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Born on September 11: A Birthday Forever Changed
Filed under: In The News, Media, Birthdays

Dinetta Wallach and her daughter Gabrielle, whose birthday is on September 11. From their downtown Manhattan neighborhood, they had a direct view of the World Trade Center. Credit: Damon Dahlen, AOL
When your birthday falls on the same date as one of the worst tragedies of humankind, yearly celebrations take a backseat to memorial services. Four families with children born on that horrific day share their stories.
Gabrielle Wallach doesn't want to celebrate her 12th birthday with cake this year. Actually, the seventh-grader told her parents that she never wants cake on her birthday. Instead of marking the occasion with indulgent sweets, Gabrielle prefers to quietly honor the 2,975 people who lost their lives eight years ago on her birthday -- September 11.
Dinetta Wallach, Gabrielle's mother, still cries when she thinks about how her little girl woke up in the family's downtown Manhattan apartment on the morning of her 4th birthday, Sept. 11, 2001, eagerly anticipating her SpongeBob SquarePants birthday cake, and how her daughter's world -- along with everyone else's -- changed.
Mother and daughter were home alone when they heard a giant boom at 8:45 a.m. It was the hijacked passenger jet, American Airlines Flight 11 out of Boston, Mass., slamming into the north tower of the World Trade Center. Minutes later, while taking in the horrifying view from a neighbor's apartment, they witnessed the second plane hit and, soon after the buildings collapse.
"Why is that building burning?," Wallach remembers her daughter asking over and over again. Then, the little girl, who was starting pre-kindergarten the next day asked, "Did my SpongeBob cake blow up, too?"
"She thought the whole city was coming down," said Wallach.

Dinetta Wallach gets emotional when she thinks about how many birthday celebrations her daughter, Gabrielle, has voluntarily given up. Credit: Damon Dahlen, AOL
That night, when Gabrielle's brother Jordan and father Fred were safely home, the family decided it was important to mark the little girl's birthday. Gabrielle's two grandmothers came by and Dad bought a pre-packaged Entenmann's cake. It was no SpongeBob, but it was something.
Gabrielle didn't talk much about 9/11 until her 5th birthday came around. Wallach asked her daughter's teacher if she could bring in cupcakes to lift the children's moods on the one-year anniversary, and the teacher agreed.
Gabrielle, who overheard the conversation, did not.
"She told me she just wanted to acknowledge all of the kids who lost parents that day," said Wallach. "She said, 'No cupcakes in school' and that she wouldn't talk about her birthday in class. That continued until she was 10."
Now a Middle-schooler, Gabrielle remains contemplative when she wakes up on her birthday. Every year since the attacks, the family gathers in the neighbor's apartment and watches the memorial beams of light that project into the evening sky were the World Trade Center once stood. The family will have an intimate dinner on Friday, but no cake.
"We'll never have cake on 9/11," said Wallach.
A Birthday Forever Changed
Gabrielle is not alone in her strong reaction to sharing her birthday with the massive tragedy that reshaped the world. Whether they were born in the years before the attacks, in 2001 or in a post-9/11 world, September 11 birthday children are a marked bunch, their birthdays forever tainted by the events of the day.
Benjamin Hesse's family members have trained themselves to say Benjamin was born "the 11th of September," so they can redirect the conversation before hearing the inevitable, "Oh, that's terrible."
The boy turned 8 in 2001. As the tragic morning unfolded, his family discovered that an uncle, Manhattan fireman Faust Apostol, went to the World Trade Center and died in the line of duty. Debbie Hesse, Benjamin's mom, broke the news to her son when she picked him up from his Long Island school, about 20 miles from the terrorist attacks. Benjamin told her afterward that he didn't want to celebrate his birthday that evening.
"I tell him no matter what happened, it was still one of the most important days in our life," said Hesse, who will take Benjamin and the family out for dinner on his 16th birthday this year. "He was too young to lose (his) birthday. Would I have changed that day? Of course."
Benjamin's school has held vigils for 9/11 victims every year since the tragedy. Because several students lost parents when the towers were attacked, Hesse and school officials agreed it was best that he not celebrate his birthday on the day itself, out of respect.
Lives Taken, Patriots Born
When Hillary O'Neill turns 8 on Friday, her parents will buy her red, white and blue balloons and place a small American flag on her birthday cake. Family friends will call the house to wish Hillary a happy birthday because the occasion gives them an excuse to celebrate something good on the anniversary of 9/11.
Hillary is proud to be born on September 11, said her mom, Heather O'Neill. In fact, Hillary pointed out to her mom last week that her name has two "L's" in it, which, for her, symbolize the towers and the 11 in her birthdate. The young girl, who goes to school with several children who lost their fathers in the 2001 attacks, wears a World Trade Center charm on her bracelet and an American flag pin on her Crocs.
