JERSEY CITY, N.J. - It is a symbiotic relationship - separated by a river, connected by an economy, and linked forever by the morning of Sept. 11, 2001.
New Jersey sends many of its residents into New York each day for work, but about 700 of those people did not return home that day. In a memorial to be unveiled Saturday for the 10th anniversary of the attacks, that tragic but enduring relationship between New York and New Jersey is presented on two stark steel walls.
Called "Empty Sky," the memorial is built on a berm on the edge of the Hudson River at Liberty State Park. As tourists and mourners walk between the paneled walls toward the water, passing the names of 746 New Jersey victims etched in four-inch lettering, they will come face-to-face with the empty sky where the twin towers once stood as part of an exceptional view of Lower Manhattan.

