Chief
of
Department
Edward
Kilduff
thanks
Astronaut
Mike
Massimino
at
the
National
9/11
Memorial
and
Museum
as
he
stands
with
Museum
Director
Alice
Greenwald.
When
packing
items
for
a
Hubble
Space
Telescope
service
mission
on
the
Shuttle
Atlantis
in
May
2009,
NASA
Astronaut
Mike
Massimino
said
he
carefully
considered
the
items
he
would
take
with
him.
Since
room
was
limited,
he
said,
“We
wanted
to
bring
things
for
groups
that
have
meaning
to
us.”
He
remembered
that
when
he
suggested
he
and
his
six
crewmates
bring
an
American
flag
on
behalf
of
the
men
and
women
who
perished
on
Sept.
11,
2001,
he
got
a
resounding
“yes.”
So
on
Jan.
28,
the
24th
anniversary
of
the
Shuttle
Challenger
disaster,
he
presented
the
flag
to
the
National
9/11
Memorial
and
Museum
in
lower
Manhattan.
“We
deeply
appreciate
what
Mike
did
and
it
will
hold
a
very
special
place
in
our
hearts,”
said
Chief
of
Department
Edward
Kilduff.
“We
will
certainly
treasure
this
flag.”
Chief
of
Department
Edward
Kilduff
and
Astronaut
Mike
Massimino
in
front
of
the
flag
that
was
flown
in
space
in
honor
of
all
those
who
died
on
Sept.
11,
2001.
Dr.
Massimino’s
father
was
a
chief
inspector
for
the
FDNY’s
Bureau
of
Fire
Prevention.
Chief
Kilduff
read
a
tribute
message
from
one
of
his
father’s
former
coworkers
during
the
ceremony.
The
astronaut
added
that
he
went
on
his
first
mission
to
space
just
months
after
9/11
and
his
crew
brought
with
them
patches,
flags
and
a
poster
honoring
the
343
members
of
the
FDNY
lost
in
the
tragedy.
“Mike
represents
the
best
of
who
we
are
in
this
country,”
said
Joe
Daniels,
President
of
the
9/11
Memorial.
The
Museum
Director,
Alice
Greenwald,
added,
“This
flag
underscores
the
notion
that
there
are
many
ways
we
can
remember
those
who
were
lost.”
The
flag
has
orbited
the
earth
197
times,
traveled
5.276
million
miles
and
spent
571
hours
in
space.
It
is
now
on
temporary
display
at
the
9/11
Memorial
Preview
Site.
“We
will
never
forget
the
heroic
acts
of
Sept.
11
and
its
aftermath,”
he
said.