On September 11, 2001
(Where were you on 9/11/01?)
Well, it's an interesting thing to ask because many of us who go
back as far as 1963 are asked the question, "Where were you when
President Kennedy was shot?" We have that deeply ingrained in our
brains, and I think this is going to be one of those cases. In Faculty
Meeting this morning the Academic Dean made a comment to that effect
that this is one of those things that will stay imprinted in your mind
forever. It's kind of interesting the story of where I was, I was
actually on the radio. I was being interviewed at WGEL, the competition
down the street. In fact this evening I knew I was supposed to have an
interview at a radio station, I actually went over there first. I
walked in and the announcer said, “Well, hi Dr. Mannoia. How are you?”
And I said “fine.” He said, “Can I help you?” And I said
“Well I'm supposed to be on an interview.” He looked puzzled, and I said,
“Well maybe.” So I looked at my palm pilot and it said WGRN so I said,
“Whoops, wrong radio station.” But, I was sitting there as part of the
auction that goes on every year for the pies for Relay for Life. I had
baked a pie and it was being auctioned off and as I sat there, as I am
sitting here with you right now, and the calls were coming in and the
news was being read, I happened to look through the glass window, and I
saw the TV monitor and I saw this plane literally go into the thing and
my mouth fell open. And the interesting thing about that is that
apparently the WGEL studios were also being taped in this auction and
broadcast on channel 3, our public service channel. So many of my
friends subsequently told me that they were actually watching me as I
was being interviewed and actually watched me as I turned and looked
out the window and saw my jaw drop open. For some of them that was the
first they knew that something horrible was happening, because they saw
me looking with this incredible look of disbelief on my face. And of
course it was only a few minutes later that we saw the second plane go
in. So it was a very memorable moment for me and I'm sure one that I'll
certainly never forget.
I think for the first minutes, probably for ten or fifteen minutes,
I thought it was a small private plane and a tragic accident and
continued to believe that until of course the second plane went in and
when we saw that we knew that this was intentional and the impact
finally began to hit. So first I thought it was an accident and then
when I saw the second one I was convinced that it was a tragedy, a
terrible, terrible tragedy. In fact I just couldn't believe it and I
think a lot of people felt that same way. “Could this really be
happening?”
(Did you have any friends or relatives that were directly affected by the attacks?)
Not really. We have a member of our Board of Trustees who later got
quite involved in the help. He was Bill Francis of the Salvation Army
and he was quite involved in the process of helping people. I had a
couple of family friends who were living in NYC who immediately
volunteered and went down to St. Vincent's, the hospital that was near
to the site and these two young men I guess managed to get through the
police barricades and volunteered and basically stayed there for two or
three days, helping to hand out food to people and to help at the
hospital. But, other than those, there really was no one that we were
aware of personally that was involved actually in the tragedy.
(What was the role you felt you needed to take as GC President?)
Well, I guess I should start by saying that I never really feared
for our community's safety, I guess because I reminded myself of where
we are located. I began to of course feel concerned for how people
would respond, but how we ourselves respond individually isn't always
the way others respond. It's hard to put yourself in other people's
shoes and imagine the depth to which it can affect them. But I felt my
primary responsibility was just to be visible. I really didn't feel so
much that it was important that I say anything. I mean, what can be
said? What words can make any difference in the light of something like
that? But I felt it was important to be visible, and so as you know we
had a gathering in the church and then as you recall, I think it was
the next day, we gathered on Scott Field. That I think was the time I
will remember most; the gathering in a circle on Scott Field.
(How do you think as Christians we should be responding to the Islamic Community?)
Well, as you know, we've done a lot of things on campus to try and
tackle that directly. The COR 410 class that we ran as a pilot class
last year chose the topic of terrorism, and this year it's human
sexuality. It's our desire, as probably all of you have heard me say
more times than you'd like, is: To transform our students, equipping
them for lives of character and service. And service has to do with
really understanding how to tackle the real problems that the world
faces. But if we don't ever have any practice with that, if we don't
try to model it, then we're not really doing our jobs. Our feeling was
that we needed to help students to understand that as Christians we
have a particular responsibility to tackle real issues. So, when we
talked about this for the whole course, we talked a lot about what it
means to be people of faith, and to be passionate about our faith, and
at the same time to be people who hold our own views with a certain
humility of attitude. And I think that's a real challenge. It's
tempting to either become so dogmatic that you want to go out and fight
or kill anybody that disagrees with you, or on the other hand, you
become so tolerant of other people's view that anything goes.
