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CNN Special Reports
Front Row to History: The 9/11 Classroom. Aired 11p-12a ET
Aired September 11, 2021 - 23:00 ET
THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
[23:00:21]
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
VICTOR BLACKWELL, CNN ANCHOR (voice-over): Sixteen kids.
MARIAH WILLIAMS-ADAMS, STUDENT, EMMA E. BOOKER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL: My mom, she took a little bit of extra time getting me prepared for the day.
SANDRA "KAY" DANIELS, FORMER TEACHER, EMMA E. BOOKER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL: The children were facing President Bush and myself.
BLACKWELL: School kids with a front row to history.
GEORGE W. BUSH, FORMER PRESIDENT: Good morning.
CHANTAL GUERRERO-JONES, STUDENT, EMMA E. BOOKER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL: When he walked in the room, I was like, oh, my gosh. That's him.
LA'DAMIAN SMITH, STUDENT, EMMA E. BOOKER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL: This is actually the president.
TYLER RADKEY, STUDENT, EMMA E. BOOKER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL: I could touch him if I wanted to reach out.
BLACKWELL: Until the unimaginable happened.
BUSH: A plane has crashed into one of the towers there.
BLACKWELL: Innocence lost.
BUSH: Join me in a moment of silence.
JANUARY TOWLES, STUDENT, EMMA E. BOOKER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL: And they just kept saying, a terrorist attack, a terrorist attack.
BLACKWELL: Twenty years later.
(On-camera): So you think that that day affected your life, who you are today?
LAZARO DUBROCQ, STUDENT, EMMA E. BOOKER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL: I wanted to leave Sarasota after high school.
LENARD RIVERS, STUDENT, EMMA E. BOOKER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL: Not many people would have thought I would have become a cop.
RADKEY: I've had my stumbles, you know, I've been to prison twice.
DYNASTY BROWN, STUDENT, EMMA E. BOOKER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL: It's always going to be a part of our lives. There was only 16 of us with him. We get to be the people that tell the story.
BLACKWELL: Tonight, their stories in a CNN Special Report. "FRONT ROW TO HISTORY, THE 9/11 CLASSROOM."
(END VIDEOTAPE)
BLACKWELL: Hello, I'm Victor Blackwell.
Most of us remember where we were on September 11th, 2001. I was in college, and I remember clearly walking into class and seeing my professor fixated on a TV. His hand was over his mouth, and I looked at the TV, and I saw smoke billowing from a skyscraper. At that moment, that was all I knew.
I also remember seeing the president surrounded by young school kids that morning. We later learned that President George W. Bush got word of the first plane that crashed into the World Trade Center as he was on his way to visit a classroom in Sarasota, Florida. He was there to honor a second-grade class for their academic achievements. The president of the United States. And they were star struck.
Then Andy Card walked in, and the image of the then White House chief of staff whispering to the president that a second plane had hit the World Trade Center, as those children watched, is still haunting 20 years later. Those students are now 27 years old. And I wondered what ever happened to those kids and their teacher. Do they remember that day? How do they feel two decades later about their connection to one of the most terrifying and consequential events in American history.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
DANIELS: The day I discovered that the White House was coming to Emma E. Booker, I was sworn to secrecy.
(LAUGHTER)
DANIELS: So imagine, I had to, for three months, as much as I talk.
DUBROCQ: The earliest memory I have of that is we were in front of a black board. We're being told that our reading comprehension grade went from, I think it was from a D, and then we bumped it up to a B or maybe an A. As a result of that, the president of the United States would be coming out to visit us, so we'd be congratulated.
BUSH: What we found is a good curriculum based upon the science of reading.
GORDON JOHNDROE, FORMER WHITE HOUSE ASSISTANT PRESS SECRETARY: President Bush was pushing his No Child Left Behind education reform bill. This was going to be a stop to meet with the students and then have a roundtable discussion with, you know, educators.
DANIELS: When I was told that I was the host teacher, like, this is getting real. My 16 little ones are going to be in the presence of the president, how cool is that? How special is that? It was quite a big thing. Quite a big thing.
