site stats
Tuesday, 22 May, 2012 RSS FOLLOW US

Firefighting bishop in 9/11 memorial

  • Bishop Ross stands by in the basket of Parnell Station’s turntable ladder as a colleague recites the names of the fallen firefighters.

    Bishop Ross stands by in the basket of Parnell Station’s turntable ladder as a colleague recites the names of the fallen firefighters.

  • Bishop Ross leads a prayer before the firefighters' memorial climb.

    Bishop Ross leads a prayer before the firefighters' memorial climb.

  • Final briefing before the firefighters begin their 549-step slog up the BNZ tower.

    Final briefing before the firefighters begin their 549-step slog up the BNZ tower.

  • Bishop Ross carried the 'tally' of Fr Mychal Judge, who rushed to the twin towers to minister to others caught in the attacks.

    Bishop Ross carried the 'tally' of Fr Mychal Judge, who rushed to the twin towers to minister to others caught in the attacks.

  • Bishop Bay, kitted up and ready to climb the 28 levels of the Queen St BNZ tower.

    Bishop Bay, kitted up and ready to climb the 28 levels of the Queen St BNZ tower.

  • Bishop Ross and his fire police brigade team at the top of the 28 level BNZ tower

    Bishop Ross and his fire police brigade team at the top of the 28 level BNZ tower

Bishop Ross stands by in the basket of Parnell Station’s turntable ladder as a colleague recites the names of the fallen firefighters.
Bishop Ross leads a prayer before the firefighters' memorial climb.
Final briefing before the firefighters begin their 549-step slog up the BNZ tower.
Bishop Ross carried the 'tally' of Fr Mychal Judge, who rushed to the twin towers to minister to others caught in the attacks.
Bishop Bay, kitted up and ready to climb the 28 levels of the Queen St BNZ tower.
Bishop Ross and his fire police brigade team at the top of the 28 level BNZ tower

Bishop Ross Bay of Auckland joined 80 of his firefighting colleagues on Saturday in a sweaty yet solemn September 11 tribute to fallen firefighters.

Together, in full firefighting ‘turnout’ gear, and lugging 25kg breathing cylinders on their backs, they scaled the 28 floor stairwell of the Queen St BNZ in downtown Auckland.

It was their annual tribute to the 56 Kiwis who’ve given their lives over the years in turning out at emergency incidents – and the date chosen, September 11, also commemorates the 343 New York firefighters who were killed in the 2001 World Trade Centre attacks.

Bishop Ross, who is a longstanding volunteer with the Auckland Fire Police, had led the prayers before last year’s inaugural climb.

This year he again led those prayers – and then he joined his fellow firefighters in scaling the 549 stairs of the tower.

Each of those climbing firefighters carried a ‘tally’ (an identifying tag used for headcounts at fires) bearing the name of a fallen Kiwi firefighter, or the truck number of a crew whose members had died in New York in 9/11.

Bishop Ross carried a tally for Mychal Judge, the New York fire department chaplain who, after the planes had hit on 9/11, had rushed to the lobby of the Twin Towers to minister to rescuers, the injured and dying – and was himself killed there.

“It was privilege,” said Bishop Ross, “to carry Fr Judge’s tally with me. He’d lived and breathed the life of a fire department chaplain and he’d shown great courage.”

Bishop Ross says that some of the most poignant 9/11 images for him are of firefighters climbing the tower stairwells.

“On one side of the stair,” he recalls, “hundreds of people are streaming down the stair to evacuate. On the other side, crew after crew of firefighters are climbing to rescue people.”

For almost all those New York firefighters, they were climbing a stairway to heaven.

Photos courtesy of Jacquie Bay.

Comments on this story

Log in or create a user account to comment.

Editors' Picks

'Horrific' violence against women

Violence against women in the Pacific is “horrific” and must be addressed, says an Australian...

From Church Times cartoonist Dave Walker

Back to the community – every day

What we need is a "Back to the Community" campaign, says the vicar of a quake zone.

Cathedral bells bound for UK

The ChristChurch Cathedral bells will soon be enroute to England for testing and repair.

New guidelines for marriage rites

A “consensus description” of Anglican theology on marriage rites is being finalized by the Int...

The best Grandad in the world.

A unique and final honour

Sir Paul Reeves is accorded a unique last honour. He is laid to rest on the gentle north-facin...

Decision time on gay ordination

The question of whether openly gay and lesbian people can be ordained should be settled s...

© Anglican Taonga

ANGLICAN TAONGA  is the communications arm of the Anglican Church in Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia / Te Haahi Mihanare ki Niu Tireni, ki Nga Moutere o Te Moana Nui a Kiwa. TAONGA magazine is published three times a year and distributed to all Anglican ministry units and agencies. TAONGA also publishes occasional booklets on church, ministry and sacraments. The General Editor of TAONGA is accountable to the Communications Commission of General Synod / te Hinota Whanui, 200 St Johns Road, Meadowbank, Auckland 1742.

Login | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use © 2005-2012 Taonga Online. All rights reserved. | Another eZ Publish site by Quiqcorp Ltd