Category: 9-11 Remembrance

Suprun Lays Wreath At Arlington National Cemetery September 2023

Suprun lays wreath at Arlington National Cemetery‘s Tomb of the Unknown Soldier on behalf of September 11 Foundation. The choice was made to honor the thousands of servicemen and women lost during military conflicts after the terrorist attacks on the United States.

The September 11 Foundation board member Christopher Suprun attended the ceremony in Arlington, Virginia, with his nine-year-old son, Wyatt, less than a mile from where he responded twenty-two years ago.

Suprun Lays Wreath

“It is critically important that the entire responder community is remembered,” said Suprun. “It was police, fire, and EMS on 9-11, but the military for years after.”

Suprun Lays Wreath Honoring Veterans At Tomb of the Unknown Soldier

The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier is a powerful and solemn memorial in Arlington National Cemetery just outside Washington, D.C. It serves as a poignant tribute to the countless unknown soldiers who have made the ultimate sacrifice in service of their nation. This iconic monument, often referred to as the “Tomb of the Unknown,” represents not just the United States but the collective honor and gratitude for all unidentified soldiers worldwide.

The tomb itself is a white marble sarcophagus situated atop a hill overlooking the nation’s capital. It was initially established in 1921 to honor the unidentified American soldiers who lost their lives in World War I. The monument’s design exudes a sense of purity and simplicity, emphasizing the occasion’s solemnity.

What sets the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier apart is the continuous and meticulous vigil maintained by the 3rd U.S. Infantry Regiment, known as the “Old Guard.” These sentinels, known for their precision and discipline, stand guard at the tomb 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, regardless of weather conditions. The Changing of the Guard ceremony is a moving ritual that occurs every 30 minutes during the summer and every hour during the rest of the year, involving precise movements and a symbolic act of reverence.

The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier serves as a powerful symbol of remembrance, reminding visitors of the sacrifices made by countless soldiers throughout history and the collective gratitude of a nation for their service and sacrifice.

The September 11 Foundation

The September 11 Foundation is a charitable organization established in the wake of the tragic events of September 11, 2001, to honor and support the victims, survivors, and their families. This non-profit foundation plays a vital role in ensuring that the memory of the 9/11 attacks endures while providing financial assistance, emotional support, and resources to those directly affected by the terrorist acts.

The foundation’s primary mission is to offer aid to the families of the victims, including educational scholarships for the children of those who lost their lives, as well as providing various forms of assistance to survivors and first responders who continue to grapple with the physical and emotional scars of that fateful day.

Additionally, the September 11 Foundation is dedicated to preserving the history and stories of 9/11, serving as a living testament to the resilience of the human spirit and the importance of unity in the face of adversity. It continues to play a significant role in helping individuals and communities heal, rebuild, and remember the events of September 11, 2001.

Board Member Christopher Suprun

Christopher Suprun is a prominent figure in American public safety. Suprun’s career has built a career marked by service to his community and his country. In September 2022 he was named EMS Chief for Marshall County, Oklahoma.

Suprun served as a paid and volunteer firefighter and paramedic. He has a firsthand perspective on emergency response and the importance of preparedness. He used this experience to become an instructor in emergency health sciences programs, where he has been published more than three dozen times in textbooks and peer-reviewed articles.

On September 11, he was a responder with the Dale City Volunteer Fire Department. Years later, he would manage multiple patients during Hurricane Katrina and at the Berrendo Middle School shooting in Roswell, New Mexico, as a new flight paramedic with Native Air Ambulance.

Beyond his political role, Suprun has been involved in various civic and community initiatives, advocating for responsible governance and emergency preparedness. Suprun’s life and career exemplify a commitment to service, reflecting his dedication to the well-being of his fellow citizens and his nation.

Suprun lays wreath at Arlington National Cemetery this year as a reminder for all that Americans have been protecting freedom since 1776.

“We must honor all those who defend us – whether fire trucks or tanks, Suprun said.