This is the Emma E. Booker school, across the tracks. OK. In Newtown. We were not the popular school in the district. They did so well that President Bush had to come here to see them. We didn't have to go to him. He came to us.
[23:05:02]
BLACKWELL (on-camera): Why do you think you did so well?
WILLIAMS-ADAMS: I think it's mainly because they wanted better for us students at the time, and they put their blood, sweat and tears into us.
RADKEY: What I remember the most is just the love that was in that classroom, with my classmates, the teacher, just the whole school.
BLACKWELL: When did you arrive?
JOHNDROE: We arrived the night before.
BLACKWELL: Do you know why you came in the night before?
ELLEN ECKERT, FORMER WHITE HOUSE STENOGRAPHER: I think he might have been having dinner with his brother, maybe.
TOWLES: I found out the night before.
BLACKWELL: And what did you think once you heard it?
TOWLES: I was like, what, I was going to be in the class to read to the president, and I didn't know what that meant.
RADKEY: I was definitely excited. Like I was dancing around in the living room. I was competitive so I always felt like the president's coming, I can show off my skills a little bit, I'm a fast reader.
BLACKWELL: How was the preparation for a teacher, the president is coming to your classroom?
DANIELS: It was easy because we didn't change anything we'd normally do. Emma E. Booker is one of the best kept secrets in Sarasota County because what you see is what we do every day.
BLACKWELL: What time does the day start on September 11th for you?
JOHNDROE: Around 6:00 a.m. I remember loading up the press pool in a smaller motorcade and being, you know, casual. It was pretty warm that day. And the president went for a jog at a local golf course.
UNIDENTIFIED REPORTER: Are you talking about tax cuts? BUSH: Not right now. I am going to talk about education though.
BROWN: I got ready at my grandmother's house that morning, she ironed my clothes, breakfast, everything.
RIVERS: My parents made sure I got a haircut, clean uniform.
JOHNDROE: I was waiting with the press pool out on the golf course while the president was running. I got stung by a bee. And I told the doctor, it kind of hurts, he goes, OK, don't worry about it, I've got it in the medical unit on board Air Force One, and I have to say, I have never thought about it again.
SMITH: I was running late at the time. And the moment I got in Mrs. Daniels' class there was a lot more people than normally is in there.
DUBROCQ: We had to show up on time, if we didn't the Secret Service wouldn't allow us in. We actually missed like one or two classmates who weren't able to make it in time.
JOHNDROE: And then we loaded back up and got back to the hotel, and that was a quick change, and it was time to get the press pool back into the vans.
TOWLES: When we got to school, it was like Secret Service everywhere. And I'm like, why are all these people here?
GUERRERO-JONES: They were like, we need to check your bags. When you're 7, it's like, OK, what is happening. My mom tells me that I told her the men in black were at the school.
SMITH: There were people on horses, people in cars. The funny thing is there were actually people in trees.
DANIELS: They were very discreet about some things I to this day don't even know happened in my classroom, I found out afterwards. Security was in the rafters. There was security in the restroom. My desk was searched, my home, my family, everything.
JOHNDROE: The motorcade as we left the hotel was a very casual, loading up, was handing newspaper clips out, press were grabbing laptops and cameras and things. It was a very normal start to a day with the president.
BLACKWELL: Was the president looking forward to in?
JOHNDROE: Yes, absolutely. He was in a great mood. He would we would have a good event and then head home.
DANIELS: I'm the first one in my classroom. I made sure all the chairs were straight. Making sure he had his seat ready. The books are ready.
GUERRERO-JONES: I remember that they told us we weren't allowed to turn around because there was all of these cameras. I was very hyper. Did not like to sit still.
DANIELS: Everybody's vying for a space to get the best angle, the best shot.
JOHNDROE: I think we set out around 8:00 a.m. or something like that for the school.
DANIELS: We were in here talking and, you know, I'm trying to keep them entertained and we're having a good time. It was a normal day with the exception of why are all these people on campus, who are these people?
[23:10:04]
UNIDENTIFIED REPORTER: This just in, you are looking at obviously a very disturbing live shot there.