But for O'Neill, her daughter's birthdate is difficult to handle. An avid scrap booker, she has yet to create a page for Hillary's birthday. The day the baby girl was born began with a perfect sky and mom-to-be O'Neill thought, "What a beautiful day to have a baby."
That feeling changed when O'Neill turned on the TV in her Norwalk, Ct., hospital room and learned of the terrorism in the midst of her labor. The hospital went into chaos as the staff prepared for the anticipated overflow of emergency-room patients from New York City.
"What am I doing bringing a child into this world when it is so evil?," O'Neill wondered, asking that the TV be turned off. Hillary was born as the hospital continued to set up for survivors, though none ever came.
O'Neill and her husband Glenn have come to believe that Hillary's life is a symbol of hope because of the day she came into the world.
"She has all of those people twinkling in her eyes," said O'Neill. "It is a source of pride for all of us in our family."
The Birth of the Future
For some children born on the September 11ths beyond 2001, the significance of the day is not yet understood. Wendy from California, who asked for anonymity, said her son, Joshua, born on Sept. 11, 2005, is not yet aware of the meaning of his birthday. Joshua was born six week prematurely and Wendy never gave his birthday a second thought. She was focused solely on her son's survival.
"I've never said anything to him," said Wendy. "As your child gets older, you can talk about it. Would I necessarily talk about it on their birthday? I don't know. ... Where do you find the line to say we are going to keep living ... versus an acknowledgment of the past?"
Editor's note: This story was originally published on September 11, 2009.











ReaderComments (Page 3 of 21)
9-09-2009 @ 10:10AM
ricochet said...Come on people! A little girl who had absolutely nothing to do with the tragedy allows this coincidence to affect her life every year? I'm really not a cold hearted person, but it's time to move on.
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9-09-2009 @ 11:49AM
Lauren said...I agree, it was horrible what happened and you have every right to feel sad about it. But seriously, moping around just because it happened on your birthday every year is a tad over-dramatic.
9-10-2009 @ 10:23AM
Jane said...Gabrielle's 4th birthday is forever tied to the event she witnessed first hand. She and her mother didn't watch it unfold on the tv they lived it. It is her choice to celebrate her birthday however she sees fit. By not having cake on her birthdate that is her way of remembering all the souls who left us that day. Sept. 11th 2001 shouldn't be something we ignore. If we don't remember it and learn from it history is going to repeat itself. Those who were lost that day and those who survived should be honored. They are forever a part of our nation's history.
9-10-2009 @ 11:41AM
Melissa said...I completely agree. She was 4! Give me a break. The picture looks so sad. It's ridiculous.
9-10-2009 @ 1:00PM
jay said...I think that it a nice thing to do . But u shouln't just not celabrate ur birthday because some one die on that day maybe u can have a moment of silence u have 2 at the least have cake u shouldn't be sad all day on ur birthday. Not celabrating on 911 is like saying if my mother is allergic to chocolate i shouldn't eat any myself. But it is ur choice and im not going toput u down.
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9-09-2009 @ 11:11AM
mpmfernandez said...My Sweet 16 was on this day, even though its my birthday on such a sad day, I celebrate it. Why, because death is as well part of life as being born. I was a month premature, so God really chose for me to enjoy this day. They will never be forgotten in my heart, or none of us, but we have to celebrate that they are in the biggest party in heaven.
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9-10-2009 @ 6:56AM
jacqueline howard said...I totally agree, 9-11 was my 31st birthday. Although I will never forget that day, it's still my birthday and I intend to celebrate it just as anyone would on their special day.
9-09-2009 @ 12:14PM
Lisa said...My daughter turned 12 on 9/11/01. It has always been a tradition that we take her out to dinner on her birthday, and that day we decided to keep the tradition going. It was important that we focus on HER not on the tragic events that were unfolding a couple hundred miles away from us. We went out to dinner as planned, but unfortunately all of the TV's in the place were showing the events of the day, showing the planes crashing into the buildings over & over again. It was rather difficult to celebrate her special day.
The following year we attended a very brief prayer service in our neighborhood but afterwards we again honored our tradition, but this time chose a restaurant that didn't have any TVs!
My "little girl" is now in college in New York state. It's difficult for her to have any celebration there because so many lost loved ones on 9/11. She has a couple of friends that understand, but most do not. I always send her a large care package full of her favorite things.
It's certainly not my daughters fault that some terrorists decided to hijack her birthday. Hers was a very difficult birth which I very nearly didn't survive, so she has always been our 9-1-1 baby and I will celebrate her birth as long as I live.
