Awareness
Historical understanding is the foundation. Participants explore timelines, testimony, and context before moving into action.
Active Remembrance 25th Anniversary
A national civic education initiative for the 25th anniversary of September 11.
We remember so they never forget. A framework for active remembrance across schools, workplaces, civic organizations, and families, built around five pillars and designed for every generation.
Ambassador Burns / Leadership Under Pressure
How Active Remembrance Works
Historical understanding is the foundation. Participants explore timelines, testimony, and context before moving into action.
Remembrance moves from observation into action through lessons, local memorials, oral histories, and service.
Participants recognize their role in carrying memory forward, whether they are students, educators, families, or civic leaders.
Remembrance becomes part of ongoing civic culture, not a single annual moment or isolated classroom lesson.
Why this matters now
For millions of students today, September 11 is history, not memory. They were not born yet. The risk is not that they will forget what happened. The risk is that remembrance becomes abstract, institutional, and disconnected from civic life.
September 11, 2026 marks the 25th anniversary. An entire generation has grown up with no firsthand memory of that day.
The number of living witnesses, survivors, first responders, and family members diminishes every year.
Memorials across the United States can become active spaces for research, reflection, service, and civic engagement.
A unified framework can connect schools, workplaces, families, civic groups, and memorial sites through shared participation.
The future of remembrance depends on participation.
Who are you teaching?
Curriculum framework
Every lesson is built around one of five pillars, the core themes that give 9/11 its lasting meaning. Each contains four modules expandable across audiences.
Why this pillar matters
For students born after 2001, 9/11 is history, not memory. This pillar gives them the context behind the morning: the geopolitical conditions, prior attacks, and missed signals that make the events legible.
Why this pillar matters
September 11 is also a record of people making decisions under pressure: responders, passengers, office workers, neighbors, volunteers, and families acting in the middle of uncertainty.
Why this pillar matters
September 11 revealed vulnerability, but it also revealed how individuals, organizations, governments, and communities respond during moments of profound disruption.
Why this pillar matters
What happened after September 11 is as important as what happened on it: the recovery, rebuilding, long-term health consequences, and the work of carrying memory forward.
Why this pillar matters
The final question every participant should leave with is what this means now: for civic life, leadership, public memory, and the next generation.
Engagement pathways
Active remembrance takes many forms. These pathways are designed for schools, organizations, families, and communities to participate in ways that fit their context.
Connect schools, organizations, and families to nearby memorials and transform static monuments into active places for research, reflection, and service.
Explore PathwayUse survivor accounts, first responder testimony, and community oral histories to help participants preserve and carry stories forward.
Explore PathwayApply real stories from civic and professional leaders to decision-making, resilience, and responsibility today.
Explore PathwayAdditional pathways are being developed for families, foundations, and community partners ahead of the September 2026 launch.
Use the framework to build age-appropriate lessons, discussions, and acts of remembrance.
Help the Foundation preserve stories and create meaningful learning for future generations.