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Re: Unidentified 9.11 Pentagon Victims Buried at Arlington
To: ALL
From: Andi Wolos & Bob Necci
(POW-MIA InterNetwork)
Date: September 13, 2002
"Funeral Service Held For Pentagon 9/11 Victims
Five Unidentified Victims Remembered
ARLINGTON, Va. -- With hymns, Scripture readings and speeches from military leaders, relatives and friends paid their respects Thursday at Arlington National Cemetery to the 184 victims of last year's terrorist attack on the Pentagon, including five whose remains were not found.
"We remember with special love five whose remains were not recovered and their families and friends who were denied the peace that comes with placing their loved ones in their final resting place," Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said.
Rumsfeld spoke next to a flag-draped casket containing cremated remains from the Pentagon rubble that could not be identified. For five of the victims, the internment in Arlington will be the only burial because no remains were confirmed to be theirs.
The five include a 60-year-old retired Army colonel and a 3-year-old girl killed with her parents and sister aboard hijacked American Airlines Flight 77.
Relatives of the victims sat solemnly, some hugging and weeping, others wiping away tears, as the crowd sang "Amazing Grace" and listened to eulogies from military chaplains.
"Know that your country shares your sorrow, mourns your loss and prays that God will comfort you," Rumsfeld told the families.
A five-sided granite marker bearing the 184 names will stand over a shared grave at the Arlington National Cemetery -- the nation's most prestigious burial ground -- holding the unidentified remains.
The 4-foot-5-inch-tall marker, with names of the dead inscribed on aluminum plaques, will be placed over the grave later, said Jennifer Lafley, spokeswoman for the Army Military District of Washington. The Army oversees Arlington cemetery.
Most of the 64 victims already interred at Arlington are nearby under simple headstones, within sight of the repaired Pentagon.
In some cases, as recovery efforts continued, additional remains were identified after a person was buried. Some of their families chose to have those fragments held for the common burial site, Lafley said.
Many of the dead, including some who were working inside the Pentagon on Sept. 11, did not qualify for burial at the nation's most famous cemetery.
Arlington is generally reserved for active duty personnel, military retirees, retired reservists who reach age 60, winners of the military's highest decorations, and former prisoners of war. Their spouses als qualify.
Among the 275,000 people buried there are Presidents John F. Kennedy and William Howard Taft, the crew of the Space Shuttle Challenger, and veterans of every war the United States has fought.
A year and a day after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, all of the dead from the Pentagon attack also share in the honors of Arlington.
"It's nice that they're remembering all the victims," said Steve Push, whose wife, Lisa Raines, died inside the Pentagon. She was buried in November; Push did not attend the additional service.
Some 13,000 people gathered to grieve and hear President George W. Bush's words at the Pentagon memorial service on Wednesday, as Sept. 11 was remembered across the nation. The Defense Department also plans to build a larger monument at the Pentagon.
The five victims whose remains were not identified are:
Dana Falkenberg, 3, who loved dressing up as a princess and died alongside her sister Zoe, 8, and parents Leslie Whittington and Charles Falkenberg, as they began a trip to Australia.
Retired Army Col. Ronald Golinski, 60, an avid golfer who worked as a civilian employee at the Pentagon. A memorial headstone, used when no remains are present, was placed for him at Arlington in December.
Ronald Hemenway, 37, a Navy electronics technician first class who left behind a 3-year-old son and 1-year-old daughter. His memorial headstone was placed at Arlington in March.
James T. Lynch, 55, a civilian video technician for the Navy known for handing out butterscotch candies to everyone he passed.
Rhonda Rasmussen 44, a civilian worker for the Army and mother of four who was planning to transfer to California.
Five sets of remains believed to be those of the hijackers, because they did not match DNA provided by victims' families, were turned over to the FBI in February and will be excluded from the burial, officials said.
Copyright 2002 by nbc4.com
Sept. 11 victims buried in Arlington
By Pamela Hess
UPI Pentagon Correspondent
WASHINGTON, Sept. 12 (UPI) -- The cremated, unidentified remains of some of the 184 victims of the terrorist attack on the Pentagon last year were buried in a solemn ceremony at Arlington Cemetery Thursday.
The burial was in honor of all the victims but special attention was paid to five of the dead whose remains were never recovered.
The gravestone, at a site overlooking the Pentagon, bears the names of all the victims of the attack, civilians that were aboard American Airlines Flight 77 included.
"We remember with special love the five whose remains were not recovered, and their families, friends, who were denied the peace that comes with placing loved ones in their final place of rest," Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said at a ceremony in the amphitheater near the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. "This day these five join the unknown of past wars, even as we pursue the war that is still unfolding. Known and unknown, those resting here were bound in a brotherhood by their heritage."
The five whose remains were never identified are: retired Col. Ronald F. Golinski, U.S. Army; Navy Electronics Technician 1st Class Ronald Hemenway; Rhonda Rasmussen, an Army civilian; James T. Lynch, a Navy civilian; and Dana Falkenberg, a passenger on Flight 77.
Sixty-four of the dead are already buried at Arlington.
"Young and old, their lives and their deaths gave birth to a new pride and patriotism that has rekindled the flame of freedom across this land," Rumsfeld said at the morning ceremony.
The casket was then carried by a horse-drawn caisson to the burial site. It contains all the remains collected at the impact site that could not be identified, in addition to some cremated remains contributed by families of other victims.
Copyright © 2002 United Press International"
"Remains of Pentagon Attack Victims Buried at Arlington
By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY, Va., Sept. 12, 2002 -- Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said here today those killed in the Pentagon attack "died because they were Americans. Put another way, they died because they were part of a nation that believes in freedom."
Rumsfeld spoke at the cemetery's amphitheater at the Armed Forces Funeral Sept. 12. It was the first such funeral in the amphitheater since the one held for the Vietnam War Unknown in 1984.
The casket contained the remains of many individuals killed that day. Some of the remains are those of women and children, but could not be associated with specific individuals. Others belong to identified persons whose families directed that any additional remains identified be included in the group burial. These families had taken partial remains for burial last fall, MDW officials said.
The group burial was in Section 64 of the cemetery, overlooking the Pentagon. A special headstone marks the spot.
Especially honored in the service were the families of five of the dead who did not receive remains. They were: 3-year-old Dana Falkenberg, a passenger aboard Flight 77; James T. Lynch, a Navy civilian; Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Ronald Hemenway; Rhonda S. Rasmussen, an Army employee; and Army Col. (ret.) Ronald F. Golinski.
"We remember with special love the five whose remains were not recovered and their families and friends who were denied the peace that comes with placing loved ones in their final place of rest," Rumsfeld said. "This day these five join the unknowns of past wars even as we pursue the war that is still unfolding."
Rumsfeld said the 184 Americans who died at the Pentagon did so because they believed in a generous creed of life and "not the twisted views of those who use a noble religion to try to mask their will to power."
He said they died because of where they worked. He said the Pentagon is a symbol of this generous creed and way of life. "A symbol of military power, to be sure, but power used to right wrong, to do good, to help achieve a more perfect day when nations might live in peace," he said.
The secretary told the families that there is nothing anyone can do to bring back their loved ones. "But we can celebrate who they were, how they lived their lives and remember how their lives were lost," he said.
"They will be remembered," Rumsfeld assured the families. "We will not forget. Know your country shares your sorrow, mourns your loss and prays that God will comfort you.
"May God grant them and you his loving peace."
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