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9/11 Special Issue
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Public Employee Press



After the Twin Towers fell, Harriet Clay, a Supervising School Aide atP.S. 234, led children to safety; the school is three blocks north of Ground Zero.

"My first instinct was to protect the kids"

At the High School of Leadership and Public Service on Liberty Street, School Aide Michael Mahmet had finished copying papers at about 8:45 a.m. when he heard an explosion.

From the 12th floor of the school, one block south of the World Trade Center, he saw a panoramic view of the unthinkable. One of the towers was burning.

"My first instinct was to remain calm, find out what was going on and protect the kids, " he said. Minutes later, to his horror, Mr. Mahmet saw the second plane slam into the South Tower.

Hundreds of Local 372 members like Michael Mahmet were on the front lines on 9/11, thinking quickly as they led their students to safety.

As airplane and building parts crashed to the narrow canyons below, pedestrians ran for cover. Next door at the High School of Economics and Finance, School Health Aide Marcia Davis treated many who were slashed by the glass and metal rain.

North of the Trade Center at P.S. 234, Supervising School Aide Harriet Clay hurried to work. She said, "I had to see if I was needed, if I could help." She found 650 youngsters in kindergarten and grades 1 through 5 waiting in the lunchroom, gymnasium and auditorium.

Outside Leadership, papers flurried down as people plunged to their deaths. "I had to keep the students from looking out the windows," Mr. Mahmet said, "so I ushered them into the hallway."
The principal gave the order to evacuate.

"We moved quietly toward Battery Park, toward safety, and then the first tower fell," Mr. Mahmet said. He and 10 students walked towards the Staten Island ferry, but when vibrations toppled a nearby construction crane, they headed over the Brooklyn Bridge. "I looked back," Mahmet said. "It was eerie to see nothing but smoke. We were shaken and covered in white dust, but we were alive."

"The building shook, fire alarms sounded and our lights went out. You couldn't see a thing," Ms. Clay recalled. She and P.S. 234 staff moved the children to a school on West 11th Street. All were safe.

That day the Local 372 members unknowingly became heroes.

— D.S.W.

 

 

 
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