HomeNewsSt. James service marks 9/11 anniversary

St. James service marks 9/11 anniversary

St. James Church, 5185 Castor Ave., held its annual Service of Remembrance on Sept. 11 to mark the 23rd anniversary of the terrorist attacks.

The service featured the singing of the national anthem, God Bless America, America the Beautiful and Amazing Grace.

The Revs. Gabe Wang-Herrera, of By Grace Alone, and John Sweet, of Frankford Presbyterian Church, lit 23 candles.

There were remarks by Pastor Paul Andell, of St. James; the Rev. Larry Fowler, of Northeast Liberty Lutheran Church; and the Rev. Larry King, of Second Baptist Church.

“We gather to remember, lest we forget,” Andell said.

The office of state Sen. Tina Tartaglione presented a citation.

Eva Parisi read the words of Lisa Beamer, widow of Todd Beamer, who was a passenger on a plane that crashed into a field in Somerset County. Beamer and some other passengers and two stewardesses decided to attack the hijackers, with Beamer famously saying, “Let’s roll.” Their actions saved the plane from being flown into either the White House or the Capitol.

There were two Northeast natives killed on Sept. 11, 2001. Alisha Levin, of Castor Gardens, and Peter Ortale, of Northwood, both died when a plane crashed into the World Trade Center South Tower, where they worked. Ortale grew up on the 4900 block of Castor Ave., two blocks from St. James. ••

Previous article
Next article
Philadelphia
light snow
32.8 ° F
34.1 °
29.9 °
93 %
3.2mph
100 %
Sat
32 °
Sun
27 °
Mon
32 °
Tue
42 °
Wed
39 °

Related articles

02

Sean Dougherty’s Vision for N...

December 19, 2024

18

Fundraiser for Magee, ALS

November 27, 2024

20

Getting in the holiday spirit

November 25, 2024

23

Help the needy this holiday season

November 19, 2024

24

Keystone Academy tackles bullying

November 14, 2024

29

Be All You Can Be

October 24, 2024

34

Around Town

October 14, 2024

35

Famous Birthdays

October 14, 2024

37

Reunions

October 10, 2024

39

Community Pride Award for GBCL

September 30, 2024

current issues