Saturday, September 09, 2006
Carl DiFranco Tribute
Since September 11, 2001, when one of the planes that flew into the World Trade Center turned south just east of here over Amsterdam, it is hard not to notice the rattle of the kitchen windows when a jet passes by. I still stop to listen every single time I hear a plane. In the first days after the attacks it was estimated that more than five thousand people died in the assault. As bodies were counted and some of the missing found, authorities finally decided that only 2996 people actually died.
Only.
As if any single one of the souls who were lost that day, heroes and homebodies, doctors and stockbrokers, firemen, policemen, cooks and secretaries, could be encompassed by a word like only.
They were not only.
They were not some incomprehensible count of the dead and missing.
They were our friends and neighbors. People loved them. People wake still wake up today missing them and mourning them and go to bed each night bereft because they are gone.
One of those 2996 friends, neighbors and loved ones was 27 year-old Carl DiFranco.
This is to honor Carl on the fifth anniversary of the nightmare that took him from his loved ones. Raised in Huguenot, NY and a lifelong resident, Carl was assistant vice president of Marsh & McLennan Cos. Inc., located in the World Trade Center. He graduated from Monsignor Farrell High School and cum laude from St. Johns University. He liked to bowl, play tennis and jog. Married a short time before the attacks he was widowed within months, when heart problems while awaiting a transplant took his longtime sweetheart, Loren Bosso.
Carl must have been a wonderful person. He supported his sister through the birth of his niece, then helped through the difficult weeks that followed. The day he died his mother’s car had a flat tire, so like the decent son he was, he offered her the use of his truck. This made him a little later than usual, but not late enough to be saved. He also took his mother on “dates” and surprise trips. He pitched in willingly to help her with projects around the house and yard. In a New York Times article she said, “I keep thinking I hear him coming in the door, that I'll have a chance to help him get through it," (referring to the loss of his beloved wife.)
From what I read in many tributes from people who knew him, his kindness and caring for his mom reflected the way he always was. Friends remember him as someone who was brave and confident, kind, generous and quick with a joke. There are many poignant references to him by the people who knew him to be found all over the Internet. They make hard reading, but they put a face on what our nation lost that terrible day.
I hope this small tribute will help to remind us of Carl and the many other special people who were taken from us on September 11. I will try to think of him and the good life he lived when I hear planes overhead, instead of reflecting on the terror of those days.
***I would like to thank everyone whose written tributes at the time of the tragedy provided me with a glimpse into Carl’s life. I couldn’t know him, but I admire him just the same.
***The picture appears many places on the Internet, so I don’t know to whom to attribute it.
***I will cross post this to my other blogs in hopes that it will reach just a little further.
Very nice.
ReplyDeleteOf the '2996' posts I've read thus far I think yours has brought out the humanity the best.
ReplyDeleteAs I read about people like Carl DiFranco who have felt grief, loved, laughed and left loved ones behind to continue the process I'm becoming more aware of what was taken from us that day. -
GBYAY - Paul -
Thank you so much for this loving tribute to Carl. I was moved to tears to think that he is with his beloved Loren. My thoughts and prayers go out to his family and friends who are missing his kindness and support.
ReplyDeleteGod Bless you Carl,
Blessings,
Auntie Lyn
Thank you all. It was an honor to be included in this project
ReplyDeleteThat was a wonderful tribute. My heart goes out to everyone who lost a friend or family member on that tragic day.
ReplyDeleteThank you for participating.
Thanks Marti, I was brave enough to do it because you did, so thanks for setting an example.
ReplyDelete