{ "html": "\x3cdiv class=\"general_button ctools-back-link\"\x3e\x3ca href=\"/resource-libraries/back?back_link=back-link\" class=\"back-link\"\x3eBack\x3c/a\x3e\x3c/div\x3e\x3cdiv class=\"resource-buttons\"\x3e\x3cdiv id=\"email-share-button\" class=\"general_button\"\x3e\x3ca href=\"/email-resource-library/5862\" class=\"email-share rounded ctools-use-modal ctools-modal-email-button-display-modal-style\"\x3eEmail\x3c/a\x3e\x3c/div\x3e\x3c/div\x3e\x3cdiv class=\"resource-general-item\"\x3e\x3cdiv class=\"view view-resource-tree view-id-resource_tree view-display-id-block_5 library-item view-dom-id-2\"\x3e\n    \n  \n  \n      \x3cdiv class=\"view-content\"\x3e\n        \x3cdiv class=\"views-row views-row-1 views-row-odd views-row-first views-row-last\"\x3e\n      \n  \x3cdiv class=\"views-field-title\"\x3e\n                \x3cspan class=\"field-content\"\x3eA Picture Worth More than a Thousand Words\x3c/span\x3e\n  \x3c/div\x3e\n  \n  \x3cdiv class=\"views-field-field-post-image-fid\"\x3e\n                \x3cspan class=\"field-content\"\x3e\x3cimg src=\"http://www.behrmanhouse.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/library_item_610w/posts/images/twin%20towers%20shutterstock_942859.jpg\" alt=\"\" title=\"\"  class=\"imagecache imagecache-library_item_610w imagecache-default imagecache-library_item_610w_default\" width=\"375\" height=\"500\" /\x3e\x3c/span\x3e\n  \x3c/div\x3e\n  \n  \x3cdiv class=\"views-field-field-image-cache-fid\"\x3e\n                \x3cdiv class=\"field-content\"\x3e\x3c/div\x3e\n  \x3c/div\x3e\n  \n  \x3cdiv class=\"views-field-field-inline-images-fid\"\x3e\n                \x3cdiv class=\"field-content\"\x3e\x3c/div\x3e\n  \x3c/div\x3e\n  \n  \x3cdiv class=\"views-field-body\"\x3e\n                \x3cdiv class=\"field-content\"\x3e\x3cp\x3eFrom afar, Daniel Miller\x26#39;s drawing appears to be a simple picture of the Twin Towers, reaching high into the sky. But closer up, the pen-and-ink drawing by the 15-year-old student at the Melvin J. Berman Hebrew Academy in Rockville, Maryland, reveals that it has much more to say. What appear from a distance to be black lines are actually letters spelling out the names of the victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks. Also embedded in the illustration are Daniel\x26#39;s personal dedication and six poems inspired by the tragedy, most of them written by other teenagers.\x3c/p\x3e\n\x3cp\x3eJewish artists like Daniel have created pictures out of words for centuries using an ancient technique called microcalligraphy.\x3c/p\x3e\x3c/div\x3e\n  \x3c/div\x3e\n  \x3c/div\x3e\n    \x3c/div\x3e\n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n\x3c/div\x3e \x3c/div\x3e" }