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http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2001/09/22/MN123903.DTL
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Saturday, September 22, 2001 (SF Chronicle)
Parents of Flight 93 victim call for peace/They fear U.S. will
retaliate in kind
Suzanne Herel, Chronicle Staff Writer

  Deora Bodley's parents say their daughter would want them to forgive
the hijackers who crashed United Airlines Flight 93 in southwest
Pennsylvania on Sept. 11.

  They admit that it's too early for that, but yesterday Derrill
Bodley and Deborah Borza asked the United States to embrace peace
instead of retaliation.

  Deora's parents spoke publicly for the first time since the
hijacking before a memorial service at Santa Clara University, where
Deora, 20, would have been starting her junior year as a psychology and
French major.

  Borza read from one of Deora's journals, which she had found under
her daughter's bed the night of her death.

  "People ask who, what, when, where, how, why. I ask peace," Borza
read.

  Though visibly shaken, Borza and Bodley joined other survivors of
the victims killed in the terrorist attacks who have urged the nation
to
search for a peaceful resolution to violent hatreds.

  "We must not retaliate in kind as if our cause allows us to," said
Bodley, a music professor at the University of the Pacific in Stockton
and Sacramento City College.

  The name of America's new mission, Operation Infinite Justice,
"frightens me more than the terrorist attacks," he said. "I shudder to
think they chose it because they think God is on their side. That is
what terrorists think."

  The U.S. government, he said, needs to review its own role in
world affairs before trying to claim the moral high ground.

  Said Borza: "Let this passing be the start of a new conversation
that is all-inclusive, tolerant of all people's beliefs, that includes
everyone's God, that includes everyone of color, that provides a future
for all mankind to live in harmony and respect."

  Borza, who works for Copley Information Services, described her
only child as a "young, vibrant woman, fiercely independent, who loved
her freedom."

  Deora, who spent many hours tutoring elementary school students in
reading, was returning to the Bay Area from an East Coast visit with
friends. She had been booked on a later plane but was given a standby
seat on Flight 93, her mother said.

  Yesterday, a memorial stood outside the Jesuit university's Mission
Church, decorated with candles, a teddy bear, balloons and notes.

  "Deora made the sun brighter," one student had written.

____________________
E-mail Suzanne Herel at [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Copyright 2001 SF Chronicle
http://www.sfgate.com



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