JOHNDROE: We were getting very close to the elementary school, and everyone's pagers started, you know, buzzing, buzzing, buzzing.
BUSH: We'll talk about it later.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
BLACKWELL: Take me back to the beginning. Give me the story of Sarasota.
FREDD ATKINS, HISTORIAN: 1921, Sarasota succeeded from Manatee County. It wasn't but 10,000, 12,000 people in this end of the county at that time. Now, this is Myrtle Street. This is the northern boundary of the colored section.
BLACKWELL: The colored section?
ATKINS: Yes, this is what we were. We were going to be servants. We was going to be the service employees, and that's all we got now. We have very little manufacturing, very little technical stuff. They was going to be the playground for the wealthy, and they was going to cater to banks, and sun, sand and fun.
[23:15:02]
This is the story of our community.
BLACKWELL: How has Sarasota changed?
ATKINS: Not much.
BLACKWELL: Really?
ATKINS: Not much. Because we are still a service-based community. We still are rather impoverished.
BLACKWELL: When you found out the president was here for the reading.
ATKINS: Reading class. Yes.
BLACKWELL: Reading class, what did you think about the school, about the accomplishment and his acknowledgment? ATKINS: It was a proud moment for me. We have outstanding teachers.
DANIELS: Bye, my love, I'll see you.
ATKINS: Miss Daniels is the reason why the president came because of her program, and her success.
BLACKWELL: What's it feels like to be back this room, although it's different, what does it feel like?
DANIELS: I started here in 1993. This is my starting school. This is my home.
Read, read, read, read, read.
The teachers were here day and night, reading, teaching, teaching reading, but they did the hard work, and they made the gains and that's why President Bush was here to congratulate him.
BLACKWELL: The principal of this school asked you to greet the president.
EDWINA OLIVER, FORMER TEACHER, EMMA E. BOOKER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL: I knew I didn't have to do anything but to say hello, shake a few hands. So I was pretty much calm at that point in time.
BLACKWELL: When did things change that morning on the way in?
JOHNDROE: We were getting very close to the elementary school and everyone's pagers started, you know, buzzing, buzzing, buzzing. We get these notes from the White House situation room that a plane has crashed into the World Trade Center.
OLIVER: The motorcade probably arrived around 8:35, 8:40-ish.
BLACKWELL: The motorcade turned here into Emma E. Booker. What happened once the car stopped and the president stepped out?
JOHNDROE: I have never seen people jump out of a motorcade all up and down the line from all the cars so quickly. And it was the president's senior aides running to tell the president what had happened.
OLIVER: When he first arrived, we didn't immediately greet him at that point in time. They said he needs to take this call.
JOHNDROE: The president comes into the hold room, everyone was trying to gather information, pages from the White House situation room were coming in with additional information.
BUSH: Good morning.
BLACKWELL: Did you know by the time that he came in what had happened in New York?
OLIVER: No, we did not. The only thing we knew was that it was something important, and something was happening. BLACKWELL: What was your impression?
OLIVER: He was very relaxed, very reserved, but very present.
BLACKWELL: What did you expect a president to look like or be?
DUBROCQ: It was kind of weird. I had this kind of kingly, regal, like, expectation. I mean, I'm 7 years old so I still have a bit of an imagination. I'm thinking a man with a crown walking in. But no, it was nice to see that's the man that's the leader of our country, a simple man at the end of the day.
BROWN: I just remember him being very nice, welcoming. It wasn't nerve racking or he didn't seem intimidating or anything. Honestly, what I expected.
WILLIAMS-ADAMS: I remember him standing up and greeting us, maybe shook a few hands.
DUBROCQ: Then he started talking, I think it was either to Dynasty, Natalie or Mariah about his dogs and daughters.
BLACKWELL: Chantal, the imagine of you with your hand over your heart. Do you remember why your hand was over your heart?
GUERRERO-JONES: I remember when he walked in, being star struck because I was like, oh, my gosh, that's him, like, and like kind of like being a little flustered. I've got this like cheesy grin on my face, and my hand is like over my heart, you know, when you do the pledge of allegiance. He's important, like.
