Today is the first anniversary of Superstorm Sandy hitting the Northeast. It is also the anniversary of the sinking the Bounty off Cape Hatteras on the coast of North Carolina. Recently, survivors of the Bounty returned to the site of the sinking, on the schooner Liberty Clipper. They cast overboard a weighted bottle containing messages from fellow survivors, past Bounty crew and loved ones in the memory of Captain Robin Walbridge and Claudene Christian, who died when the ship sank. Messages in a bottle seem an appropriate a memorial for those lost at sea.
I am not sure how or if Superstorm Sandy should be memorialized. There have been, and will be, memorials for the more than 160 who died in the storm and for the entire communities washed away or destroyed. That is fitting. Memorials are for discrete events. So much about Superstorm Sandy, however, is ongoing. It has not ended. There are still thousands in New York and New Jersey who were forced from their homes and still have not been able to return. There are still hundreds of damaged businesses and stores struggling to reopen. Many will stay shuttered for good.