A Visit
at Camp Unity: First Person Reflections
Hannah
Mack Lapp
The following
article gives Hannah's personal reflections of her September 24th trip
to Camp Unity, the area near the Pentagon where investigators and search
and recovery workers came to eat and take breaks from their work.
The autumn air
blended humidity with the aroma of grilled chicken in Camp Unity on
the south parking lot of the Pentagon.
Mealtime provided
a brief respite. Red Cross and Salvation Army volunteers, investigators
and recovery workers could choose black-eyed peas over rice with half
a grilled chicken at the Salvation Army buffet line or stop by McDonalds
or Burger King in the mobile food court. We joined Majors Samuel and
Veronica VanDenberg, commanding officers for the Harrisonburg-Rockingham
County Salvation Army Corp, for lunch in the dining tent that included
tables with fresh flowers, homemade cookies and TV.
The VanDenbergs
explained "Operation Noble Eagle," the Pentagon's search and
recovery support, to their seven volunteers. A military chaplain had
been assigned to each victim's family at hotels, and families were encouraged
to use DC area lawyers' free legal services. The VanDenbergs' round-the-clock
service provided additional emotional and spiritual support to victims'
families. They also came alongside to support security officers, volunteers
who served food or those doing search and recovery.
A conference of
military chaplains at the Pentagon had ended just before the tragedy,
so their assistance was instantly put into action along with additional
chaplain reserves.
A street sign inside
Camp Unity read "Home Town USA." Here the Salvation Army coordinated
food services along with cooking in their canteens. The Red Cross coordinated
supplies. Both agencies were assisted by North Carolina Baptist Men's
Association, Christ in Action, Tyson Foods, Outback Steak House and
Starbucks.
America's Unity
Wall offered obvious encouragement - Sharing Hope and Healing - with
hundreds of signatures that connected to a colorful border of children's
art and voices of well-wishers.
Before arriving
at Camp Unity, we received ID's at the Arlington Salvation Army Corp.
Within 72 hours of the attack their fellowship hall was filled wall-to-wall
with supplies and hundreds of volunteers. A local businessman donated
a 150,000 sq. ft. warehouse where goods could be processed. John Edwards,
public relations spokesman for Operation Noble Eagle, stressed that
everyone wants to make a difference - thus the wave of tractor-trailer-loads
of supplies.
Photos and news
releases of Operation Noble Eagle lined the walls. A photo-memory remains
for me: three children hanging out a car window: "Thank you to
all the volunteers working so hard to help repair our lives."
Salvation Army
canteens continued to serve in the highly secured areas as the FBI gathered
evidence and recovered belongings of victims to help families work at
"closure." Memorials of flowers, gifts, flags, letters and
candles acknowledged the grief and loss on the lawn of the Naval Annex,
near the entrance to the blackened, wounded Pentagon.
The incredible
sense of kinship experienced by the VanDenbergs was felt by each of
us as the military, NGO's and corporations worked collectively. "The
emotional and spiritual needs are mammoth," Major Samuel VanDenberg
plead. "Pray for us, send contributions - we will need them long-term."
I returned to
Harrisonburg remembering:
- A man who lost
his wife, who now is encouraging the VanDenbergs,
- An EMS paramedic
from New York, who lost 66 friends, wearing a Twin Towers pin,
- To pray for
a Missouri Red Cross volunteer who admits he is getting tired,
- The stronger
relationship ties enjoyed with my Salvation Army Board colleagues
today.
I ask:
- What will be
the fallout in this high tourism area?
- What will be
"normal" when our majors return?
- Are we prepared
for the waves of personal support that will continue to be needed?
I dream that the
relationships being built and the generosity shared since September
11 will be just the beginning of our "being neighbors" - that
we will bring comfort, healing and hope, not only to our neighbors here,
but extending beyond our borders.
Hannah
Mack Lapp (CTP '98) is the public relations associate at Eastern Mennonite
University and spouse of EMU President Joseph L. Lapp. She serves on
the local Salvation Army Advisory Board.