Operation Ukraine
Operation Ukraine is a nonprofit organization located in Columbus MS. This is a relief organization that collects & distributes all over the world.
06/15/2026
Interesting read!
"Her name was Betty Ong.
She grew up in San Francisco's Chinatown, the daughter of a family that ran a small grocery store on Jackson Street. She played in the alleys and parks of the neighborhood as a little girl. She wasn't wealthy. She wasn't famous. She had a dream — to travel, to see the world, to take care of people — and she found a way to live it.
In 1987, she became a flight attendant for American Airlines.
She was good at it. Not just competent — genuinely good. The kind of flight attendant who walked the aisles on overnight flights while passengers slept, tucking in blankets, softly checking on the ones who were awake. The kind who would hold a stranger's baby so a tired parent could rest.
Her family called her ""Bee.""
On the morning of September 11, 2001, Betty assigned herself to Flight 11 — Boston to Los Angeles. She wanted to connect to San Francisco and then fly on to Hawaii with her sister. A vacation she had been looking forward to.
At 7:59 a.m., the plane took off from Boston Logan Airport.
At approximately 8:20 a.m. — twenty-one minutes into the flight — Betty Ong walked to the back galley of the aircraft, picked up a GTE Airfone, and dialed American Airlines reservations.
The phone was answered by Vanessa Minter, a reservations agent at the center in Cary, North Carolina.
Betty did not panic. She did not cry. In a voice that Minter would later describe as steady and immediate, she said the words that no one had ever called in before:
""I think we're being hijacked.""
Minter immediately patched in her supervisor, Nydia Gonzalez, and stayed on the line.
For the next twenty-three minutes, Betty Ong told the ground everything she could see.
The cockpit was not answering. The crew could not get through the door. Two flight attendants had been stabbed. A passenger in business class had been killed. Someone had sprayed what she believed was Mace — people couldn't breathe. She gave seat numbers. She described positions, movements, what she could hear.
She was sitting at the back of the plane. She could not see the cockpit. She could not stop what was happening. She could only do one thing — keep talking, keep the line open, keep feeding information to the people on the ground who were scrambling to understand what none of them had ever encountered before.
She kept talking.
""In a very calm, professional and poised demeanor, Betty Ong relayed to us detailed information of the events unfolding on Flight 11,"" Nydia Gonzalez later testified to the 9/11 Commission. ""Several media accounts claimed that Betty was hysterical with fear, shrieking and gasping for air. Those accounts were wrong.""
She had been there. She knew.
What Betty didn't know — what none of them could have known — was what her call was setting in motion on the ground below her.
The seat numbers she read out calmly over the phone would allow the FBI to identify the hijackers within hours. The information she relayed traveled from American Airlines operations to the FAA to air traffic control in real time — building a picture of something coordinated, something deliberate, something no protocol had ever been written for.
Her call was the first confirmation that what was happening in the sky that morning was not an accident.
It was the reason the FAA made a decision that had never been made before in the history of the United States — and has never been made since.
Every plane flying over American airspace was ordered to land. All of it — grounded. For the first time in history. Groundwater World
Betty Ong made that happen.
At 8:46 a.m., American Airlines Flight 11 struck the North Tower of the World Trade Center.
The line went quiet.
Gonzalez stayed on the open call for a moment, not yet understanding what had happened.
""Betty, talk to me. Betty, are you there? Betty? Okay... I think we might have lost her.""
Betty's family spent months afterward fighting simply to hear her voice again. Her brother Harry called Senator Edward Kennedy's office and asked for help. In January 2002, the family was brought to a private room at San Francisco Airport and played the recording.
It was the first time they had heard her speak since the morning of the 11th.
""Her first duty is for the passengers and for the plane,"" Harry said afterward. ""She didn't call us because her first responsibility as a flight attendant that day was to help the plane and the passengers, and that's why she made that call."" EBSCO
In the spring of 2002, the New York City Medical Examiner's office called Betty's sister Cathie. At the base of where the North Tower had stood, a two-inch fragment of bone and some soft tissue had been recovered and identified. That was all that remained of Betty Ann Ong. NBC News
She was brought home to San Francisco. She is buried at Cypress Lawn Memorial Park in Colma, in the Ong family plot.
When the 9/11 Commission played portions of her call in 2004, the room fell completely silent.
Vanessa Minter — the reservations agent who answered the phone that morning — has given interviews for over twenty years about what it meant to be on the other end of that call.
""You have to understand,"" Minter said. ""Betty Ong, to me, was the hero. She was the hero. Not me."" EBSCO
The recreation center in San Francisco's Chinatown where Betty played as a child has been renamed in her honor. Her name is carved into the memorial at Ground Zero. A foundation bearing her name sends children to camp and teaches them about healthy living — because that was the kind of person she was. Someone who thought about children she would never meet.
She was going to Hawaii.
She was forty-five years old.
She had fourteen years of putting blankets on sleeping strangers and holding other people's babies on overnight flights.
And on the morning the world changed, she walked to the back of a hijacked plane, picked up a phone, and did her job — completely, professionally, without panic, without hesitation — for twenty-three minutes.
She talked until there was nothing left to say.
Her name was Betty Ong.
Remember it. "
Its cold here but its about twenty to to thirty degrees coldthere. We can get in our cars , crank it up and warm up. Go to walmart to warm up. Million folks in one city, where do they go to get out of below 0 degree temperatures?
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803 9th Street S
Columbus, MS
39701