 

September 11 Responder Addresses Sussex Police

Sussex Police

Christopher Suprun, a Pentagon 9-11 responder, spent the morning of March 17, 2022, with members of the Sussex Police Department discussing September 11, the impact of coronavirus on public safety, and how public safety responders must be prepared for the next event whether war in Europe, another pandemic, or some other disaster and maintain their own mental wellbeing if they are going to be successful.

Christopher Suprun is an experience speaker and spent time with the Sussex Police while in the UK.

“I always enjoy building bridges with responders in other jurisdictions be they across the road or across an ocean,” said Suprun who has lectured to tens of thousands of responders over the past decade.

“COVID-19 has created a terrible burden on us all – which was predictable – and it is time we came together to support our fellow responders whether they are fire, EMS, police, or other disaster responders.”

Sussex Police: One of Many Stops

Suprun was in Brighton and Sussex along with other stops in the United Kingdom speaking to responders from each discipline and organizing humanitarian relief for the people of Ukraine on behalf of The September 11 Foundation.

Christopher Suprun is one of The September 11 Foundation’s founding board members. His past résumé has spanned more than twenty years as a paramedic and firefighter. He has served on numerous career incidents. These include responding to the September 11 attack on the Pentagon.

Suprun’s three decades in community service and public safety has been recognized by many. He has been honored by four states and numerous organizations for his work on September 11 and with pediatric prehospital response.

Suprun still works as a street paramedic. While his initial EMT training and paramedic school was in Virginia, he is a Texas Department of State Health Services certified paramedic and Advanced Coordinator. He also has recently served as a flight paramedic. He is the former Chairman of the EMS for Children National Resource Center Advisory Council.

Suprun is Adjunct Faculty for EMS at Dallas College and previously was an Adjunct Instructor in Emergency Medicine for The George Washington University. He has taught on a wide variety of subjects for public safety agencies across the spectrum. Agencies include regional hospitals, federal law enforcement, Fortune 500 firms, and foreign governments including organizations with similar missions as the Sussex Police.

Welcome To The Rock

Welcome To The Rock

Welcome To The Rock is the opening of the Broadway play Come From Away. We mention them because when September started, we began posting a list of ways to remember September 11.

The full list of suggestions is below. However, we want to make sure we all never forget our neighbors in Canada who responded through difficult circumstances.

One of our board members noted, Come From Away is the “perfect narrative of the hospitality, generosity, and inclusiveness we can all show when we choose to do so. It brings tears to my eyes that it takes a tragedy to come together.”

Come from Away is a the musical tale written by Irene Sankoff and David Hein.

It is set in the week of the Tuesday 9-11 attacks and tells the true story of what transpired when thirty-eight planes were re-routed to the small Newfoundland town of Gander.

The characters in the musical are based on (and in most cases share the names of) real Gander residents as well as some of the 7,000 stranded travelers they housed and fed.

Welcome To The Rock

This powerful musical returns to Broadway on September 21st. It is also touring nationally. We hope you will also remember 9-11 by buying a ticket to both keep September 11 alive in our memories and support the arts as they return to the theater.

The production runs in a single act over approximately one hundred minutes without intermission.

Welcome To The Rock And More Ways To Remember 9-11

The 9-11 Foundation supports everyone remembering September 11. We hope this list is of assistance to teachers, community groups, and others who seek a formal process to remember that day’s events.

Day One: Learn CPR 

Day Two: Volunteer

Day Three: Less Partisanship

Day Four: Donate Blood

Day Five: Attend A Religious Event

Day Six: Visit Your Local Police Precinct

Day Seven: Moment of Silence

Day Eight: Raise The Flag

Day Nine: Visit Your Firehouse

Day Ten: Donate

Day Eleven: Share

 

 

Eleven Ways To Remember 9-11: Day Eleven Share

Share Our Experiences Of 9-11

Today, the 9-11 Foundation asks you to share your experience with September 11 so we all with never forget that day, its challenges, or its heroes.

September 11 isn’t just about tragedy, but about the spirit of America coming together, unified, to assist and help one another. 9-11 while horrible was a shining example of what America can do when it comes together.

Share Our Experiences Of 9-11

Today we ask Americans to share their experiences and their support for us.

