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    Read it at AE911Truth.org
    In Honor of 9/11 Survivor Janette MacKinlay Print E-mail
    News - News Releases By AE911Truth
    Written by Mike Cook   
    Tuesday, 21 December 2010 21:31

    A Review of Her Artistic Book Fortunate

    After a battle with brain cancer, likely induced by the toxic dust of the WTC on 9/11, accomplished sculptor, artist, and 9/11 truth seeker Janette MacKinlay continued her journey deeper into truth, passing away on December 9, 2010. We present a small collection of stories from her amazing heart-filled little book.

    On 9/11/2001, Janette Mackinlay was living with her boyfriend Jim at 110 Liberty St – a building adjacent to the World Trade Center. Written eight years after the events of 9/11, combining imagery from the experience and selections from her prolific artwork with a personal and poignant narrative that is imbued with an artist’s sensibility, her book Fortunate: A Personal Diary of 9/11 persuasively conveys the shock, pain and tragedy of that day and its immediate aftermath. Her amazing graphic volume radiates sparks of hope and flames of triumph.

    This 9/11 survivor ultimately succumbed to the literal fallout from the attack

    I wonder, as she did when she was writing her book, how to write about what seems beyond words.

    After both planes had crashed into the Twin Towers, Janette and Jim called loved ones to let them know they were all right, and began to accept the sudden reality that they had ringside seats at a major historical event. They began to tidy up in case they had to evacuate, so they wouldn’t have to return home to a messy flat. When the destruction of the South Tower began, they barely had time to get into the hallway before their windows were blown in. The hallway surely saved them serious injury and perhaps saved their lives. As they tried to recover from the blast, the suffocating, deadly dust immediately started choking them. Janette would later provide a sample of this toxic dust to Dr. Steven Jones, who along with eight other researchers would find in it one of the most conclusive “smoking guns” of 9/11.

    Jim’s thoughts in those critical moments of the blast were, “What a simple way to die… just here in the hallway… no high tech approach with tubes every which way coming in and out of your body… just over in a few seconds… just that simple.” Jim had long suffered from heart trouble. Janette’s reaction was a mixture of simple amazement that she was still living and a bemused wonderment regarding whether or not she was really dying.

    Fighting for air, they made their way onto the street onto a surreal scene where, “People were either inside buildings or they were dead.” The first other survivors they saw were firemen. Janette and Sam thanked God for them, and sought refuge in a restaurant some distance away where other survivors were gathered. There they awakened to the extraordinary awareness of and appreciation for every moment of existence that many who survive a close brush with death experience, where everything is intensely perceived and deep gratitude is felt for the simplest things. Some cleaner air to breathe and some ice water to drink were “luxuries” they enjoyed while praying for more complete deliverance to safety and normalcy.

    As the North Tower was destroyed, their more sheltered and distant location shielded them from experiencing another direct blast and another choking dust cloud. All communications with the outside world were cut off. While others proceeded away from the disaster site, they headed back towards it to gather Jim’s medicine and other essentials. They were amazed to find their building still standing, though otherwise the devastation was complete. They gathered what they needed and made their way to a nearby friend’s place to begin what would become a long, painful aftermath.

     

    Some called Janette the heart of the 9/11 Truth Movement

    Many striking sights are described in the book, many of them sad, but there are also times when, through the all-consuming tragedy, triumph shone. Symbolizing recovery from the the South Tower’s destruction, Janette created a piece called “10 seconds in September,” a green, leafy image reminiscent of grass growing through pavement, of nature’s relentless resilience and its unending passion to survive and even thrive.

    More moments of transcendence can be found in Janette’s factual reporting of the instinctual reactions of people reaching out to each other to help in a crisis; of complete strangers offering them shelter for the remains of the day as they made their way to their friend’s place; of the herculean efforts by rescue workers and the Red Cross to mitigate suffering and save as many lives as they could. Throughout her narrative, the preciousness and fragility of life come through, with a sense of the survivors’ determination to make the most of their lives, which for a time at least had been miraculously spared.

    “Fortunate” is the harrowing story of a 9/11 survivor who healed her soul through art

    It is that very determination that I hope readers of this work will perceive most strongly and take and keep with them. Life is indeed incalculably precious and often fragile. Most of us, blessedly, will never be faced with such a horrific near-death experience as Janette did. Yet, also like Janette, all of us will experience death. For each of us, our time here is very limited; how limited we’ll never know, and what we do with that time and ourselves is of utmost importance. Gandhi said, “Whatever you do may be insignificant, but it is most important that you do it.” Perhaps those of us who never come close to death until that final day are not only blessed, but also less “fortunate,” because without frequent reminders, we often forget to appreciate the wonder and opportunity of our all-too-brief existence.

    Janette never lost that determination. She spoke out on her doubts about the official story of 9/11 every chance she got, contributing what she could to what has become a worldwide movement. That movement, filled with many motivated people like Janette, has the potential to overcome the tide of destruction, hate, and lies, and turn it with an even more powerful tide of creativity, compassion and truth. I hope that others will be inspired by this account of the horror that Janette MacKinlay did not merely endure but transformed with so many beautiful works of art. Her spirit’s thrust for life can inspire all of us to contribute our best to this movement and to our world.