I normally don't post information that I can't track, but even if this is bogus, it's worth
the time spent. If anyone know the originator of this e-mail, I would appreciate their e-mail
address. In the meantime, I hope you are as affected by this display as I was.
Change your video to 1024 x 768 for best viewing
3,031 large flags in Utah. A reverent silence prevails in
this eerie representation of those who died on Sept. 11th.
Utah remembers the victims of September 11, 2001
I never heard or saw anything about this in the media. I was going to the
bank when I saw this. I went home, got my wife Linda, and came back with
a camera. Below is my best, though inadequate, attempt to share the
experience with you.....

The above picture was taken on the mall in front of the Sandy, Utah city
hall. Scroll sideways to see the whole thing. I pasted the photos
together to try and help show just how big this thing was, but even with
that, the photos don't do it justice. There was very little publicity
about this, but it was a real traffic stopper. People would park and get
out and walk among the flags. Some brought bundles of flowers and left
them at the base of a flag. Others came together and just hugged each
other hard in the silent memory of the terrible loss that we suffered one
year ago. We all know over 3000 people lost their lives, but seeing this
display, and walking among it, helps put perspective on just how big a
number that is.
Close up of the one of the signs placed around the perimeter of the
display. There were also some international flags on display representing
some of the various foreign nations whose citizens dies that day.
Interestingly, this whole display was done by a local company that
manufactures and distributes flags and flag display equipment...and I saw
not a single sign bearing their name in the display. People walked
through, and all you could hear was the sound of the flags blowing in the
breeze. A reverent silence prevailed over the display as those who came
each reviewed his or her experiences of that fateful day a year ago.
I saw many families while I was there. It was hard watching adults
struggling to cope with their own emotions while caring for children who
were far too young to understand the significance of the flags around
them. To the credit of the children, I didn't see any who could not somehow
sense that this was a special place. For a few moments, everyone who came,
young and old, male and female, families, and even a group of mentally
handicapped individuals stopped their busy daily lives to remember. If
those who caused this pain only knew how much stronger we have become, and
how terribly their comrades have paid, and will continue to pay, for this
horrible crime, I wonder if they still would have done what they did.
It's hard to picture mentally just how big this thing is. As I walked
among the rows, I was reminded of rank on rank of soldiers standing at
attention, guarding us even now.
Some brought flowers, small flags, notes etc. The flags didn't have
individual names on them so I don't know how people picked out where they
would leave these tokens as they experienced their own memories and grief.
For anyone who has ever shed a few tears at THE WALL (the Vietnam Veterans
memorial in Washington DC) or during the changing of the guard at The Tomb
of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington, VA, this display is every bit as
moving in its sheer power to remind those who come of just how deeply we
all experienced the cowardly attack on innocent civilians in our own
homeland.
We parked about a block away to get in and experience it up close. We
weren't the only ones as you can see.