VERSIONS: روسيا اليوم NOTICIAS FREEVIDEO ИНОТВ RTД
breakingnews
Go to main page   USA   News   Muslim hero overlooked at 9/11 memorial  
MORE ON THE STORY
Photo by Joe Woolhead / http://www.911memorial.org 31.12.2011, 00:03 4 comments

NYC halts plans for 9/11 museum

A Lower Manhattan museum in the works to recognize the atrocities of the September 11 terrorist attacks is being put on hold due to a disagreement over hundreds of millions of dollars.

9/11 tragedy
US soldiers from Bravo and Delta Company, 2-87 Infantry Battalion, 3rd Brigade Combat Team escort suspected Taliban insurgents to the Forward Operating Base Pasab in Zahri district of Kandahar province on August 15, 2011, following their capture during a five hour ground and air assault operation (AFP Photo / Romeo Gacad) 30.12.2011, 20:44 17 comments

Obama will free Afghan prisoners to appease Taliban

Ten years after America entered Afghanistan and began a decade-long campaign against the Taliban, the Obama administration is making moves to throw in the towel and evacuate the foreign nation.

9/11 tragedy
Spencer Platt / Getty Images / AFP 15.11.2011, 00:37 4 comments

Muslim community vs NYPD

In the wake of an investigation that reveals that the New York Police Department hunted Muslims based only on their religion, community leaders in the Big Apple are telling Muslims to cut their ties with the NYPD.

US Election 2012
Body parts of soldiers lost by Air Force 08.11.2011, 23:56 1 comment

Body parts of soldiers lost by Air Force

An investigation at the Dover Air Force Base in Delaware has led to the reprimand of three officials as an internal probe reveals that top-brass at the site lost body parts belonging to slain soldiers killed in battle.

Visitors gather at the grand opening of the Park51 community center and mosque on September 21, 2011 in New York City. (Mario Tama/Getty Images/AFP ) 22.09.2011, 21:05 6 comments

Ground Zero "mosque" opens without protests

The proposed construction of an Islamic center near Ground Zero in New York caused outrage when it was announced two years ago. Now days after the 10-year anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the facility opened last night to no opposition.

9/11 tragedy
Early morning light illuminates the wreckage of the World Trade Center (AFP Photo / Eric FEFERBERG) 02.09.2011, 20:52 4 comments

9/11 causes cancer

It took a decade, but doctors are now confirming that firefighters that responded to Ground Zero during the September 11 terrorist attacks have a higher risk of getting cancer.

9/11 tragedy

Muslim hero overlooked at 9/11 memorial

Published: 03 January, 2012, 23:55

A photo of 9/11 victim Mohammad Salman Hamdani is worn by his mother Talat Gilani Hamdani (McNew / Getty Images / AFP)

A photo of 9/11 victim Mohammad Salman Hamdani is worn by his mother Talat Gilani Hamdani (McNew / Getty Images / AFP)

TRENDS: 9/11 tragedy

TAGS: Religion, Scandal, History, USA, Culture


Mohammad Salman Hamdani was on his way to his job at the DNA analysis lab at Rockefeller University on September 11, 2001 when the 23-year-old EMT and police cadet raced to the World Trade Center to lend a hand.

It was months before Hamdani’s mother learned that her son’s body was found in nearly three dozen parts, and his name was specifically written into the Patriot Act’s legislation where he is recognized as a Muslim American hero for offering rescue assistance only to perish in return. A decade later, however, the young Pakistan-born scholar isn’t remembered at Ground Zero for his bravery as a first responder and budding police cadet.

Instead, the name Mohammad Salman Hamdani is on the final panel at the site of the former World Trade Center where 10,000 people have been visiting daily to pay their respects. There are sections reserved for first responders and policemen alike. Hamdani, however, is listed along with other that died on September 11 and had no right to be at the site. Those people, according to officials involved in the memorial, are those with only “loose connections” to the World Trade Center.