DANIELS: I had given him lessons on who the president was, what the president does, and why he's coming to meet you. Because I wanted to be as authentic and as real as they are. They were beautiful kids at the time. The next thing that happened is they sat down and we went right into the lesson.
BLACKWELL: What was the lesson that day?
DANIELS: Everybody together, "The Pet Goat."
BLACKWELL (voice-over): When we return.
DANIELS: All I could see was this man coming towards the president. And I'm thinking, who is this? Why is this happening?
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
[23:23:22]
JOHNDROE: As the motorcade arrives, and the president comes into this room, the hold room, the pool goes separately, the press pool, and goes straight to the classroom to set up in the back of the classroom, so the pool, with the print reporters and the television reporters, are in the back. The kids are in their chairs or on the floor in front, and then the teacher and the seat for the president are set up in the front.
DANIELS: This is my classroom.
BLACKWELL (on-camera): And he came through this door.
DANIELS: This exact door.
BLACKWELL: OK.
DANIELS: This is the door. I was sitting up here.
BLACKWELL: OK.
DANIELS: Book easel, President Bush's chair.
BLACKWELL: Was there a greeting that you rehearsed with the class when the president walked in?
DANIELS: No, there was no greeting. I tried to keep it as natural as possible. This is Regal, our former principal.
He comes to the classroom all the time to observe, but when they saw him come in with her, they were a little, is this really the president? They were very spontaneous. They knew how to behave.
Would you please stand and recognize the president of the United States?
BUSH: Good morning. Good morning.
TOWLES: When the president walked in the classroom, like, we all kind of froze a little bit. Because I'm like, oh, my goodness, that's George Bush, like, that's the president.
BLACKWELL: Describe from your perspective his mood, his energy, as he crosses in to meet the children.
JOHNDROE: Probably a little bit more serious than he normally would going into a classroom full of young kids.
[23:25:01]
BUSH: Great to meet everybody.
JOHNDROE: But what he tried to do was convey an air of calm and excitement to be with the children, but he definitely looked like someone with more on his mind.
BLACKWELL: This is the book that the president read in Mrs. Daniel's room on 9/11. What was the lesson that day?
DANIELS: Everybody together. "The Pet Goat."
(LAUGHTER)
TOWLES: She had us get our books from under our seats and to open it up to the right page, and then of course Miss Daniels would always start off by saying, get ready.
DANIELS: Get ready.
CHILDREN: "The Pet Goat."
DANIELS: Yes. "The Pet Goat."
TOWLES: And then -- and then she would tap her stick, her reading stick, and then we would start. She told us to start reading.
DANIELS: Get ready.
CHILDREN: "A girl had a pet goat."
DANIELS: That was a pencil.
Go on.
CHILDREN: She got to --
DANIELS: Just a little pencil to keep the beat.
GUERRERO-JONES: I don't remember, like, being anxious about reading.
CHILDREN: One day her dad said.
GUERRERO-JONES: It was like walking. We just like knew what to do, and we were like, wanted to show it off.
BROWN: A lot of people say, you know, you guys look so good and so well mannered, like, that was every day. Like, Miss Daniels drove a tight ship. It wasn't for the president. That was every day.
DANIELS: What's behind the word said?
CHILDREN: Comma.
DANIELS: And what does that comma means?
CHILDREN: Slow down.
DANIELS: So let's read that sentence again.
BROWN: We were good at it so there wasn't nothing to be nervous about.
BLACKWELL: That was not a performance.
BROWN: No.
(LAUGHTER)
DANIELS: They did the work and they were in front of the president, and they were holding their own. It was authentic, and what you saw were my babies doing what we did every single day. And I felt like a proud mama.
BLACKWELL: What was your impression of Mrs. Daniels' class?
ECKERT: They were loving the talk by the president. If you were around them enough, you would know by the way he smiled, how much fun he was having with the kids in reading to them, so it was going really well, until it wasn't.
DANIELS: And all I could see was this image of a man coming towards the president, and I'm thinking, who is this, why is this happening, this should not be happening.
BLACKWELL: At some point, then White House chief of staff Andy Card walks up to the president.
