Posted on 11/16/2001 10:57:55 PM PST by CounterCounterCulture
TALK EXCLUSIVE
with CHELSEA CLINTON
Chelsea Clinton Speaks Out for the First Time in a Personal Account of the September 11 Tragedy and Its Aftermath
The December 2001/January 2002 issue of Talk magazineon newsstands in New York November 9, and nationally November 16features an exclusive testimonial by Chelsea Clinton about her experiences watching the World Trade Center collapse from 12 blocks away and her life in the aftermath. In her own words, Clinton powerfully details the horrors of that day, the maelstrom of panic, the loss of life, and the triumph of spirit.
"Chelseas story is an incredibly powerful and personal one," says Tina Brown, editor-in- chief of Talk magazine. "Her story is eloquently told. Her perspective is both insightful and provocative. Chelseas story proves her to be a gifted writer, mature beyond her years."
"Before September 11 I wouldnt have believed I had many innocences left." So begins Clintons intensely emotional account. Clinton was alone at a friends Union Square apartment in Manhattan that morning, when her friend phoned to tell her what had happened; then Chelsea tried to call her mother, but the line went dead. Panicked, Clinton suddenly found herself running downtown"the direction everyone was coming from"in search of a pay phone, desperate to speak to her mother, in Washington, and her father, far away in Australia.
As she reeled from the tragedy in her midst, Clinton also rallied at the sense of community around her: "I have never felt such a strong sense of belonging as I did that day. Thousands upon thousands of New Yorkers were moving as one. Thats when I realized that I had become a New Yorker. I expect now that Ill always be one." Clinton also recounts her eagerness to have her father return to Manhattan and show him around: "I wanted my father therenot only to understand what had happened to the city but also to understand what was happening to me. I knew he would want to connect with everyone who was confused and suffering, including his daughter." Clinton describes the joy she felt when she was finally reunited with her mother the day after the attacks, and when she saw her father the morning after that. "It was only after I had seen them both that I finally felt secure again in my skin." It was with her father that Clinton first visited ground zero, where she found herself overwheled by the scope of the damage. "The hardest part was walking through the makeshift morgue to thank the clergy members who were there blessing victims remains. To this day I cant imagine where they found the strength and will." Now studying in Oxford, England, Clinton describes the alienation and difficulty of being away from America at this time. "Every day at some point I encounter some sort of anti-American feeling." But Clintons time abroad is also giving her greater insight into her American identity. "For more than 21 years I lived with the assumption that I was safe, with a sense of security so profound I didnt even know I had it. Today I find myself shocked into a new awareness of how much I loved the country I grew up in." |
reads:me me me me , mom mom , dad, me
This needs a chunder alert
A chunder and whanker alert, I reckon.
naw. web's cuter.
You must be kidding. Do you realize how much Charmin I could buy for that??
"Chelseas story is an incredibly powerful and personal one," says Tina Brown, editor-in- chief of Talk magazine. "Her story is eloquently told. Her perspective is both insightful and provocative. Chelseas story proves her to be a gifted writer, mature beyond her years."
With Chelsea writing this:
"Before September 11 I wouldnt have believed I had many innocences left." So begins Clintons intensely emotional account.
"Innocences"? Since when does "innocence" have a plural version? It's like making "virginity" a plural!
Aw, come on... I believe Doris Day had many "virginities".
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