To Hamdani’s mother, the connection between her son and the building that took his life is much bigger than that.

“They do not want anyone with a Muslim name to be acknowledged at ground zero with such high honors,” Talat Hamdani, 60, tells the New York Times. “They don’t want someone with the name Mohammad to be up there.”

Indeed, authorities have been quick to question the Muslim’s place in the history books with 9/11 and have been acting that way since the immediate aftermath of the attack. Mrs. Hamdani recalls police questioning her about her son as early as October 2011, and while she waited still unsure of if her son’s body was among the World Trade Center’s wreckage, officials were more concerned with what a Muslim-American from Pakistan with a degree in biochemistry was doing that Tuesday morning that whether he was alive or dead. Mrs. Hamdani tells the Times that in March 2002, she was finally informed that her son’s remains were found in Lower Manhattan — five months earlier.

Ten years after the fact, her son is remembered at the 9/11 memorial at the site of the former World Trade Center, but the fact that he gave his life to help others is forgotten.

“It shows an enormous lack of imagination on the part of the NYPD and museum not to figure out a way to acknowledge adequately the special sacrifice he made and that his mother endures daily,” Interfaith Center of New York Executive Director Rev. Chloe Breyer tells the Times.

Hamdani’s strife has been only one example of New York’s ongoing attack against those that suffered from September 11 but whose fight has failed to be recognized. At last year’s 9/11 memorial dedication, first responders were excluded from receiving tickets to the dedication ceremony. Those same men and women that raced to Ground Zero and lived to tell the tale have also been denied coverage from cancers developed after 9/11, despite a study from Dr. David Prezant of the New York City Fire Department concluding that exposure to the air in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks signaled a direct correlation to a rise in cancer among firefighters.

For Muslims living in New York that do not have ties to the attack, the events of 9/11 has forever changed the way the rest of the city looks at them as well. An ongoing report from the Associated Press continues to reveal that the NYPD has repeatedly launched campaigns against minorities, specifically Muslims, including programs that installed spies in Muslim-majority neighborhoods to gather intelligence by means of clandestine surveillance.

Though New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg called Hamdani’s actions on September 11 “an example of how one can make the world better,” the mayor has since publically stated that Muslims should appreciate the scrutiny that the NYPD is scathing them with, as the security that comes as a result of it is positive for New York as a whole.

For Hamdani’s mother, she doesn’t think that anything coming out of the Big Apple is being done in a way to positively reflect her son or Muslims. In the end, she says, though, that is only a minor detail.

“You are equal no matter where you are buried, whether your name is there or not,” Mrs. Hamdani adds to the Times. “By your actions the world remembers you.”

+1 (1 votes)
 
Back to top
next MORE NEWS
Abram Loeb, a fracking opponent (Spencer Platt / Getty Images / AFP) 03.01, 22:42 26 comments

Confirmed: Fracking caused Ohio earthquakes

Ohio lawmakers have put a temporary ban on fracking after experts say it is certain that recent fracking in the Buckeye State caused an outbreak of earthquakes.

Debbie Cook accuses leaders of Church of Scientology of corruption 04.01, 00:42 26 comments

Scientologists start a civil war

Hold on tight to your leather-bound edition of Dianetics and hope for the best. A rift between two top members of the Church of Scientology is causing the controversial religion to be bought to the brink of civil war.

I K Xora January 07, 2012, 09:10
+3

   " put the kid name on the wall"If this is done; pl for the sake of Humanities, remind the  world that his name was intentionally  and ungratefully left out and reinstated by humans who care.

conor flynn January 04, 2012, 17:11
+9

put the kid name on the wall

Clydealmighty January 04, 2012, 15:02
+4

Wilson Boozer wrote in #3

"Americans have a gargantuan capacity for lingering hatred"

 Not only Americans Wilson.

You should say PEOPLE have a gargantuan capacity for lingering hatred.