ECKERT: He came from the president's right, right here, isn't it? I was standing in the back with the press, and we were whispering to each other, this is odd. This is unusual. What do you think this is?
DANIELS: When I saw him whisper to the president, I knew something devastating had happened.
RADKEY: I thought the way his facial expression turned and his face got red, I thought he had to use the bathroom. I don't know what else is going on.
DUBROCQ: The president's face kind of contorted a little bit.
DANIELS: I was waiting for security to come and take care of the matter, but no security came.
TOWLES: He kind of regained his composure, and continued on with, you know, the lesson and with us reading.
DANIELS: He was supposed to pick up the book immediately and participate with the reading lesson. But he didn't.
DANIELS: I could feel President Bush leave the room mentally, spiritually.
JOHNDROE: You could see he was staring off into the distance in some ways, but then trying to come back to, wait, I've got a task at hand that needs to be finished, which is I can't frighten these kids. I can't send a signal to the world. The press is filming, the TV is rolling, sound is going, he's thinking we need to finish this off, and then I need to calmly get back into this hold room, and get more information.
DANIELS: After we finished the lesson.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Please step outside.
BUSH: We'll talk about it later.
DANIELS: He came back out and he shook my hand, and he said, I have to leave to go address the nation.
BLACKWELL (voice-over): Coming up. BROWN: I thought it was like us, I thought we did something wrong.
DANIELS: He was gone like whoosh, really quickly.
BUSH: I unfortunately will be going back to Washington after my remarks.
DANIELS: And I couldn't believe that the day started so joyously and then it ended so tragically.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
[23:33:14]
BLACKWELL: Did you find out before the president that the country was under attack?
JOHNDROE: Yes, if I recall, I did, because the Secret Service wanted the President to leave pretty immediately. Like we've got to get moving. Because we don't know what's happening. And the President of the United States is obviously a target.
ECKERT: I don't think the pool knew, you were back in and out of this room, so you had different knowledge. The other thing going through my mind was what has happened here? Like, what has happened here?
JOHNDROE: So, Andy Carr has come in and he's told the President. The President leaves, a few minutes later come back into this room. They're gathering information. The President is back on the phone with communicators back in the White House.
BLACKWELL: Do you remember what you're thinking? Now, your teacher has been pulled into another room. The President is leaving early.
TOWLES: We definitely felt like something was wrong. I was just -- I was trying to figure out what it was that was wrong.
GUERRERO-JONES: I do remember like being confused because we knew that he was supposed to be with us for the whole day, and then like Miss Daniels left, something is not right.
DANIELS: I needed a moment to absorb what I had been told and what I had -- what I saw happening, what I found out what's happened.
BLACKWELL (voice over): Two planes into the World Trade Center.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: U.S. officials are saying this is an act of terrorism.
JOHNDROE: And then short remarks are quickly drafted here for him to deliver.
BUSH: This is a difficult moment for America. I -- unfortunately, we will be going back to Washington after my remarks.
JOHNDROE: You could cut the tension with a knife. BUSH: Today, we've had a national tragedy.
[23:35:01]
Two airplanes have crashed into the World Trade Center in an apparent terrorist attack on our country.
May God bless the victims, their families, and America. Thank you very much.
BLACKWELL (on camera): What did you do in that moment?
DANIELS: I cried, I prayed. And I asked why? Why and how? I really needed a moment.
LENARD RIVERS, STUDENT, EMMA E. BOOKER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL: We never really see her cry, and it's like, something definitely impacted her more than what we know what was going on, was deeper than what we were seeing.
LAZARO DUBROCQ, STUDENT, EMMA E. BOOKER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL: We knew Miss Daniels as loving, caring. It's a really different take from our teachers kind of jarring. I mean, we've never seen her like this.
BLACKWELL: How long was your moment?
DANIELS: It could have been two minutes, it could have been three minutes, but I knew I had to get back to my kids.
BLACKWELL: Okay.
DANIELS: Because I didn't want them to think that they had done something wrong, so I had to let them know it was not their fault.
JONES: Something in the way that you presented it to us, like allowed me to understand that like the human side of it that like, I am not the most important person right now. Like he's got something he has to do. People are hurting, he has to leave and that's okay and it's not our fault.
