I, too, was living near Oklahoma City when the blast went off five years ago today. Here are a few more details: the building blown up was the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. The explosion occurred at 9:02 am (Central Time). People came from all over the world to help us dig our friends and relatives out of the rubble. Connie Chung had the poor taste to remark, "Not bad for a bunch of hillbillies." Timothy McVeigh was captured, tried, convicted, and sentenced to death for the murder of the Federal agents, and Terry Nichols was sentenced to prison as an accomplice.

Today, April 19, 2000, is the official opening of the Oklahoma City National Memorial, which includes a park, an interactive museum, and the Memorial Institute for the Prevention of Terrorism. President Clinton and Vice-President Al Gore are both attending the dedication services.

Now is the time for healing to begin. The victims and victims' relatives, when asked about a Memorial five years ago, responded in favor with one stipulation: they wanted to somehow prevent this horror from ever happening on American soil ever again. That is why the Institute for the Prevention of Terrorism is part of the Memorial. It is not enough to learn from our past; we must also take the future into our own hands and ACT upon what we learn. We must work through the sorrow to build a better tomorrow.