Remembering 9/11

Wesley Kelly, Manager of Cornelia Ingles, joined the Ride to Remember when other cyclists had a break in the Ingles parking lot.

At Sunday’s Ride to Remember in Habersham, individuals expressed their memories of the events of September 11, 2001:

Wesley Kelly, manager of Ingles in Cornelia (left), joined the motorcyclists in Habersham County – at the Ingles parking lot – to continue to the ride’s end, in Blairsville. He said that he remembers, in 2001, eating breakfast after getting off from work, and then hearing about the 9/11 attack.
“I was shocked more than anything,” he said. And of the motorycle ride in 2015, he said, “it’s good to remember the events – to take a little bit of a stand.
The Ride to Remember served a positive purpose, he continued, saying, “it pulls people together…in fellowship. It’s good for morale,” he continued, “for everybody who sees it.”

READ A Ride to Remember Roars Through Habersham

Motorcycle rider Chris Jenkins, a physical therapist in Athens, said he actually knew someone who died in the 9/11 disaster. “I have a family friend who died in the Pentagon – a great guy with a close family.
” I was close to his sister,” he continued, “and yes, it’s still fresh,” he said of the family’s memory of 9/11.
“It was very real to them,” – the family of Lt. Michael Scott Lamana.
“This,” he said, gesturing toward the many participants in the Ride to Remember, “makes it a smaller world.”

Terah Dyer, Manager Carolyn Lopez, and Cheryl Fowler were the Beall’s Outlet store employees who offered free crackers and water to Ride to Remember participants.
Terah Dyer, Manager Carolyn Lopez, and Cheryl Fowler were the Beall’s Outlet store employees who offered free crackers and water to Ride to Remember participants.

Terah Dyer works in Beall’s Outlet store in Cornelia, one of the sponsors of the Ride to Remember break time in Habersham – that provided free water and crackers to motorcycle riders. Because of her youth, Terah’s memory of 9/11 is distant, she said – but she has a present-day reason for considering the Ride to Remember important.
“My father is a firefighter,” she said, “with the City of Cornelia.”
That is why she says “it’s important to show support for people like the ones who lost their lives in the towers.”