DINASTY BROWN, STUDENT, EMMA T. BOOKER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL: And I think after that, that's when you know, they kind of had on the TV for us.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: For those Americans who are looking at these horrific pictures.
BROWN: And then it all came together, like I grasped how serious it was.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I think myself and maybe other students thought it was like a movie or something.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: It didn't look real.
BLACKWELL: The TV was here, you took them to a different room? DANIELS: The TV -- the monitor that President Bush had was in his
office next door. Their memory of it might fluctuate a little. After I came out of the room, I told them what happened.
The pictures and the images that they saw, they might have seen them when that door was open, but the TV never came in here.
I was very careful about how much I expose them to it and what I said to them.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: That was the first time I learned the word "terrorist," too.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Yes.
TOWLES: We didn't know what the World Trade Centers were, they just kept saying, "A terrorist attack, a terrorist attack."
BLACKWELL: Who taught you the word "terrorist." You taught them.
DANIELS: I had to. It was a vocabulary word that I incorporated into our vocabulary. We are talking about days later, not the same day. I had to teach them evil can happen anywhere. It can happen in America, it can happen in other parts of the world.
DUBROCQ: So, that was my whole world. Right, and I grew up in a family of immigrants. I was told terrorists are attacking this country. And it's a lot for me grasp to the point that I didn't really even understand it.
BLACKWELL: You've now explained to the students what has happened. In general terms, what next happened in this classroom?
DANIELS: Some parents wanted to come pick their kids up. My baby stayed with me. I went outside the classroom and I took a look at the parking lot. And it was like a ghost town.
JOHNDROE: I distinctly remember telling the press pool, we're going to have to run to the motorcade. I said, I'm not kidding. I know. I often say that we have to move quickly. I'm not kidding. We've got to run to get in the cars with him.
ECKERT: We ran. We actually have never seen a more obedient press pool. We ran.
DELDRIA TURNER, MOTHER, JANUARY TOWLES: I'm seeing what's going on in New York, but I had no idea what was going on at the schools. I'm like, "Okay, what's going on with my baby? What's going on my baby?"
MARIA DUBROCQ, MOTHER, LAZARO DUBROCQ: It truly feels like it's like in a movie that you're a part of and then your son is there. You know, it's safe. But you're not a hundred percent.
BLACKWELL: When your parents came to pick you up, who remembers that first interaction with their mom and dad?
BROWN: And they was just like checking on me. "Are you okay?" So I don't think they knew what to say to us.
AISHA HORNE MILLER, MOTHER, MARIAH WILLIAMS ADAMS: I did not know how to question her. When I still was kind of like in shock myself.
MARIAH WILLIAMS ADAMS, STUDENT, EMMA T. BOOKER, ELEMENTARY SCHOOL I didn't realize how important it was until people were reaching out to me like, hey, you were in the class of 9/11. How was that? How do you feel?
BLACKWELL (voice over): Up next --
BLACKWELL (on camera): How does it feel to be connected to the day?
JONES: This is something that I'd like kind of like been trying to like work through specifically.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
[23:43:26]
DANIELS: For a long time, I would not tell anybody that I was the host teacher for President Bush on 9/11. I wanted to keep that in because I felt guilty.
RIVERS: I think the guilt comes from it was something bigger than this region that happened that day.
DUBROCQ: It's almost like a duty. It's hard to really feel any sense of pride being in that day because of what happened.
BLACKWELL (on camera): Does anyone else feel that guilt?
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Yes.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Yes.
BROWN: Definitely. Now, I understand that people want to know how we feel, too. Like they want to know our story and how we feel because we were there and it did affect us.
DANIELS: You know, I started thinking about this, what did they see on September the 11th that they carried subconsciously that will lead them to the path that they are now in?
JONES: I love Sarasota.
DANIELS: Chantel was a little princess, always cute and dainty.
JONES: That's where we got married because it's so important to me.
My parents gave up a lot for me to like be able to go to school. And so like I think that's like a different way that you feel, oh, I'm a first generation American and my parents probably did more than they'll ever tell me to like be able to put me through that experience.
