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“Keep moving mountains, keep growing wings, keep dreaming…”With those words, Philippe Petit accepted an award at the 2008 Sundance Festival ceremonies for his work on the documentary “Man on Wire.” When Mr. Petit, one of the earliest signers of the Twin Towers Alliance petition, spent almost an hour dancing on a wire between the Twin Towers in 1974, he epitomized the courage and joy that dreaming no small dreams requires and inspires. His producer, James Marsh, calls his astonishing performance a denial of death, life-affirming. Philippe Petit simply says he has a “life wish.” This interview with the amazing Philippe Petit is a perfect prologue to our tribute to the towers he fell in love with. Just as the Twin Towers beckoned to Philippe Petit to do the unthinkable and barely imaginable, so they beckon to us to have the vision, faith, and guts to keep on dreaming and striving against all odds until they are back where they belong — because the Towers deserve another chance, and so do we. This tribute is dedicated to all who reject the scheme to abandon those two unforgettable towers and who oppose plans to stick four nothing-special buildings in their place. Nothing could ever replace them, except for better versions of themselves. They were glamorous, awe-inspiring, and comforting. After being away, they were the lights of home. We want them back. Goethe said: “Dream no small dreams, for they have no power to move the hearts of men.” That advice played a key role in building the original towers. The head of the Port Authority at the time, Austin Tobin, used to repeat a variation of it every chance he got. And that is the spirit that built New York. The Empire State Building and the Chrysler Building and the Twin Towers were all born of the same exuberant, extravagant, extraordinary spirit. They complemented each other — and complimented each other — for being the best of the best. Please send a link of this video to everyone you think might appreciate seeing it. You can help bring the lights of the World Trade Center back to New York! Not long ago, we received an extraordinary email from a supporter with more or less the same idea for a tribute to the Twin Towers and he wrote such a thoughtful and passionate tribute to the Towers that we are including it here. The young man, Gerry Bugallo, is 18 and starting his last year of high school in Geneva, Switzerland. His father is a diplomat and Gerry has lived most of his life abroad, but spent his first years in New York, “with a view of the Twin Towers from my apartment and dining in ‘Windows on the World’ practically once a month.” And now, “every time I visit New York, I just can’t shake the feeling that, while still the greatest city on Earth, it is somehow incomplete. I hope we can do something about that.” Gerry included the images that follow to help him in making his case:
It is hard to understand how some people can understand so keenly the scope of the blunder that is underway, while others are oblivious to the big picture. It goes so far beyond being a matter of taste or opinion and into the realm of denial. His email brings to mind the piece by Georgia college student Justin Ove: “Rebuilding the Twin Towers Transcends Politics” which was another remarkable example of muscular idealism. This issue is a great example of the idealism of youth that some people manage to keep as they mature — proving that cynicism isn’t a function of maturity as much as it is a sign of aging and a loss of zest for life. That’s not likely to ever be Gerry’s problem:
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