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9-09-2009 @ 6:39PM
ame s said...Great comment, and so true! There are so many people who were born on the date something horrible happened but that is no reason anyone shouldn't be able to enjoy their birthday.
9-10-2009 @ 11:11AM
LGMETS said...I think you had to live in NY on 9/11/01 to fully appreciate the horror of the day. Things at a distance don't look as bad as they do up close. For weeks afterward every plane flying over the house brought fear; restaurants had to cancel affairs because of funerals; and it seemed the entire state was covered in some sort of red, white and blue to show we weren't beaten down. My son was in one of the adjacent towers and had to run for his life as did thousands of others. We understand that you could still celebrate your daughters birthday on that day but I doubt any birthdays anywhere near the World Trade Center did. However, it is great to celebrate any 9/11 birthdays now -- we cannot let the devils who did that disgusting atrocity control the good days in our lives. We were knocked down but not for long. Get out your flags and celebrate your birthdays all you 9/11 people. Happy Birthday!
9-09-2009 @ 11:01PM
paula said...my fathers birthday is 09-11 and last year my aunt( my fathers sister) died on 09-11. yes 09-11 was a tragedy and we will forever remember that tragic day.
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9-10-2009 @ 9:04PM
Heather said...I was born on the 10th aniversery Kennedy was shot, I am not going to live my life dwelling on it. It is time for her to move on. The parents should be helping her to move on not encourageing it. What about Nov 11, or D-day, or Pearl Harbour, do people born on these days not celebrate? If anything she should be having a huge party, to celbrate life. That even on a tragic day life goes on, the bad guys can't win and take that away from us.
If she want's to stick it to the bad guys she would be celebrating big time. Right now she is giving them what they want.
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9-09-2009 @ 11:55PM
april said...my birthday is 9-11-83 and its hard for me to get through the day i lost my aunt in the world trade center its hard but look to god he heals the wounded and mends the broken he is wonderful
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9-10-2009 @ 9:37AM
jamie said...My birthday is also 9-11-83. Like everyone else, I don't forget a single detail of the day in '01. And those first few years afterward were hard. No one wanted to celebrate because it was weird to celebrate when the rest of the world was so solemn--including me. But this year I am planning to get together with a number of my friends--some of them I haven't seen since that day. We're making up for the party that was canceled 8 years ago, and I'm looking forward to it. And as my parents say, "You came first. You can't change that." They also always assure me that it's a special day regardless and we can remember and celebrate at the same time.
9-09-2009 @ 11:37PM
yolanda said...My son was born on 09/11/91 this year he will be 18 years old and people are so insensitive to this they say "He will remember this day for the rest of his life! " I say he already does! "Who doesn't remember their birthday??" I believe my son was a blessing from God so i was told to name him John God Bless America!!
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9-10-2009 @ 10:25AM
LynnP said...I also have a son born on 9-11, and I also hear how awful for him that that is his birthday. It truly angers me to hear that from "adults" who really should know better.
On the one year anniversary of the attacks, someone said that to him at school. He came home very depressed and wouldn't at first tell me what was wrong. When he did confide in me, I had to walk away from him for a few minutes so that he wouldn't see how angry and upset I was. When I sat down to talk to him about it, he asked me if we could still celebrate his birthday anymore. He turns 19 tomorrow, and I plan on having a huge cake, balloons, and presents for him like I have for the last 18.
I feel that to do any less, is to allow those terrorists to win, albeit in a small way
9-10-2009 @ 1:43AM
karie said...I have a daughter born on September 11th. She was 15 years old the day 9-11 happened. For years she had always asked why nothing exciting ever happened on her birthday. Well, she isn't asking anymore.
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9-10-2009 @ 9:58AM
drew said...my daughter was was bron 9/11 the day before her brithday she said it would be a day she would remenber and it was. she is still having a hard time with it. she will be 20
9-10-2009 @ 6:21AM
Moi said...Every day in the year is marked by a tragedy somewhere, somewhen in history. Shall we all give up joy because of that? I find it hard to believe that any of the victims of 9/11 would begrudge a child their cake or happy celebration that children born on other days enjoy and although I know that the sentiment has been overused, don't let the terrorists win. Don't let them steal the joy.
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9-10-2009 @ 9:17AM
lschrow said...like many others, we lost loved ones that day.
as i told my daughter (who shares her birthday with adolf hitler, which a suprising number of people have commented on), there is good & evil in the world. each person born on a day previously associated with evil has the unique opportunity to influence the "bad" that particular day is known for, by changing the world for the better.
every little act of altruism adds up to better world.
God bless the innocents, & please give us the strength to be empathetic enough to take action to make Earth a more caring place.
Enjoy your birthday, & try to use it as reason to improve the world!