Go to Facebook and follow us there. Share your personal story about that Tuesday in September or your donation.

We are also on Twitter and while there are fewer characters to work with we welcome your mentions of our work or lists like this which we think empower our friends and neighbors to take action.

Our Instagram account is relatively new, but we hope you will engage us there too if that is the platform for you.

If you can donate today to our mission we are grateful, but if not we would ask you to consider shopping using an Amazon Smile account which donates funds to us through your every day purchases.

The quickest way to make a difference is spread that message on social media to your friends. It costs you nothing and makes an enormous difference.

Tell your local schools that you want 9-11 responders speaking to your local students. Every year we speak to hundreds of school students about September 11 and how they can make a difference in their community.

We are not pushing an agenda other than the values of teamwork, family, self respect, good decision making, and the importnce of pursuing excellence. If those are lessons you want taught in your community let’s discuss how we can get into your classrooms.

We know America is better when we overcome our own differences whether they are skin color, sex, marital status, religion, and even political identification.

Share Our Experiences Of 9-11

Eleven Ways To Remember 9-11: Share Your Experience and Support

We should never forget 9-11, but we should also never forget we can make a major difference in someone else’s life donating blood today while remembering yesterday.

Day One: Learn CPR 

Day Two: Volunteer

Day Three: Less Partisanship

Day Four: Donate Blood

Day Five: Attend A Religious Event

Day Six: Visit Your Local Police Precinct

Day Seven: Moment of Silence

Day Eight: Raise The Flag

Day Nine: Visit Your Firehouse

Day Ten: Donate

 

 

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Eleven Ways To Remember 9-11: Day Ten Donate

Donate

Donate today and support our mission to remember 9-11 and educate the next generation about the heroism and lessons from that day.

This sounds like a bad fundraising request, but the 9-11 Foundation was formed to never forget 9-11 which means keeping that day alive in the minds of school children not alive for the events that day.

We do that by making September 11 connect to their lives today with lessons on overcoming adversity and challenge, unity, and leadership using skills on display on September 11: family, teamwork, self respect, intelligence, and passion for excellence.

Our speakers have traveled the country speaking to tens of thousands of school students on how they can apply lessons from two decades ago to their lives now.

Donate
Donate To 9-11 Foundation

Your tax deductibe contribution is well used. We have earned the Guidestar Gold Seal of Approval for financial transparency and appropriate use of donor funds.

We also know not everyone can contribute. For this we have set up a Smile account with Amazon allowing a percentage of your ordinary purchases to support our mission.

Your support matters whether it is a contribution through our donation portal, an Amazon purchase using Amazon smile, or participating in donor events like North Texas Giving Day, where donors have provided matching funds to money raised in September.

Donate

First and foremost, when you contribute to our shared you are making the world a better place. We will help children feel supported and understand what was a confusing situation. We will help communities realize they are neighbors and not just a collection of people.

Your financial support shows kindness and those around you see that. It inspires them in their daily lives too.

Many say the he act of financially helping our charity gives an improved sense of wellbeing. You are sacrificing hard earned dollars, but are doing so to create positive change in the world. This is a beautiful gift and provides purpose in life for many.

Those who support our mission also get the opportunity to build their social circles by working with like-minded people – in some cases current day responders. This improves your overall well being and helps you become healthier and happier.

The mental and spiritual benefits from knowing your contributing to an important national cause are important also.

For some though their motivation is knowing that as an IRS approved public charity your contribution is tax deductible and will both help the next generation understand the tragedy of  that Tuesday in September.

It has a financial incentive for you too.

The bottom line is today is less different from twenty years ago than we think it is. Together we united and responded to a horrific series of events that temporarily paralyzed a nation watching the horror, but we united in action.

We united in responding.

We were better working together then and we are better working together now.

Your financial contribution helps us work with the next generation of leaders to not only remember that awful day, but celebrate the successes and use them moving forward together.

We really are better together. We are better united as a team. We are better united as a nation. Help us today.

