NEW YORK (September
12, 3:15 a.m. ADT) - The nation's day began with a moment of silence and closed
with a televised plea from President Bush: "Our prayer tonight is that God will
see us through and keep us worthy."
In the hours
between, Americans marked the anniversary of the Sept. 11 terror attacks with
ceremonies and services stressing religious tolerance and interfaith harmony.
At St.
Bartholomew's Episcopal Church in New York, religious figures processed in a
rainbow of robes, caps and symbols. Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, Hindu,
Sikh, Jain, Bahai, Taoist, Zoroastrian, Native American and African tribal
prayers were uttered.
"We needed to reach
out to each other, to share our grief and we needed everyone to pray together,"
said U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan, one of the worshipers.
In St. Louis, a
Muslim imam gave thanks to Americans for their religious tolerance, and a Reform
rabbi and the local Roman Catholic archbishop preached harmony. Thirty
Christian, Jewish and Muslim clergy gathered at a service in Detroit's Roman
Catholic cathedral.
"We pray for
safety, but we also pray for those profiled and deported since Sept. 11," the
Rev. John Marsh, a Unitarian Universalist, told an interfaith congregation at
San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge.
The Fiqh Council of
North America, a supreme court that interprets Muslim religious law, issued an
anniversary statement condemning the attacks as violations of Islam. Mosque
leaders in various cities stressed their patriotism and moral contempt for the
Sept. 11 attackers.
"So many people
still think Muslims are about terrorism, but the truth is we are about peace,"
Sa'id Abdul-Salaam told firefighters and religious leaders at a mosque in
Durham, N.C.
The anniversary
brought musical harmony as well. Church bells tolled thousands of times to honor
the victims. Concert requiems rolled across the land, including an orchestra
that played "Amazing Grace" at the crash site in Shanksville, Pa.
Catholic Bishop
Kenneth Angell of Burlington, Vt., had a brother and sister-in-law in one of the
planes that hit the World Trade Center. But the bishop insisted, "in those worst
hours, God was with us" in the heroes who helped others that day.
In his TV speech
late in the day, Bush called on Americans to "respect the faith of Islam" and
oppose only those who "defile that faith."
Also as the day
ended, several hundred people held candles during a vigil in Lansing, Mich. "The
road to peace is not an easy one," said Said Omer Sobhani of the East Lansing
Islamic Center, "but it is the best and only choice."