And it's precisely the ability to do both of those at once, to hold
those two in tension or in paradox, as you often hear me say, that I
think is often one of the cheap outcomes of our education. So, I think
it's our responsibility as a college to help students understand, and
this is a good illustration of it. Our calling is to be committed as
Christians and as believers who accept that Christ is the way, the
truth, and the life. But, at the same time, to recognize that the world
has people in it who are equally passionate about their point of view
and that we've somehow got to get out of the mode of trying always to
argue people into our position, and leave that to the Holy Spirit to
do. And to affirm them as people who are God's creations and for whom
He died as much as He died for us. And being able to do that is very
hard. It's just very hard and I'm proud to say that I think a good
number of our students understand that that's the goal, just as faculty
and staff understand it as a goal. Even if none of us is perfect, even
if none of has fully arrived at trying to embrace that tension. So,
yeah, I guess that's a long-winded answer, but I guess my hope is that
as Christians we will learn to be passionate in our faith, but at the
same time to hold our faith and our beliefs with open hands in a
humility of spirit, that will really model for the rest of the world
what it takes to get along.
(Did you know how the faculty was feeling?)
Yeah, I can't say I had long conversations with them. I think it was
important for them to be visible and available because often students
would go to them and talk because they have a closer relationship than
they might have with me. I think that the sessions in Armington where
we projected things on the side of the wall, CNN news there was a
healthy thing because it allowed us a place to gather, and I think
there were faculty present and I think that there were students there
that illustrated that we were struggling with this too, and to be
together in community in a time of crisis I think was a healthy way for
faculty to respond, and many of them did. Now, if you're asking about
specific thoughts that they may have had about how we were coping with
this, it was interesting that after about a day or two, I heard a
number of faculty mention that they were surprised, and I think I
noticed this too, how quickly our students, how should I say, got past
it. And I don't know that that's a bad thing. I mean often it's a
healthy thing to be able to move on, but I did hear a number of faculty
say that they were surprised that students thought of it as “old news”
within three days even.
(What do you think about a curriculum change that could make students more updated
on current events?)
I suppose that's a good possibility. Of course we did immediately
respond with the senior course. I think that maybe the even bigger
benefit is that an event like this causes students to take a different
attitude towards the curriculum that already exists. Because, to be
perfectly honest, I believe the liberal arts allows for wonderful
preparation for helping students learn to understand and tackle the
very nuance complexities of the world. And the problem is that unless
and until students understand how all of this bears on those problems,
then the education is not fully understood or appreciated. And so maybe
more than an event like this prompting us to create new curricula, an
event like this can cause students, and faculty alike, to take more
seriously how the curricula that already exists is really relevant to
the problems of the world. It brings it all home. We're all familiar
with that phenomenon where we've got something that we're familiar with
but don't really appreciate until something happens, and then, all of a
sudden it speaks in new words to us. My daughter, who is in law school,
was struggling with some issues last week, and she said, “You know Dad,
I read the 23 rd Psalm, and it had new meaning to me. It just had
completely new meaning.” And I think that's kind of the power of an
event like this.
(Do you feel a Current Events class is a necessity?)
I can't imagine that a course in Current Events would be a problem,
I certainly wouldn't oppose it, but again, I think as I've said, a
course in Current Events is a little hard for me to imagine because a
course in a context like ours is a course that doesn't just give
students facts, but it gives them theory in which to understand and
interpret those facts. I've always had the view that experience, in
itself, is not an education. Experience without the context of an
historical perspective and without the context of a theoretical
perspective is not educational at all. So, if we were to have more of
our courses in whatever discipline that emphasized theoretical and
historical perspectives on the current events that are happening, I
think that would be even better. Otherwise it just becomes, “Well,
let's all sit down and watch CNN.” You sit down and watch CNN, big
deal. Lots of us watch CNN by the hour, but do we learn from it? Do we
benefit from it? I'm not sure, unless we engage in conversation and
that's what I think would be particularly helpful, is if all of us,
because of events like this, took seriously the need to take what we
learn theoretically and historically in the classroom, in whatever
discipline, and apply it to the real world. That's exactly what we
want. That's why COR 101 is set up as a bookend course at the beginning
of the experience to introduce students to a taste of real-world
issues. Movies: and how do you discriminate? Gender roles; real issues
that people are asking. Of course you don't have a lot of disciplinary
skill as a freshman yet to bring the bear on that, but by coming back
as a senior and then tackling a real issue again and say, “Hey, you
know all of that stuff that I learned in Psychology, all that stuff I
learned in Literature, all that stuff I learned in Chemistry? That
really has a bearing on this issue. And that's the point: To help
students to see that the disciplines, for their own sake, are valuable,
but as they apply to real issues, I think take us a step beyond and
teach us to really serve.
