
Every day, in ways large and small, 9/11 hangs in the
air. Of course, the pandemic isn’t 9/11, and the differences are telling.
The 9/11 attacks killed killed 2,753 people in New York City, with a total of 2,977 people nationwide. The
number of people who have died in New York City as a result of COVID-19 as of April 14 had already exceeded 10,000.
But the differences are far more than
numbers. 9/11 was in some ways far more clarifying. America was under attack. In the days that followed, New Yorkers came together.
When I
directed the film "7 Days In September," I remember feeling and seeing a powerful sense of unity and shared compassion in the city.
And the crowds that gathered on the West Side Highway to cheer and clap for first responders -- also as seen in the film -- is echoed in today's 7 p.m. applause for healthcare workers. But
that’s where the similarities end.
advertisement
advertisement
As muddy as our understanding was of whom to “blame” for 9/11, still it was a “them.” It wasn’t
us.
Twenty years later, after a war in Iraq and Afghanistan, and a continued fuzzy dotted line between Islamic fundamentalists and the Saudi government, we take some solace in the
fact that the dangers unleashed in the attacks on the World Trade Center came from outside our borders.
COVID-19 is in the air around us. We find ourselves looking suspiciously at
the unmasked dog walker, or the people who spend their days behind a mask checking out groceries, hoping they will observe social distancing. We wash our hands, we wipe down surfaces, we accept the
phrase “flatten the curve” as a gentle stand-in for what it really means: slow the death rate.
As terrible as 9/11 was, it also provided a symbol for global unity. America
was, for a moment, the center of global support and appreciation. Terrorism, if not stopped, would infect the globe. And so we agreed to armed conflict, a reduction in civil rights, massive
surveillance of digital communication, and a blurring of the line between war and peace.
Historians have yet to write the final chapter on America’s response to 9/11. But
there’s an argument being made that we squandered a moment when we could have built a new chapter. A connected world could have come together after 9/11 and begun to understand that some
problems don’t honor borders or boundaries. Extremism exists in various forms around the planet.
Digital connections and social media offered the promise of understanding and
sharing across cultures and boundaries. Instead, it’s fueled misinformation, fake news, hate speech, and social isolation.
9/11 brought us together against a common enemy,
one we could at least theoretically identify through ideology and fight with technical tools we understood.
COVID-19 offers no such easy blame or identity. For a moment,
trying to invent an enemy, the White House worked to hang the blame on China with the monicker the “Wuhan Virus.” Some members of the public heard the dog whistle, and Asian Americans paid
the price.
What does the enemy look like? For residents of Rhode Island, it was New Yorkers. For people living year-round on Long Island’s beach communities, it was
Manhattan residents leaving the city to travel to their summer homes. And Trump took turns emasculating and then empowering and blaming governors, though mostly Democratic governors.
COVID-19 is a virus that doesn’t respect borders, nationality, or ethnicity. it is communicable for days before it shows symptoms. So even if everyone who had any symptoms
self-isolated, the disease would still spread through the population. It makes everyone around us dangerous.
Thinking back to 9/11, I remember the fear, the sense of invisible
danger. But I also strongly remember the sense of unity, of a shared sense of resilience. We were, back then, “all in it together.”
COVID-19 feels strangely more
divisive. The U.S., Canada, France, Germany, China: We’re all in it for ourselves. Which makes the unseen danger of the virus far more ominous -- and solving it something that demands a global
solution to a global pandemic.