BLACKWELL: What does it feel like to be connected to that day?
ADAMS: So, I didn't realize the seriousness of it until I got older.
DANIELS: Mariah, quiet, go getter.
ADAMS: Dribble, dribble.
[23:45:01]
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: One, two, three.
ADAMS: Growing up, my dream was to be in the WNBA. I have my Bachelor's in Exercise Science. Currently, working at the Boys and Girls Club. I work as a youth development professional.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Game.
ADAMS: I have a six-year-old. His name is Jayden, my two-year-old, Roman. He's super, super bright and I just enjoy working with kids every day, making them smile, inspiring them to be better people.
DANIELS: Majority of my students stayed on the right path and they did -- they follow their dream. They accomplished things in life that they wanted to.
RIVERS: I remember as a kid saying I wanted to be a police officer.
DANIELS: Linard, studious, very, very concerned about others.
RIVERS: I went into public safety. I joined the military. And then I became a police officer.
The interaction with different people, business owners, the families, not everybody's life is the same.
RIVERS: 9/11 made me lean towards doing public safety work. There is connection. I feel a part of it is like, hey, I see something that's related to 9/11, yes, I was related to that, too.
TYLER RADKEY, STUDENT, EMMA E. BOOKER, ELEMENTARY SCHOOL: The 9/11 connection, I definitely brag about it a lot. Most people react like, dang, man. You are a piece of history man, like you -- you're in history books.
I was fed with a silver spoon my whole life like anything I wanted, like my mom and dad to get it for me.
DANIELS: Tyler, there was some hiccups that he had to overcome.
RADKEY: I've had my stumbles, you know, I've been to prison twice. But you know, that's stuff that I did in the past and I ain't proud of it.
I made my own decision, I made my bed, I laid in it. And I'd been in prison for it. DUBROCQ: When you open the textbook and you see the picture of the
class, we were there. Right? We were there's a little seven-year-olds and we were watching that from a different perspective. It's hard to say how that didn't affect us.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Right.
DANIELS: Lazaro, sweetheart, loving, determined, just a man in a little boy's body.
DUBROCQ: My parents are awesome. I call them every single day just to say hi, you know, good morning to them, and also because we run a business together.
JAVIER DUBROCQ, FATHER, LAZARO DUBROCQ: He is a dream, and let me tell you why because we couldn't have the best partner. I do the building, she'd do the decorations because this is a family business and we created with so much effort.
And then when you see the result, it motivates you so much to keep going on.
DUBROCQ: It's been 20 years since that day, when you're seven years old, you're being asked what do you want to be when you grow up? And it's always something that we ask ourselves, you know, have we lived up to what we want it to be?
LA'DAMIAN SMITH, STUDENT, EMMA E. BOOKER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL: Are all your seatbelts on?
UNIDENTIFIED CHILDREN: Yes.
DANIELS: La'Damian is quite the gentlemen, and very protective, very protective.
L. SMITH: I didn't honestly think about joining the military until my ninth or 10th grade of high school. I'm actually more behind the scenes, computing data. My career to become an executive chef didn't go out as planned because once me and my wife graduated, we actually found out the day of graduation that she was pregnant with our son, Jaden.
He told us that he had learned about 9/11 and when the President went to the school that day.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Who do you think died that day? Like lost their life?
JADEN SMITH, SON OF LA'DAMIAN SMITH: A lot of people.
L. SMITH: The 20-year anniversary is this year. It's a long time, man.
J. SMITH: I realized, we weren't even born.
TOWLES: I think I wanted to be a teacher or a lawyer, but I was a social butterfly because I was always talking and disrupting the class.
DANIELS: January, my baby. Sweet, very aware of other's feelings.
TURNER: I'm very, very proud of her. She gave me Jalen.
TOWLES: After you were mad when you found out I was pregnant. My mom was like my annoying best friend, but I love her to pieces.
I currently work at Metro Regional Youth Detention Center.
People that think that youth that are incarcerated, that there's no hope for them. I will tell them that they are wrong.
I see so much potential.