Eleven Ways To Remember 9-11: Donate

We should never forget 9-11, but we should also never forget we can make a major difference by contributing to our mission today.

Day One: Learn CPR 

Day Two: Volunteer

Day Three: Less Partisanship

Day Four: Donate Blood

Day Five: Attend A Religious Event

Day Six: Visit Your Local Police Precinct

Day Seven: Moment of Silence

Day Eight: Raise The Flag

Day Nine: Visit Your Firehouse

 

 

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How To Teach 9-11

Teach 9-11

Tonight on PBS Extra Hours, Sari Beth Rosenberg will talk about how to teach 9-11 to the next generation who were not alive for the event itself.

This event will offer teachers the opportunity to use their own voice and experience to teach students about the tragedy of September 11.

Teach 9-11

Using the standards and resources of PBS’s NewsHour, PBS NewsHour Extra provides middle and high school students and teachers with quality educational resources based on current issues and events.

Extra’s mission is to help middle and high school students understand world events and national issues and answer the question, “Why should I care about the news?”

Extra helps educators spark young people’s interest in the world.

The 9-11 Foundation in our mission to never forget that day will post a link to the session after it airs so that teachers across the country can use it to develop their own plans for the classroom.

Award Winning Educator Will Teach 9-11

Teach 9-11

Sari Beth Rosenberg is an award-winning U.S. History teacher, writer, host, and public speaker.

She has been teaching for nearly two decades and currently hosts the PBS NewsHour Extra Educator Series. Sari is available to write & speak about history, politics, civics, civil rights, education, and culture.

 

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Eleven Ways To Remember 9-11: Day Nine Visit Your Firehouse

Visit Your Firehouse

Visit your firehouse. Today. It takes moments and like visiting your local police, it can build bridges to your public safety community.

Visit Your Firehouse
The iconic FDNY “Ghostbusters” Ladder 8. This firehouse was the Ghostbusters headquarters in the 1984 movie.

Again, we support citizen and other responder visits to firehouses to both pay your respects and see the operational equipment used to serve neighbors where you are visiting. We wuld like to offer some suggestions on appropriate visitor behavior.

First, please ring the door bell. Even if you have decades of experience in another department – paid or volunteer – it is inappropriate to just walk in. Your visit should  take place between 9:00am and 11:00am or between 1:00pm and 5:00pm. It is inappropriate to visit during morning check out, lunch, or after business hours. You should always ring the bell and do not presume anything.

In some organizations they will have shirts or patches for sale. Many larger departments carry an in-house stock of department and house shirts, hats and patches emblazoned with their own logo. The funds earned from these items often stay in-house for staple cooking items, chairs, TVs or other non-safety items. Consider a shirt and a patch.

Finally, should a call go out while touring, know how you are going to expeditiously move out of the firehouse so the building can be secured. Do not leave anything on tables, kitchen counters, etc. and allow the fire responders to do what they do best: respond to other people’s worst day.

Eleven Ways To Remember 9-11: Visit Your Firehouse

The 9-11 Foundation will never forget 9-11, but we should also never forget we can build bridges today within our community.

Day One: Learn CPR 

Day Two: Volunteer

Day Three: Less Partisanship

Day Four: Donate Blood

Day Five: Attend A Religious Event

Day Six: Visit Your Local Police Precinct

Day Seven: Moment of Silence

Day Eight: Raise The Flag

 

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Eleven Ways To Remember 9-11: Day Eight Raise The Flag

Raise The Flag

Raise the flag. There are a few images that come to mind as we remember 9-11 and three members of the Fire Department of New York raising the American flag over the rubble has to be top three. It is an important reminder that together we can accomplish anything.

All departments, agencies and instrumentalities of the United States are instructed to fly the American flag at half-staff from sunrise until sunset on September 11. Governors of the United States and its territories and interested organizations and individuals are also encouraged to join in this observance of September 11, or Patriot’s Day as it has also become known.

Raise The Flag
9-11 Flag on Sept 13, 2001 At Pentagon

Several questions exist about September 11 Patriot Day flag etiquette.

