
A tree grown from a cutting of the Oklahoma City Survivor Tree was replanted in the Living Memorial Grove, located across the street from City Hall, next to five trees that were previously planted in the World Trade Center Plaza.
As part of the 5th Anniversary Commemoration, the World Trade Center Survivors’ Network, with the help of the NYC Parks Department, replanted a tree grown from a cutting of the Oklahoma City Survivor Tree.
The OKC Survivors’ Tree is an American elm
that offered shade in the parking lot of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building,
prior to the bombing on April 19, 1995. The tree was badly damaged in the
explosion, but survived and is now the centerpiece for the Survivor Circle in
the Oklahoma City Memorial. The Survivor Tree is a symbol of human resiliency
and a tribute to renewal and rebirth. We hope to solidify, with this planting,
the deep bond that has developed between the people of Oklahoma City and New
York – sister cities in grief, but also in the strength needed to
survive.
The replanting ceremony was preceded by an interfaith gathering. Speakers representing the wisdom of the many faith traditions in New York City described what the planting ceremony means to them. Most traditions embrace tree plantings as symbolic of life and rebirth. And we hope the public expression of this common human thread will continue to provide both healing and uniting.
"This tree, a gift from the People of Oklahoma City, is the offspring of the Survivor Tree which remained standing in the wake of the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Building on April 19, 1995. It is planted here among the trees that survived the September 11, 2001 attacks upon the World Trade Center to symbolize our common bond, resiliency and renewal. May it forever represent hope and strength to endure. World Trade Center Survivors' Network, September 10, 2006"