Blanket statement
Lolita Harper
On Sept. 17, Aaron Abraham of Costa Mesa was called to duty.
His mission was to help organize a nationwide campaign to memorialize
the victims of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Armed with a kind heart
and natural leadership abilities, Abraham helped recruit hundreds of
Americans to join in creating the Memorial Quilt and Tour.
“I would love to say that this is fun, but it isn’t,” Abraham said. “I
see it more as a duty.”
His command post is a modest room on the second story of the First
United Methodist Church on 19th Street in Costa Mesa. From there, the
59-year-old oversees dozens of Orange County volunteers who gather
pictures of victims, convert those images to cloth and sew them into
three enormous quilts designed like flags.
He is a robust man with a commanding presence, but he is not strong
enough to escape the quilt’s powerful effect. Abraham said he screens
every victim’s picture, and knows their names and faces by memory. The
happy expressions on their faces contradict the harsh reality that they
are gone forever.
“Each of these people are dead,” he reminded. “They are gone because
of a senseless act.”
Volunteer Tom Goggin of Yorba Linda said it is hard to come to grips
with the fact that each of the 2,600 images on the quilt represent their
own, individual tragedy.
“It’s an eerie feeling,” Goggin said. “It’s a very eerie feeling.”
Hundreds of pictures were strewn across a large wooden table in the
converted classroom. Together they made up half of a 26-foot stripe. A
total of 39 stripes -- 13 for each flag -- will be sewn into
19-by-26-foot quilts. The pictures have corresponding red, white or blue
backgrounds. On the table, they look like the makings of a large
scrapbook, but when put into perspective, the flag design will be
apparent, Abraham said.
Nicole Miller’s smiling face stood out in her row.
Miller was killed Sept. 11 while working on ill-fated United Airlines
Flight 93. She was used to taking care of others while they traveled; now
her final cross-country trip is in the hands of Goggin and other local
volunteers.
Once finished, the three flags will tour the country on their way to
New York City for the one-year anniversary of the attacks. Abraham hopes
to have the project complete by June 15, and the three flags will start
their individual tours from Southern California, San Francisco and
Seattle on July 4.
Goggin, who works for an air freight porter, will arrange the
transportation for the quilts.
“I can’t knit, I can’t sew, but I figured there was something I could
do to help,” said Goggin, 54.
Although Goggin is stitch-challenged, his wife is not. She is one of
the 500 national volunteers who thread and sew the final cloth images
into the enormous quilted masterpiece. Goggin said his wife enlisted him.
Volunteer Ralph Short was also drawn into the project by his wife’s
influence. The 77-year-old Costa Mesa man said he was out walking his dog
when he saw a quilting flier. He thought his wife, who loves quilting,
would be interested and subsequently met Abraham.
“It was just a fluke that I knocked on the door with my funny dog and
here it turned into this,” Short said.
Volunteers say it was more than a fluke. After all, it was Short -- a
50-year member of the First United Methodist Church -- who arranged for
the project’s headquarters.
“I just think this is such a marvelous and creative idea,” Short said.
“We have such enthusiastic volunteers who were moved enough to honor the
victims of this horrible tragedy. And it’s all coming together in Costa
Mesa.”
FYI
For more information on the Memorial Quilt project or to volunteer,
call (949) 650-2444.
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