Thursday, May 30, 2019

Inventory of the lost :: essays research papers

An inventory of the lostSuppose your father was working high in the World Trade shopping mall on Sept. 11, 2001. You have been told by authorities in New York City what intuition told you as you watched the two towers collapse Your father is dead.Yet that conclusion is a municipal bureaucracys intuition, no more(prenominal) certifiable than your own. Your fathers remains have not been found. He is presumed to have been killed largely because, first, he could not possibly have survived and, second, he has not been seen since. So your grief is compounded by a question as illogical as it is impossible for you to shake What if, somehow, he escaped? What if, in some perhaps tragicomic way that screenwriters might never imagine, he managed to get out alive? This sort of bizarre ending doesnt often run into in real life, of course. Extremely rare is the victim of war, or of violence, or of some other tragedy, whose remains are never found and identified. If survivors of those victims ge t the repelling pain of loss, they invariably get proof that the victim is, irrefutably, deceased. Not so, though, for many survivors of the 2,792 people killed at the World Trade Center. Working with body parts retrieved from mountains of rubble, the mail of New York Citys medical examiner has confirmed the identities of 1,518 of those World Trade Center victims. But scientific tests have failed to link any of the body parts to the more than 1,200 other victims.The majority of those body parts exhumed from the debris - 12,000 of almost 20,000 fragments - are a tragic inventory of the lost. Efforts to match them to known DNA samples provided by the families of victims - strands of bull lifted from combs left at home, for example - have failed, often because the retrieved body fragments were so badly incinerated, crushed or deteriorated that their DNA was unknowable.Unknowable, that is, using todays DNA technologies. faith in future technologies has led to a remarkably smart way of dealing with all those still unidentified body parts. They are being dried, one after another vacuum sealed and packaged for a time when new means of identifying human tissue may tie them to specific victims.Under a communications protocol developed by city officials working with representatives of victims families, the remains will be interred in a memorial at the site of the twin towers.

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