Hours before a light-as-air ballet lifted heavy hearts Sunday outside the State Capitol, before the Rev. Peg Chemberlin proclaimed "we will win the war on terror only when we release the terror within," before Sheila Ray Charles did her namesake daddy proud with a stirring rendition of "America the Beautiful," Julie Gonsoski had her family in place.
Ensconced in a portable chair next to her and son Matthew was a life-size cutout of Senior Master Sgt. David Gonsoski of the Minnesota Air National Guard.
"I like to call it my soldier-on-a-stick," said Julie, 46, of St. Paul, as the Minnesotans Standing Together gathering kicked off with Tchaikovsky's gossamer Serenade for Strings segueing into the utter dissonance of eight people reciting the names of 9/11 victims.
From the Capitol steps to a Brooklyn Center mosque and an Eden Prairie megachurch and in other towns across the state, people took time for reflection.
The poignance of Master Sgt. Gonsoski's image sitting smack dab in front of the Capitol was diminished not a whit by the fact that he is alive and well, halfway across the world on his second post-9/11 deployment "in the desert."
When he checks his wife's Facebook page, the airman will get at least a partial recounting of the sun- and memory-splashed day. He might read about the heart-rending mix of Barber's Adagio for Strings with the parading of a black banner topped by an anguished In the Heart of the Beast puppet, hands covering eyes.
Or Chemberlin, executive director of the Minnesota Council of Churches, warning the crowd of about 500 not to let "fear ... stick a knife into the soul of our nation and twist it until we give up."
Or the Holly's Center Dance Company turning Bruce Springsteen's "My City of Ruins" from a dirge into a sprightly evocation of purity and hope.