Cincinnati
Enquirer
Thursday,
May 6, 2004
Bush
pauses to comfort teen
'This
girl lost her mom in the World
Trade
Center
on 9-11'
By
Kristina Goetz
The Cincinnati
Enquirer
During his visit to the Golden Lamb Inn in
Lebanon
,
President Bush stops to hug Ashley Faulkner, who lost her
mom in the Sept. 11 attacks.
Photo by Lynn Faulkner
|
In
a moment largely unnoticed by the throngs of people in
Lebanon
waiting for autographs from the president of the
United
States ,
George W. Bush stopped to hold a teenager's head close to his
heart.
Lynn
Faulkner, his daughter, Ashley, and their neighbor, Linda Prince,
eagerly waited to shake the president's hand Tuesday at the Golden
Lamb Inn. He worked the line at a steady campaign pace, smiling,
nodding and signing autographs until Prince spoke:
"This
girl lost her mom in the World
Trade
Center
on 9-11."
Bush
stopped and turned back.
"He
changed from being the leader of the free world to being a father,
a husband and a man," Faulkner said. "He looked right at
her and said, 'How are you doing?' He reached out with his hand
and pulled her into his chest."
Faulkner
snapped one frame with his camera.
"I
could hear her say, 'I'm OK,' " he said.
"That's more emotion than she has shown in 21/2 years.
Then he said, 'I can see you have a father who loves you very
much.' "
"And
I said, 'I do, Mr. President, but I miss her mother every day.' It
was a special moment."
Special
for Lynn Faulkner because the Golden Lamb was the place he and his
wife, Wendy Faulkner, celebrated their anniversary every year
until she died in the south tower of the World
Trade
Center
,
where she had traveled for business.
The
day was also special for Ashley, a 15-year-old
Mason
High
School student, because the visit was
reminiscent of a trip she took four years ago with her mother and
Prince. They spent all afternoon in the rain waiting to see Bush
on the campaign trail. Ashley remembers holding her mother's hand,
eating Triscuits she packed and
bringing along a book in case she got bored.
But
this time was different. She understood what the president was
saying, and she got close enough to see him face to face.
"The
way he was holding me, with my head against his chest, it felt
like he was trying to protect me," Ashley said. "I
thought, 'Here is the most powerful guy in the world, and he wants
to make sure I'm safe.' I definitely had a couple of tears in my
eyes, which is pretty unusual for me."
The
photo has been circulating across the country, Faulkner said.
Relatives have passed it on to friends, bosses and acquaintances.
As they tell the story, they also share in Wendy Faulkner's
legacy, which her family continues through the Wendy Faulkner
Memorial Children's Foundation.
"I'm
a pretty cynical and jaded guy at this point in my life,"
Faulkner said of the moment with the president. "But this was
the real deal. I was really impressed. It was genuine and from the
heart."