
With
FDNY Lt. Brian Bonsignore

FDNY Lt.
George Riley looks for his missing son

FDNY Chiefs
Hayden, Callan & Pfeifer

Sun sets
on first Sunday after attacks

The tool
of choice for digging
PAPD officer
Jimmy Cronin digs for remains

Ironworker
cuts crosses for 9/11 families
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Marlon Suson is a professional actor-playwright who resides in Manhattan & an Honorary Battalion Chief in the Fire Department of New York (FDNY). Just months after the attacks of September 11, 2001, he stepped away from his theatrical career after he was requested to take on a unique role: To be the Official Photographer at Ground Zero for the Uniformed Firefighters Association & Uniformed Fire Officers Association (FDNY). Like all New Yorkers and wanting to contribute to the relief efforts in any way he could, he began shooting on the morning of 9/11 and was appointed Official Photographer at Ground Zero in late December of 2001. He spent six days per week and approximately 17 hours per day “living” at Ground Zero, where he documented every phase of the recovery. He was allowed access to every area at Ground Zero and given strict guidelines, which included:
• Not to release any of the images until the Recovery was over
• Not to shoot images of human remains.
• To share future proceeds with 9/11 charities.
In addition, he was not salaried by anyone and had to take out bank loans in excess of $8000.00 in order to finish his documentation of the "Recovery." The FDNY first caught wind
of Mr. Suson’s work in December of 2001, when the Manhattan Trustee
for the Uniformed Firefighter's Association, Rudy Sanfilippo, was receiving
complimentary immunotherapy and vitamin drips at a well-known holistic
clinic. Mr. Sanfilippo, a survivor of the WTC collapse on 9/11, was
having lung complications. Mr. Suson
had arranged the free care for several firemen who were experiencing
breathing problems from September 11. It was this impromptu meeting
between Suson and Sanfilippo that led the Uniformed Firefighters
Association to view Mr. Suson’s award-winning website, SeptemberEleven.net,
and then allow him full, unrestricted access to every area of Ground
Zero. Early on, he didn’t shoot very much; choosing instead to focus
on becoming friendly with the Chiefs and fixtures that ran the WTC
site. Firemen were at first spooked when they saw Mr. Suson shooting
and were uneasy. They feared he was exploiting the sacred site but
this changed quickly as they got to know him and also noticed that
none of his images were showing up in any of the daily newspapers.
This spoke volumes to the many men who had lost family members and
whole fire companies on September 11. Slowly, he was welcomed into
the Ground Zero “brotherhood” and was even allowed to document the
private Honor Guards from only a few feet away without the men so much as blinking an eye. Mr. Suson recalled, “I have to say I felt
as if I was always at home there. I looked forward to seeing the
men (and women) every day. It was an honor for all of us to be the
ones to help out firsthand in the recovery efforts. We knew we were
making a difference.” To listen to an in-depth radio interview on Mr. Suson's experiences at Ground Zero, you may click here. Whenever financially possible, Marlon Suson's non-profit Museum donates to assorted charities and is particularly supportive of charities having to do with Mesothelioma research, such as the Mesothelioma & Asbestos Awareness Center (MAA Center).
One Battalion
Chief in particular, Stephen
Zaderiko, took Mr. Suson under his wing. “He spent time educating
me on different aspects of the site, which included the art of making
a recovery. He literally taught me how to dig when I wasn’t shooting;
showing me what to look for in the way of remains. It was an honor
to be able to dig but quite frightening the first time I did it.
That’s when everything got quite real for me. No more hiding behind
the lens. I really looked up to him; he was always at Ground Zero,
even on his days off and always stayed upbeat.” Another Chief Mr.
Suson credited for his images and emotional support was Battalion
Chief Jim Riches.
“Chief Riches lost his son on 9-11 and God himself couldn’t pull
Chief Riches away from Ground Zero. I called him the gentle giant
as he never spoke much but when he did, it mattered. He was very
supportive of my work and genuinely cared about everyone at the
site. It was quite a day when Chief Riches finally found his fireman
son, Jimmy, Jr. in the North Tower area.” One last catalyst to Mr.
Suson attaining his unique images at key moments during the recovery
was a volunteer recovery worker known simply as "Mike The Beard."
A bear of a man who sported a thick beard, overalls, size 14 work
boots, coke-bottle thick glasses and was always covered in the trademark
brown-gray, Ground Zero mud, “Beard” often drove Mr. Suson around
the site in an ATV. “He’d often wake me up at two or three in the
morning while I slept in St. Paul’s Church and told me to be outside in two minutes. He would do this when he thought there was something
happening down in the hole that should be documented, so he’d pick
me up in this muddy, Honda ATV “Gator” and whiz me down to wherever
the action was happening. I attribute some of my best photographs
to his being so attentive and involved in my documentation.” Mr.
Suson, who stockpiled his collection of images for many months,
was virtually unknown to the media until the fire union granted
him permission to release the images in the last week of the recovery
at Ground Zero. On May 28, 2002, the New York Times broke the story of his singular journey into Ground Zero with a feature, half-page,
color photo story entitled, “From a Camera at Ground Zero, Rare
Photos of an Agonizing Dig” by Susan Sachs. The morning that the
story broke, Mr. Suson was contacted by every major media outlet
in the world, including Fox News Channel, CNN, SKY (UK), CBS, NBC
and ABC. His first major interview, a five-minute featured segment
on CNN Worldwide, was shaky. “I was only a few days out of Ground
Zero and suddenly I had to talk about my experiences with a camera
