Amandla 9/11 Special issue
Founded October 2003 Volume 10 Issue 8 Global African Newspaper Telephone: 973-419-0073 / 973-731-1339
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September 15 -October 16, 2011 latest African news
9/11 Restored My Faith in God -Survivor A Ghanaian civil engineer who survived the September 11, 2001 attack on the World Trade Center in ew York recounts his experience on that fateful day. By Kwabena Opong The heinous events of September 11, 2001 that suddenly ended the lives of about 3,000 innocent people in New York and other places in the country left a deep scar on America. Ten years later families and friends that lost loved ones and survivors continue to mourn and recall the day with about the same sense of revulsion and fear hoping nothing like that ever happens again. Many have told their stories but others like Robert Kumapley, a Ghanaian civil engineer had to wait ten years. Mr. Kumapley on September 11 2001 was employed by HNTB Corporation but was seconded as a consultant to the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey with his office on the 74th floor at the World Trade Center. He is married to Genevieve, also a Ghanaian and a Board Certified Oncology Pharmacist and practices at Saint Peter’s Uni-
versity Hospital in New Brunswick, NJ. To date, the couple has three children. Mr. Kumapley’s secondment, renewable on half-yearly basis had just been renewed on the previous Monday, September 10, 2001. He had worked then for almost two years and his wife objected to the renewal because she was not happy with his daily commute to the city from their New Jersey residence. He remarks, “this is why sometimes we have to listen to our wives.” He would not let go of the opportunities that were open to him. On the morning of September 11, Kumapley recalls, “something very strange happened,” I woke up in the morning and I would normally drive my car to the train station and get on to the train and move on.” On this day, however, he walked up to the room where his three-month old son Nicholas was sleeping with his mother-in-law who was on hand to help with their two children. He wanted to kiss his son goodbye, something he had never done before. It was about 4:30 a.m. and grandma would not allow him because she did not want him to wake up the baby. Continued on page 12
The Kumapley Family: behind their children are from left Dr. Genevieve Kumapley and Robert
9/11 - The Salamones, 10 Years Later: Grieving Privately, in A Public Way
It’s time to stand up, Diaspora – Diploma urges
The Salomones: from left is Alex, MaryEllen, Anna and Aidan ten years later in 2011 Alex, Aidan, and Anna Salamone from orth Caldwell lost their father John on 9/11 and have spent the last decade dealing with their grief, mostly in the classroom. ow they are helping teachers learn how to deal with grieving children through a webinar produced by Scholastic and the ational Center for School Crisis and Bereavement. Their mother, MaryEllen Salamone, was on the ational Commission on Children and Disasters. By Karin Oxford When she is on the back of a horse, she can almost forget what
happened on Sept. 11, 2001. For her brothers, it’s on the baseball and football fields of their North Caldwell hometown where they remember their father, John P. Salamone, killed in the terrorist attacks while working as a Cantor Fitzgerald stockbroker on the 104th floor of the World Trade Center’s North Tower. For his children, Anna, Aidan and Alex Salamone, the last 10 years have been about managing their grief. Anna, 12, is the youngest. She is a quiet girl with brown hair to the middle of her back and a pleasantly freckled face. Looking around the room, where a family interview is taking place, at her mother, MaryEllen Salamone,
and at her brothers, she seems to gain the strength to let her voice be heard. Anna could be any American pre-teen: blue flower earrings in her ears and macramé friendship bracelets on both wrists. She has a quick smile that vanishes as soon as it appears. Her passion for her horseback riding and extracurricular activities shines, not through an outspoken demeanor but through her performances. Her interest in musical theater led her to the role of Golda, the female lead in her school’s production of “Fiddler on the Roof,” and an animal therapy program her mother found for her and her Continued on page 3
This is not a turkey. Iit's the "wankagie" from Liberia it is believed to bring peace and happiness See page 2 for news
Amandla is one of New Jersey newspapers selected to use student articles and pictures in our coverage of the tenth anniversary of September 11. See articles on pages 1and 5