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"It's been healing, for myself as well as others, in getting stuff off not only my chest
-- without having to really say anything -- but also helping other people," he said. Some of his young interviewees had never really talked about it before, he said. He had been reluctant, too. "I definitely had a very bad experience that day," he said. His mother, an actress who had done volunteer work on fundraisers for firefighters, was on her way to a firehouse for a meeting when the first plane hit the trade center's north tower. She was quickly drawn into helping relay messages among firefighters as they began to organize the massive response, she recalls. After the south tower was hit, she dashed to Brook's school to collect him and brought him back with her to the area where she had been helping. After the dust cloud enveloped the area, they ran into a firehouse. "For a little kid, he had a horrible look on his face," Capt. Anthony Varriale remembered this week. Varriale was interviewed for Brook's documentary and was struck by how deep the teen's memories were. "I knew exactly why this kid wanted to do this, because it's probably been on his mind since he was 4 years old," Varriale said. Brook grappled for years afterward with his memories of the burning towers, the falling people the young boy initially described as "asteroids" and the firefighters who told him to take care of his mom and expressing messages for their own families. The movie gave Brook new insights into the vagaries of even such sharp memories. He realized he had recalled some events out of sequence. Some older students remembered being displaced from their schools for a shorter period than they actually were, his mother said. Some teens were loath to talk about Sept. 11. But others were "very ready to talk about it because they haven't really gotten the opportunity to before" and were willing to open up to a peer, Brook said. Many parents tried to shield their children from the horror of the attacks, and "ultimately, a lot of them never really asked their kids how they felt about that day, even years later," his mother noted. Brook shot "The Second Day" on a basic camcorder, editing it on family friends' computers because the Peters' own couldn't handle video. Thanks to his mom's acting contacts, it boasts as narrators Charles Durning and Dan Lauria, who is currently starring in Broadway's "Lombardi." Now at an arts-focused public middle school, Brook has made some other films, including animated pieces shown at a children's film festival. He wants to be a filmmaker -- and a firefighter, too.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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