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'Paulie's Push' remembers flight attendants lost on 9/11

'Paulie's Push' remembers flight attendants lost on 9/11
REPORTER: 200-MILE JOURNEY ON FOOT TO NEW YKOR CITY. PAULIE, THE ONLY INTHG I KNOW IS I'M GOING TO BE IN GROUND ZERO ON SEPTEMBER 11. I KNOW THAT EPDE DOWN IN MY SOUL. I'LL CARRY IT ON MY BACK. REPORTER: AFTER AN 18 MILE DAY THROUGH THE ELEMENTS, AND AN OVERNIGHT STOP CRTESOU OF TH -- >> THEY REWE HEROES. UNDER THEOS CONDITION REPORTER: PAUL SEYPOKE TO US 20 YEARS AGO. JUST NIGHT BEFORE THAT DAY. >> IT'S BEEN HARD. IT'S BEEN REAL HARD. REPORTER: THIS IS A MAN WHO'S EMOTIONS PROPELLED THENND A NOW. >> THE DIFFERENCE NOW, I'M NOT HITTING ELBOWSND KNE.ES NOW I'M HITTING POTHOLES. FINDING A SENSE OF HUMOR THROUGH THE SADNESS HAS BEEN ESSENTIAL THROUGH THE YEARS. HE'LL BE SOBER FOR 6 YEARS THIS COMING 9/11. >> I'M LIVING PROOF THAT IF YOU YOU HANG ON LONG ENOUGH, AND DON'T QUIT FIVE MINUTES BEFORE THE MIRLEAC REPORTER: THAT IT'S POSSIBLE. POSSIBLE TO LIVE OUT A VISION HE HAS HAD FOR NEARLY TWO DECADES. PAULIE'S NOT PROJECTING ANY SPECIFIC NUMBER OF MILES PER DAY HOPING HE'LL MAKE IT TMIO LFORD TONIGHT. TO FIND OUT MORE ABOUT HIS JOURNEY OR TO GIVE, GO TO WC
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'Paulie's Push' remembers flight attendants lost on 9/11
A Massachusetts man is honoring the flight attendants on board the planes that were hijacked on Sept. 11 ahead of the 20th anniversary of the terrorist attacks.Retired United flight attendant Paulie Veneto is pushing a beverage cart from Logan International Airport in Boston to Ground Zero in New York to honor the crew members.鈥淭he only thing I know is I鈥檓 going to be in Ground Zero on Sept. 11. I know that deep down in my soul. I鈥檒l carry it on my back,鈥� he said. Veneto, 62, is using his more than 200-mile journey to raise money for the victims鈥� families and their foundations and collect donations for those struggling with addiction."I pushed one all over the world at 30,000 feet. The difference now is I鈥檓 not hitting elbows and knees. Now I鈥檓 hitting potholes," he said. He said his main goal is to pay tribute to those flight attendants who showed unbelievable strength and courage under the worst conditions."They were heroes, absolute heroes under those conditions. So, I know that what I鈥檓 doing is giving some relief to these crew members' families that suffered for 20 years," he said.Veneto first spoke with sister station WCVB 20 years ago after he had returned to Boston on United Flight 175 the night before the attacks. "When you know them close, it's been hard. It鈥檚 been real hard," he said at the time. The horrors of that day started a nearly 15-year battle with opiate addiction that almost ended his life. He has been sober for six years. "I鈥檓 living proof that if you hang on long enough 鈥� and don鈥檛 quit five minutes before the miracle 鈥� that it鈥檚 possible," he said. To donate, click here.

A Massachusetts man is honoring the flight attendants on board the planes that were hijacked on Sept. 11 ahead of the 20th anniversary of the terrorist attacks.

Retired United flight attendant Paulie Veneto is pushing a beverage cart from Logan International Airport in Boston to Ground Zero in New York to honor the crew members.

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鈥淭he only thing I know is I鈥檓 going to be in Ground Zero on Sept. 11. I know that deep down in my soul. I鈥檒l carry it on my back,鈥� he said.

Veneto, 62, is using his more than 200-mile journey to raise money for the victims鈥� families and their foundations and collect donations for those struggling with addiction.

"I pushed one all over the world at 30,000 feet. The difference now is I鈥檓 not hitting elbows and knees. Now I鈥檓 hitting potholes," he said.

He said his main goal is to pay tribute to those flight attendants who showed unbelievable strength and courage under the worst conditions.

"They were heroes, absolute heroes under those conditions. So, I know that what I鈥檓 doing is giving some relief to these crew members' families that suffered for 20 years," he said.

Veneto first spoke with sister station WCVB 20 years ago after he had returned to Boston on United Flight 175 the night before the attacks.

"When you know them close, it's been hard. It鈥檚 been real hard," he said at the time.

The horrors of that day started a nearly 15-year battle with opiate addiction that almost ended his life. He has been sober for six years.

"I鈥檓 living proof that if you hang on long enough 鈥� and don鈥檛 quit five minutes before the miracle 鈥� that it鈥檚 possible," he said.

To donate, .