United in Memory 9/11 Victims Memorial Quilt Exhibit Provides Comfort to Visitors at St. John’s University’s Staten Island Campus

September 10, 2007

The United in Memory Victims Memorial Quilt returned to the Staten Island campus of St. John’s University in honor of the sixth anniversary of the tragedies of 9/11 this weekend. For the second-straight year, family members and friends gathered for a private reception and viewing of the quilt when it arrived on Friday evening and the exhibit was open to the public Saturday through Monday. 

“There are so many great memorials that are all fitting, all appropriate and all necessary but there is something more comforting about this memorial,” State Senator Andrew J. Lanza said, describing it as a blanket that was “mended together the way this community has been mended together forever.”

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Corey Gammel, CEO and founder of United in Memory, came up with the idea of the quilt after feeling compelled to do something to commemorate the victims of the 9/11 attacks. Each and every victim of the attacks on the World Trade Center Towers I and II, the Pentagon and the passengers and crew of American Airlines Flights 11 and 77 and United Airlines Flights 93 and 175 have been memorialized on the 16,000 square foot quilt, which was made by over 3,000 volunteers from around the world. Together with the Where-to-Turn Foundation and the Joseph Maffeo Foundation, the quilt made its first appearance at St. John’s in September 2006, to commemorate the five-year anniversary.

“We must teach our children and our children’s children that good things can still come out of bad circumstances,” said Dennis McKeon, Executive Director of Where-to-Turn. “We can not let things like 9/11 change the people we are.”

Throughout the weekend, a steady stream of visitors attended the exhibit, reflecting in their own personal ways. Charles Amoroso, whose son Christopher had attended St. John’s University’s Queens campus and was a Port Authority Police Officer killed at the World Trade Center, travels around the East coast with his family to visit the quilt whenever it is on exhibit.  The Amoroso family has visited several other memorials – daughter Jessica Amoroso, a singer, has performed at several ceremonies dedicated to 9/11 – but finds a comfort in the quilt that they don’t feel other places.

“When I leave here, I leave here with a smile,” Mr. Amoroso said with a peaceful grin on his face. His wife Donna added, “When I first saw the quilt (at Pier 94 in 2003), it felt like home. We spent the entire day there.”

Theresa Papasso, mother of Salvatore Papasso, a 1989 graduate of St. John’s Staten Island campus, who was also killed at the World Trade Center, visited the quilt last year and after describing it as “the most beautiful and warm tribute,” knew she had to come back again this year to the place her son had held so dear to his heart.

For more information about the United in Memory 9/11 Victims Memorial Quilt, please visit www.unitedinmemory.net.  For information about the Where-to-Turn Foundation, visit www.where-to-turn.org

Media inquiries may be addressed to Elizabeth Reilly, Assistant Director of Media Relations at St. John’s University by calling (718) 990-5789, or by e-mail to reillye@stjohns.edu. For additional news about St. John’s, please visit www.stjohns.edu/news.