Volume CXXXIII, Number 3
September 21, 2001
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Where do we stand in the aftermath?
ACADIA SENESE

Our lives changed on September 11. Forever. With the collapse of two beacons of the free world and the penetration of an impregnable Pentagon, the essence of our nation was rocked to its foundation. Millions of Americans held candles in their hands, the stars and stripes sailed over our terrorized country, and with patriotism and anguish, our nation began to piece together the incomprehensible. President Bush choked up on television, threats were issued to the faceless terrorists, and millions of Americans were left to make sense of the unimaginable. The Bowdoin Bubble burst, and without our notice, or maybe our understanding, a responsibility fell upon us.

I sit writing this article more than one week after the attack. The initial shock has lessened, disbelief turned into belief, and the unknown a little more known. The panic and the frenzy, of a nation turned upside down seems to have quieted a bit. It has taken me a good week to even begin to make sense of it all, to try and place it into some sort of comprehensible thought in my mind. I still read the news every chance I get, and stop at every TV screen, waiting and wondering what the answers will be; what the U.S. will do. These are questions that I know won't be answered anytime soon, yet I can't help but sit and attempt to piece together the answers.

I have done a lot of thinking and wondering in the past week has turned into self-reflection. I've spent so much time critiquing and asking myself what I'm really doing with my life. For if everything seems uncertain at this point, only one thing is obvious: Our generation has received an enormous responsibility. And whether we choose to acknowledge this or not, we are the next generation waiting in line to lead this country. I realize what began on September 11 will not end in the near future. It will be a long, drawn-out struggle between freedom and terrorism. We will be the ones to continue that struggle, to be at the forefront of national and international relations in the years to come, to be at the leading edge of world peace. That has to make you wonder about what direction your life is aimed, or where it should be heading.
So many people on this planet want world peace; they would do anything in their power to attain such a goal. To some, this goal is idealistic. To others, it's realistic. But no matter which way you view it, the goal is a common one. Unfortunately, so many people in this world do not have the ability to begin to confront that issue. Their social status inhibits the agency they need to achieve such a thing: to be the person that dedicates their life to furthering the peace of others and future generations to come.

We are all very lucky to be at Bowdoin. We possess something that so many people worldwide do not; an education. It is an education that will give us the tools to do whatever it is we choose. It will give us the agency to be the leaders in a world torn by terrorism, to be the ones in our generation to build an international community founded on peace. It would be an outright shame if each one of us did not utilize an education wrought with so many benefits to further peace worldwide.

Forget selfishness, forget your self-centered career, because when the world trade centers collapsed and the Pentagon was breached, a world of responsibility landed on each of our shoulders. We have the tools to do something constructive with our lives, to help, even in the slightest manner, all of the international community. It is time for us to realize the greater endeavor that all of our lives will be apart. We will be the faces of world peace in the years to come, and Bowdoin will provide us with the tools to do so. The U.S. Naval Academy ranks colleges in the U.S. that have produced world leaders. Bowdoin was ranked number eight out of 3,000 colleges. Let's not put this opportunity to waste.