in my face and I couldn’t do it. I got choked up every time I opened
my mouth, so CNN was kind enough to pair me up with a very sensitive
producer who made sure I felt comfortable, which included my not
being able to see the video camera. It was a slow process, that
first interview, but the final product was an accurate tale in words
and images that told the story of my journey into the heart of Ground
Zero. I still get choked up every time I watch that interview as
I can see just how emotionally vulnerable I was during that period.”
That five-minute segment remains to this day the longest taped story
ever produced on CNN.
Book offers quickly
followed and Mr. Suson, courted heavily by Judith Regan of Regan
Books, signed with the smaller Barnes Noble Publishing to
release, "Requiem: Images of Ground Zero", a 200-page pictorial
of Day 1 through the closing ceremonies. The book was endorsed by
the most notable firemen in the FDNY, with the foreward penned by
highly respected Assistant Chief of Operations Joseph W. Pfeifer,
whose brother Kevin was lost on 9/11. In keeping with his promise
to the fire union, he donated hundreds of autographed books to the
Uniformed Firefighters Association, to FDNY headquarters in Brooklyn,
to 9/11 families and to firehouses all over the New York area. In
addition, he sold books and museum posters for the UFA Widows
Children’s Fund. His works were featured on the FBI Training Network
in Quantico for their Homeland Security and Policing videos and
in 2003, 8 of his images were reviewed by the Pulitzer Prize Committee
for the 2002 awards. In August of 2002, Mr. Suson was a guest of
the U.S. Secret Service at The White House, where he was given a
private tour and signed dozens of books for the staff. From there,
he came back to New York where he was an honored speaker at the
U.S. Postal Service’s “Tribute To Heroes” ceremony, moving the packed audience with an emotional power point presentation of his Ground
Zero images set to music. His travels also included going to England,
where he accompanied British Fire Chief David O’Dwyer of the Hereford
Worcester Fire Brigades to the peak of a centuries-old, mountain
fortress called “British Camp”, where Mr. Suson dug a hole and buried
World Trade Center glass and dirt in a secret location in memory
of the British citizens who died on September 11. The dirt was given
to Mr. Suson by retired FDNY Lieutenant Paul Geidel, who spent nine months looking for his missing son, Gary Geidel, of Rescue-1 in
Manhattan. Since then, Mr. Suson has spoken all over Europe on his
work and experiences at Ground Zero, often showing up at firehouses
with historical images for people on the opposite end of the world
to remember the fallen. In 2002 and 2003, he had two different museum
exhibits at The New-York Historical Society. One exhibit, “9/11:
Loss and Remembrance”, featured the "Band of Dads" from Ground Zero.
In 2004, Mr. Suson, feeling unfulfilled in his mission to educate people as to what transpired during the Ground Zero Recovery, began writing his next Off-Broadway project, AMERICAN BROTHER - a ground zero-themed play. In addition, Mr. Suson recently penned a feature screenplay based on his own experiences at Ground Zero as the Official Photographer of record during the Recovery. Academy Award-winning actress Olympia Dukakis has already offered to act in the project when it comes to fruition. From time to time, Mr. Suson travels to different fire expos around the USA to sign books & museum posters for 10 assorted charities, including Artists 4 Hope, NYC Fire & Police WIdows Fund, The FDNY Chief Raymond Downey Memorial Fund, The UFA Widows & Children's Fund, HugsAcrossAmerica.net, Firefighter Ralph Geidel 9/11 Fund and the Brian E. Sweeney Memorial Fund. In 2004, Mr. Suson participated in a Ground Zero chemical detoxification program designed by the Church of Scientology and campaigned for by actor Tom Cruise. Mr. Suson continues to raise awareness of the courage of the Ground Zero firefighters, police and volunteers through his unique and singular images. Most importantly, these images keep the memory alive of all those who perished on the fateful day of September 11, 2001 . Mr. Suson has often stated, “Time has a way of dulling our memories and so I hope these photographs will keep people from forgetting how we need to consistently fight the war on terrorism.” Mr. Suson, in 2005, opened the Ground Zero Museum Workshop in the Meat-Packing District of New York, which conducts daily, guided tours for tourists from all over the world, as well as hosting 9/11 families and survivors groups. Upon request, Mr. Suson speaks around the world about his experiences as the Official Photographer at Ground Zero for the Uniformed Firefighters Association & Uniformed Fire Officers Association. Mr. Suson's role as Official Photographer at Ground Zero for the Fire Unions (UFA & UFOA) was a one-time position that ended when the Ground Zero Recovery ended and he no longer shoots photography for either union. His affiliation was with the 2001-2002 UFA administration from the Ground Zero Recovery period and not the current, 2007-8 UFA administration, whose current members were not elected officials nor were in office during the events of September 11 or during the "Recovery" at Ground Zero. In 2006, Gary Suson initiated a lawsuit in New York State Supreme Court against the New York Post newspaper and three of its reporters. This lawsuit is ongoing, and seeks to recover damages stemming from libel committed against Gary Suson in a series of false articles published in August and September, 2005. You may view the complaint in that lawsuit (PDF) through this link.
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With FDNY
Chaplain Christopher Keenan
Water from
Hudson River leaks into WTC site

"Today
is 11" Calendar found in PATH subway area

With actor
Robert DeNiro

PATH train
#143 emerges from the rubble

Jack Tipping
carries his son out of
Ground Zero

PATH train
#139 tangled in rebar wire

Retired old firefighters show up to help dig
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