For me, the Boston Marathon bombing was like a hot poker thrust into the smoldering embers of a recent fire — that then burst back into flame. The race itself is as American as apple pie, one of those iconic events by which the world knows us — and we know ourselves. These are my reflections on the fifth anniversary of this fatal attack that jolted me out of retirement.

I had three links to the Marathon bombing — family friends who got caught up in the blast, a shared history with the all-time record holder for Marathon wins, and thirty years of writing on terrorism.

My wife and I used to live in Boston but had left long ago, replaced, as it were, by one of our sons and a niece who became best friends with a neighbor named Kris. Kris attended our son’s wedding and our niece became the godmother of Kris’s handicapped daughter, Kayla. Kris lost her husband to a heart attack, but she and Kayla continued competing in the wheelchair division of marathon races.

In 2013 Kris and Kayla were on the verge of becoming the first mother-daughter duo to complete the Boston Marathon in the disabled division when the first blast bathed Boston in blood and carnage. Kris’ fiancé, Brian, had left the sidewalk to assist Kris in navigating a pool of reporters and was struck in the head by shrapnel just as he reached them. Miraculously, all three survived.

Kris, Kayla, and Brian’s close call in the Marathon bombing jolted me out of retirement and into a writer’s rage of anger. We had welcomed the Tsarnaev brothers, Tamerlan and Dzhokhar, giving them a chance to integrate into our culture and pursue the American dream. Instead, they had used low-tech terrorism, two pressure-cooker bombs, to give us an American nightmare.

Using my experiences in Northern Ireland and familiarity with Boston, I poured out article after article, soon reaching fifty. But as I delved into the hatred that terrorists, both foreign and domestic, had for America, seeing us as a bastion of imperialistic exploitation and discrimination, I began to reorient my writing. I saw how narrow and unfairly focused this hatred was on a particular flaw — as they saw it — in our American system. They were literally blowing up a tree without seeing the forest.

While no nation is perfect, my reflections on our history and my ancestral experiences, began turning the terrorists’ hatred of America into my own renewed love for our country — not “our country right or wrong” but our country striving to move forward, correct flaws and injustices, and be that shining city on the hill that could be the beacon of hope for others, the torch of liberty held high by our iconic Lady Liberty statue on Bedloe’s Island. Look up not down.

I used my great-aunt’s experience of crossing the Cumberland Gap mountain in a wagon (since the train tunnel had caved in), the team of horses that pulled the wagon having to rest every one hundred yards to reach the top of the mountain. Rewarded with a sunrise view of ridges of mountains bathed in a blue haze, Aunt Mary said she was in four states at one time — Kentucky, Virginia, Tennessee, and a state of bliss. My articles referred to this as an example of America’s making piecemeal but generally steady progress in removing injustices to people of color, women, gays, workers, the impoverished, the handicapped, and other groups deserving more equitable and fair treatment.

The young terrorist has neither the time, patience, nor enough life experiences to see a single perceived injustice in a broader context. I will receive withering criticism for inferring that such young men (and a few females) are hot-headed and make rash decisions to go out and kill a few people on the street or at the mall as an outlet for their anger. Those that survive to become older retired terrorists — there are many such men in Northern Ireland — generally realize that their violent methods were not only futile but counter-productive. Yet they had committed their life to “the cause” and cannot let go of at least giving lip service to that great idealistic motivator that robbed them of their youth and others of their lives.

So I began writing terrorism articles that were more analytical and more infused with American history and traditions—such as the Boston Marathon which was won seven times by Clarence DeMar, a cousin of my father’s best friend. They had all grown up Madeira, Ohio, exemplifying small-town American’s contribution to American greatness—and to the Boston Marathon.

James F. Burns is a retired professor at the University of Florida

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