I think that being passionate about what we're doing is the key. If
I had a choice between a classroom full of students who were brilliant
in every way and could score perfectly on tests, but were relatively
indifferent to the subject matter, or those who were passionately
interested in the subject matter, even if less well-prepared and less
capable, I'd take the second group any day. Because, really, the secret
of getting a good education is not how bright you are or how many
resources you have; it's not whether you go to a prestigious school or
blah, blah, blah. The secret is your motivation and engagement. If
you're motivated, if you're engaged in your education, then you're
going to learn, regardless of where you are, and there's empirical
evidence to support that.
(What are your thought on the resurgence of patriotism, post-September 11th ?)
I don't think anyone should feel more guilty for not feeling more
deeply about it; I think that would be a mistake. I think emotions are
just that way: They come and they're strong, and they go. And if
there's a lesson to be learned in it, the lesson I suppose is that the
sooner we realize that we can't be motivated to do the right thing
merely by emotion the better. We've got to be motivated to do the right
thing, because it's the right thing. We've got to do that in whatever
commitment we make, whether it's a commitment to a spouse. You know, if
I only loved Ellen Mannoia on the days when I had a lot of deep passion
and emotion about it, well, you know, there would be a lot of days when
I didn't love her. But, if I love her on the days when I keep my
promise to her to be committed and faithful, well then, I love her all
the time, likewise in our relationship with Christ. If we only loved
Christ on the days when we've had a super quiet time, and been moved
powerfully like the message you (Joy Wrigglesworth) gave at the senior
401 retreat, then there will be a lot of days when we don't love
Christ. But, if we love Christ on the days that we remind ourselves
that He is the same yesterday, today, and forever, and we've made a
commitment to Him, then the strength of that commitment, and His help
embraced through faith, will keep us consistent. So likewise, if we
only do the right thing for our country, on the times when we feel this
massive influx of patriotic feeling, well then we're going to be
fickle. But if we do because we have, through an experience like that,
come to appreciate the value of the country in which we live, then
that's great, because we can remember that. So I guess what I would
hope is not that every student would have on that occasion felt this
profound emotion, but that whatever level of emotion that you felt
would translate into a recognition, an understanding, about what it is
you value in this country. On the basis of that understanding and those
facts, that your life would be changed. And that from that day forward,
you wouldn't be so quick to say, “Oh well, this country is nothing but
rotten” or “Oh well, this country is full of all kinds of problems,”
but that you would stop and say, “Well, you know, I remember enough
about the emotion I had, even though I don't feel it now, to recall
that I was proud of my country that day. And I was proud of what we
did.” And so forth. I guess the point is that we shouldn't feel badly
about the level of emotion that we had then or that we have now. But
rather, what we decided to do about the experiences we had then.
(How do you feel about the political state of the US, two years after September
11th ?)
I think presently that we have an administration that values
character, and that's important to me, that values faith, and that's
important to me. But at the same time, I think it's important to
realize that character and faith while I believe they're necessary
conditions for good government, they're not sufficient. And so, neither
of those convictions about the current government would stand in the
way of my being willing to criticize aspects of what they're doing. I
think that they were clear in their response, and decided to take steps
in regard to centers of terrorism. I don't happen to agree with those
who believe that our primary motivation for going into Iraq was for
oil. Maybe I'm naive about that or maybe I'm unrealistic, but I don't
think that was the primary motivation. On the other hand, I'm not sure
that there was a completely realistic estimate as to how much time and
how much effort it was going to take to completely bring that job to
conclusion. It's easy to leap, and not to count the cost. And I think
we're all beginning to ask that question now. But I certainly think it
was appropriate that all of us stood behind the President and the
troops over there and still stand behind them, because right or wrong,
what they're doing is to defend their country. And, after all, we're
the ones who are the beneficiaries of that.
I appreciate the fact that you guys are thoughtful enough to come up
here for the day and to invest some time, and the listeners likewise,
in think about how all this has made an impact on them. We'll all be
changed because of it, and I hope and pray that it will be a change
that causes us to appreciate more the place we live; to recognize the
potential danger when people become so dogmatic about the things that
they believe that they are prepared to sacrifice other's lives for it.
And I think that we have to all of us be aware that the potential for
that exists in our hearts as much as it exists in the hearts of
Muslims. To whatever extent, this is a lesson to us about avoiding that
kind of fanaticism, then I hope it is driven deep and it is learned
well. Because certainly Muslims have no monopoly on dogmatism.
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