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Bill Clinton returns to Oklahoma City 30 years after bombing

Warning: This story contains disastrous images

Thirty years after the fatal homemade attacks in American history, former President Bill Clinton returned to Oklahoma City on Saturday to remember those who killed and comforted those affected by the bombing.

Clinton was president on April 19, 1995, when a truck bomb exploded and destroyed a nine-storey federal building in downtown Oklahoma City. He gave a keynote speech at a memorial ceremony near the Oklahoma City National Memorial Museum.

Clinton, now 78, has been widely praised for how he helped the city tackle its grief in the wake of the bombing that killed 168 people, including 19 children. He says it was President’s Day that he never forgot.

Former President Clinton, who was in office during the Oklahoma City bombing, visited the area to honor those killed and affected by what happened 30 years ago. Reuters

“As 30 minutes ago, I came here for that service ceremony with Hillary, saying, “You lost too much, but you didn’t lose everything. You certainly haven’t lost America. “I think we’re maintaining that commitment.”

Clinton visited the Oklahoma City National Memorial Museum many years after the bombing and gave a speech on major anniversary.

On Saturday, Clinton also warned of the polarized nature of modern politics and the way such divisions lead to violence, as they did 30 years ago. He said there is a lot that can be learned from “Oklahoma standards.” This is a term coined to refer to the city’s response to bombing by uniting in service, honor, kindness.

Ruins of the Alfred P. Muller Federal Building following the explosion in downtown Oklahoma City. AP
Aerial view of damage after a truck bomb tores the building. AP
The bombing killed 168 people, including 19 children. Zuma24.com

“Oklahoma City, America needs you today,” he said. “I hope that all Americans can see their lives unfolding here, hear these stories and just see their lives unfolding.”

Other speakers included former Oklahoma Gov. Frank Keating and former Oklahoma City Mayor Ron Norick. The families of those killed in the bombing read 168 names of those killed in the attack.

Saturday’s ceremony was originally scheduled to take place on the monument grounds, but was moved into the adjacent church due to heavy rain.

Workers at Alfred P. Maraufederalville place flowers and memorabilia at the scene of a deadly car bomb. AP
“Oklahoma City, America needs you today,” Clinton said. “I hope that all Americans can see their lives unfolding here, hear these stories and just see their lives unfolding.” AP

After the ceremony, a procession of bagpipe players from the Oklahoma City Fire Department led many of the people attending across the street to an outdoor monument built on the grounds where the federal building once stood. The memorial carries the names of those who were killed, with museums, reflecting pools, 168 empty glass, bronze and stones. The 19 chairs are smaller than the other chairs to represent the children killed.

Among the top missions of the monument is to help people understand the pointlessness of political violence and teach a new generation about the impact of bombing, said Kari Watkins, president and CEO of the monument.

“When we built this place, we knew that one day we would reach a generation of people who weren’t born or who didn’t remember the story,” Watkins said. “I think it’s not just the kids, but the teachers who teach those kids, I think it’s now.”

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