It’s been 18 years since 9/11. But the horrific attack and its innocent victims have not been forgotten. Firefighters in New Zealand performed a powerful Haka dance in memory of their U.S. counterparts who died responding to the scene.
Nearly 3,000 people lost their lives and almost 10,000 were injured after terrorists hijacked commercial planes and crashed into the twin towers of The World Trade Center in Manhattan. Amongst the fallen were 343 New York firefighters.
Nine-eleven marks the most disastrous firefighter tragedy in modern history.
The meaningful tribute was to honor the brave firefighters who lost their lives responding to the catastrophe and to commemorate the lives of fallen New Zealand firefighters.
Haka is more than a novel amusement for the Maori people. It is a custom of high social importance in the welcoming and entertaining of visitors. Tribal reputation rose and fell on their ability to perform the Haka.
“Haka reflected the concerns and issues of the time, defiance and protest, of factual occurrences and events at any given time,” the All Blacks’ website adds.
Scott Brown, the U.S. ambassador to New Zealand and Samoa, tweeted about the dance and called it “[a]n appropriate and uniquely Kiwi way to remember the bravery and sacrifice of 9/11 first responders.”
“Thank you for the wonderful Kiwi tribute to the 9/11 fallen first responders!” wrote one person.
“Although the Haka is performed as a war challenge it is also a sign of tribal strength, passion and unity. This haka was the NZ Firebrigade showing exactly that ... Strength ... Passion and a unity with the NYFD that lost their lives 9/11,” another added.
“Thanks to our Kiwi firefighters honouring their U.S. colleagues some of who never came home that day,” one person wrote.
“Moving tribute ... honoured so many lives lost for no reason,” another Facebook user wrote.
Nine-eleven was a tragedy that defies comprehension, which many of us are still grappling to make sense of. Seeing the first responders honored across the globe is a beautiful call for unity and solidarity transcending national bounds. Bravo!