The above pictures were taken on my way out of New Orleans on Friday, June 15. I visited the Lower 9th Ward. The area is adjacent to the canal levee which broke after Katrina. Many of the homes were washed away, while the others have been removed because they were condemned. Once again the pictures don't convey the vastness of the destruction. What now are weed filled lots, were once block after block of homes.
Wednesday, June 20, 2007
I'm BACK!!!!!!!!!
The above pictures were taken on my way out of New Orleans on Friday, June 15. I visited the Lower 9th Ward. The area is adjacent to the canal levee which broke after Katrina. Many of the homes were washed away, while the others have been removed because they were condemned. Once again the pictures don't convey the vastness of the destruction. What now are weed filled lots, were once block after block of homes.
Thursday, June 14, 2007
It's time to go home.
It's my last night in New Orleans. The LDR team just took me out to dinner to say thank you. Katie, Larry, and Ellen have been great host. I really respect the work that they do here at the volunteer camp. Each week they have to train new volunteers to go out and face all the work that needs to be done in the city and surrounding areas. They along with many other groups throughout this region face an impossible task each day.
The hardest thing about leaving is feeling that I have not done enough. After 15 work days of Mucking, tarping roofs, helping to install counters and sinks, and cleaning out yards it just seems that I haven't done enough. I want to save every starfish on the beach, not just the ones I can pickup and through back in the water.
Tomorrow just after lunch I'll pack up the van and begin the long trip home. I have had an EXPERIENCE here that I will never forget. I hope that some of you get the opportunity to come and work here in New Orleans.
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Eyes Wide Open!
Sorry I don't have any pics to post today. I left my camera a the volunteer center again. I'll try to do better tomorrow, we're going to a new place to muck. In the mean time please check out this site; http://www.sojo.net/special/multimedia/video/061120_new_orleans/00_main.html, it's a slide presentation from Sojourners. Alli sent it to me, she'll be coming home from Mexico in about 4 weeks. Hi Gen, Erin, & Laura. Enjoy the last few days of school. I'll be home soon.
Sunday, June 10, 2007
Only 6 days before the long trip home
Thursday, June 7, 2007
It's starting to get HOT down here!
Wednesday, June 6, 2007
Scenes from the City
It was a hard day of work today. In the morning we covered a roof with large tarps to stop damage from rain. The temperature was in the 90's. The afternoon was spent doing a lot of house keeping jobs around the volunteer center. I ended up outside again and it was hot & humid. It really wasn't a hard day of work, it was just the sun took every ounce of energy.
The pics above are of homes and a church that are still vacant. The church rebuilt next door and the homeowners are still waiting on promised money so they can repair their homes and move back into them. The boat was brought into the neighborhood by the storm. It's amazing how many boats I've seen in peoples yards nearly 2 years after the storm.
Thanks to Deni and John & Sonya for the Starfish story:
Based on the story by Loren Eisley...
I awoke early, as I often did, just before sunrise to walk by the ocean's edge and greet the new day. As I moved through the misty dawn, I focused on a faint, far away motion. I saw a youth, bending and reaching and flailing arms, dancing on the beach, no doubt in celebration of the perfect day soon to begin.
As I approached, I sadly realized that the youth was not dancing to the bay, but rather bending to sift through the debris left by the night's tide, stopping now and then to pick up a starfish and then standing, to heave it back into the sea. I asked the youth the purpose of the effort. "The tide has washed the starfish onto the beach and they cannot return to the sea by themselves," the youth replied. "When the sun rises, they will die, unless I throw them back to the sea."
As the youth explained, I surveyed the vast expanse of beach, strectching in both directions beyond my sight. Starfish littered the shore in numbers beyond calculation. The hopelessness of the youth's plan became clear to me and I countered, "But there are more starfish on this beach than you can ever save before the sun is up. Surely you cannot expect to make a difference."
The youth paused briefly to consider my words, bent to pick up a starfish and threw it as far as possible. Turning to me he simply said, "I made a difference to that one."
I left the boy and went home, deep in thought of what the boy had said. I returned to the beach and spent the rest of the day helping the boy throw starfish in to the sea.
Tuesday, June 5, 2007
Does anyone know the Starfish on the Beach Story?
We had a good day at the house today. We removed the sunken floors and some of the the support beams that had collasped. We are still waiting on the final word if the house can be salvaged. The more we work on it, the beeter we feel the chances will be to save it. At htis point the owner wants to save it. It has been his home for a very long time, and he would like to return. Bill the inspector guy from LDR will let us know as soon as he does a walk through. They really try to save homes if the homeowner wants it saved. Homes that have been deemed to be abanded are torn down. A house across the street from our hause was torn down this morning in just an hour and a half. I forgot my camera today so I don't have any updated pics of the house. We are scheduled to help at another home tomorrow, but I will try to get over there again on thursday.
There's a story about a little girl and star fish on a beach that people keep refering to down here, but no one seems to know the whole story. If any of you know it please send it to me. Thanks so far for all the comments.
My experience so far has been incredible, and I look forward each day to the new challenges. As I listen to stories from the people I meet, I know that it will be many years before New Orleans can recover. The spirit of the People is something I hadn't expected, with all that has happened to them in the last few years, there is still hope that each day things will get better. I know that a lot of bad things are happening now, murders, drugs, broken promises, and people taking advantage of the situation (and of people),but there is still that beleif that all the people will come together.
