet.
What will you do: National 9/11 Memorial Hall and Museum - Let's start from free entrance from Tuesday night, 5 pm. The exhibit of the museum is divided into three parts. It is before 9/11, 9/11 ~ 9/11. Because of the delicate theme, the museum has a free download guide that provides tips on children's visit. Because the monument is very close to the battery park, ask the children if they want to take advantage of the Statue of Liberty or the ferry to Ellis Island. This is a wonderful way to learn how most of us come here, looking at New York City from the water.