BLACKWELL: Do you all feel a kinship to one another?
TOWLES: When we see each other, it's just like no time has passed, because I don't think I've seen Dinasty since like high school
[23:50:00]
DANIELS: Dinasty, my entrepreneur, serious, determined, strong.
BROWN: I always wanted my own business. I enjoyed entrepreneurship, being my own boss making my own schedule and I also like to help other people, and then also TikTok grows people like tremendously.
I help young women, inspiring entrepreneurs start a business, and then learn how to grow that business using social media online.
If I can just motivate one young girl help her believe in herself, I'm happy.
ADAMS: Personally, I'm just proud of everyone to see how much they've accomplished in life and the goals that they've reached.
BROWN: Yes. We had a great teacher. It wasn't just instruction, but it was genuine love.
RADKEY: I call her mom. She was my favorite teacher because what she did outside of the classroom. She calls me probably twice a week just to check on me, just to see how I'm doing.
What teacher does that 20 years later?
DANIELS: All right, baby. I think I'm just about ready.
Teaching is a passion. I think teaching is also a calling and I've been doing it now almost 30 years.
Good morning, my butterflies. Good morning, morning.
LASHAWN FROST, PRINCIPAL, BOOKER MIDDLE SCHOOL: Miss Daniels has an attitude of overcoming whatever it takes to ensure that we are going to be okay. DANIELS: I can do anything if I try.
I teach my kids to sing. Singing is a part of me.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: She always sings.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Yes, she started singing --
DANIELS: But that's natural. That's something I do all the time.
We were in turmoil at that time. We needed to know that a resolution would come.
BLACKWELL (voice over): When we come back --
DANIELS: To see the memorial in New York now 20 years later, it will bring closure.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
[23:55:40]
BLACKWELL: How did that day affected your life? The choices you've made? The careers you've chosen? What you've studied? Who you are today?
DUBROCQ: I went to college in New York City. I wanted to leave Sarasota after high school. New York City was the natural choice for me.
DANIELS: This is every day for me, this is a part of my life. No matter where I am, there's something out there in the world that reminds me of 9/11.
One of the things that we talked about wanting to do was going to the memorial there in New York, see it, touch it, and be a part of it.
Twenty years later, it will bring closure.
BLACKWELL: So CNN arranged to bring the students and Miss Daniels to the Memorial.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The name of this piece is trying to remember the color of the sky on that September morning.
These are two of the pillars that were there in the building, the triads the center tridents of the building.
This was the last column that was standing
DANIELS: Michael's prayer, Lord, take me where you want me to go. Let me meet who you want me to me. Tell me what you want me to say and keep me out of your way.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: These were the men and women who were running up the stairs, running into the buildings. JONES: It's very grounding and everybody should go. I think it's a
huge part of like our history, too.
DANIELS: Corrections. Police Department, Criminal Justice.
This is an answered prayer for me. I wanted to come to the museum, but I wanted to come with my students that were with me on 9/11.
As we were looking at some of the artifacts, I thought to myself, and yet we rise.
Even though this horrific action happened, we are resilient. We push through, we come back.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: It reminds me of your singing to your students that day, "Hold on, change is coming." It just seems to me like that there is a connection from that song to that moment.
QUESTION: Mr. President, are you aware of the reports of the plane crashing in New York?
BUSH: We will talk about it later.
DANIELS: I had to think quick, on my feet, to sing something because we were in turmoil.
Yesterday, a man said to me, how can you smile when your world is crumbling down? I said, here's my story.
When I want to cry, I take a look around and I see that I'm getting back and I hold on.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALES: Hold on.
DANIELS: Change is coming.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALES: Change is coming.
DANIELS: I know they are adults now, but my memory is that U-shaped circle with my little kids sitting there reading.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALES: Hold on.
DANIELS: You can make it.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALES: You can make it.
DANIELS: Pigtails, ribbons. I remember everything.
Don't worry about a thing. Hold on.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALES: Hold on.
DANIELS: Change is coming.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALES: Change is coming. DANIELS: Hold on.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALES: Hold on.
DANIELS: Everything will be all right.
[20:00:00]