First, flags should be flown at half staff, but individuals and corporations are not required to do so. Patriot Day is one of the official days for the American flag to fly at half-staff throughout the United Stated. Every year, the sitting President issues a proclamation speaking to the significance of the day and it will specify that flags are to be lowered to half-staff from sunrise to sunset on that day.

Only federal and state departments and agencies are required to follow the protocol outlined in the Presidential Proclamation, but the public is encouraged to participate.

Eleven Ways To Remember 9-11: Raise The Flag

We should never forget 9-11, but we should also never forget to honor one another. Raise the flag to remember 9-11, honor those who died, give tribute to those responders working today to protect us now, and stand tall like our country can.

Day One: Learn CPR 

Day Two: Volunteer

Day Three: Less Partisanship

Day Four: Donate Blood

Day Five: Attend A Religious Event

Day Six: Visit Your Local Police Precinct

Day Seven: Moment of Silence

 

 

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Eleven Ways To Remember 9-11: Day Seven A Moment of Silence

Moment of Silence

As we begin another hectic work week we ask everyone to take a moment of silence for yourself to think about the pending anniversary of September 11.

Our world is filled with noise. Notifications of email, phone calls, text messages, and other alarms keep us constantly responding to the next beep.

Silence has its value too. First it gives our ears a much needed respite from the constant flow of information and alerts. Silence has also been shown to offer significant health advantages that boost  a person’s well-being. Silence has multiple positive physiologic benefits. They include:

  • Lower blood pressure, which can help prevent heart attack.
  • Boost the body’s immune system.
  • Benefit brain chemistry by growing new cells. A 2013 study found that two hours of silence could create new cells in the hippocampus region, a brain area linked to learning, remembering, and emotions.
  • Decrease stress by lowering blood cortisol levels and adrenaline. Furthermore, according to a 2006 study in Heart, two minutes of silence relieves tension in the body and brain and is more relaxing than listening to music. This was attributed to changes in blood pressure and blood circulation in the brain.
  • Promote good hormone regulation and the interaction of bodily hormone-relate systems.
  • Prevent plaque formation in arteries.

A moment of silence is both good for your health wise, but an opportunity to consider the challenges ahead.

Moment of Silence

In a few days many responders will be reliving the post traumatic stress of September 11. They will remember heroes like Mychal Judge. They will think about the next event they are asked to respond to in their career.

A moment of silence can be a powerful tool to strengthen all of us for the next challenge ahead.

Eleven Ways To Remember 9-11: Take A Moment of Silence

We should never forget 9-11, but we should also never forget we can make a major difference in someone else’s life donating blood today while remembering yesterday.

Day One: Learn CPR 

Day Two: Volunteer

Day Three: Less Partisanship

Day Four: Donate Blood

Day Five: Attend A Religious Event

Day Six: Visit Your Local Police Precinct

 

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Eleven Ways To Remember 9-11: Day Six Visit Your Local Police Precinct

Visit Your Local Police

The 9-11 Foundation asks everyone to find time to visit your local police precinct.

On September 11, 2001 seventy-two law enforcement officers lost their lives from the New York Police Department, Fire Department of New York Fire Marshal’s office, Federal Bureau of Investigation, US Secret Service, the Port Authority, and other agencies.

Visit Your Local Police

There is has been a great deal of discussion in the past year about the proper role of police officers in our nation and we support accountability, proper training, and scaled response, but there is no question that those who sacrificed their lives on 9-11 were heroes not because of their death that day, but because of their commitment to the Rule of Law and responding to others’ needs.

We believe bridges are best built over conversations and that can only happen when open minds show up to both be heard and hear.

This Labor Day we encourage you to take a moment to visit your local police precinct and learn more about their operations and how you can be a citizen contributor to your local community.

Eleven Ways To Remember 9-11: Visit Your Local Police

We should never forget 9-11, but we should also never forget our opportunities to build bridges into other communities, both those who protect us and those who may challenge us.

Day One: Learn CPR 

Day Two: Volunteer

Day Three: Less Partisanship

Day Four: Donate Blood

Day Five: Attend A Religious Event

 

 

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