Huntington residents grieve with the nation
Bryce Alderton
The United Airlines plane that crashed in western Pennsylvania hit
close to home for Connie Greyshock.
Greyshock, a Huntington Beach resident, awoke Tuesday morning to a
phone call from her son, Steven, a sophomore at West Virginia University,
telling her to turn on the television set.
His school is a mere 30 miles from the crash site of United Airlines
flight 93 bound for San Francisco -- one of four commercial planes
hijacked early Tuesday morning.
Unknown terrorists reportedly hijacked the four commercial planes at
knifepoint, crashing two passenger-filled jets into the 110-story twin
towers in New York, a third into the Pentagon outside Washington and the
fourth in Pennsylvania.
Two American Airlines planes carried 156 people to their deaths and
the United Airlines planes carried another 101.
Three of the four planes were headed for Los Angeles International
Airport, two coming from Boston and the third from Dulles in Washington
D.C.
“I’m so saddened,†she said. “I don’t understand how somebody could
give their own life for a cause like that.â€
Greyshock’s other son, Peter, lives in Santa Rosa and is a member of
Jesuit Volunteer Corps.
“[Peter] called and he was just sobbing, saying, ‘Mom, some of these
people that left for work this morning are never going to come home,â€â€™
Greyshock said.
Her shock and grief was shared by many throughout the city, including
school children.
At the parish school at St. Bonaventure Church in Huntington Beach,
600 students went to mass Tuesday morning to pray for the victims and
perpetrators of the terrorist attacks.
“It was powerful looking at the childrens’ concern,†Father Bruce
Patterson said.
Patterson said Tuesday’s attacks remind him of an event 38 years ago.
“I was in the first grade and all the adults started crying at news of
President [John F.] Kennedy’s assassination -- I’m sure the children
today will remember where they were when this happened,†Patterson said.
Like countless others Patterson knew people flying that day. He knew
two bishops and one other friend that had flights from the East Coast to
Los Angeles, but they all landed safely before airports closed Tuesday.
Patterson was amazed when he walked into church Tuesday morning to
people smiling and greeting each other, in place of the usual solitary
somber atmosphere.
“I usually don’t see that during weekday masses,†Patterson said.
“It’s the ability to be with people who share the same spirit and
compassion.â€
St. Bonaventure Church held a 7:30 p.m. mass Tuesday where community
members gathered to pray.
Over at city hall Huntington Beach Mayor Pam Julien Houchen was also
trying to comfort residents.
She issued a statement late Tuesday afternoon to assure residents.
Julien Houchen used to fly across the United States weekly when she
was the vice president for a furniture manufacturer based in Los Angeles,
often from Boston to Los Angeles.
“It’s a funny feeling in your stomach, knowing that it could have
happened a year ago,†she said. “You expect to go to bed every night safe
and wake up safe. It’s devastating to all of us.â€
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