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Sunshine after floodwater: a report from New Orleans
by Starhawk
October 12, 2005
I'm sitting at the block party in front of the Algiers clinic set up
by Common Ground, the grassroots organization we've come to New Orleans
to support in the wake of hurricanes Katrina and Rita. The clinic is set
up in a storefront mosque in this black neighborhood on the West Bank
(which oddly enough is on the east side of town) which escaped the flooding.
At a table next to me, four people of three or four different races are
playing dominoes. Across the street, kids are having their faces painted,
and I'ila is helping a group paint prayer flags with their wishes and
dreams. A white activist I know as a deeply serious person is intent on
getting just the right composition of dish soap to make giant bubbles.
Miss Beverly is dishing up red beans and rice from a big pot, and down
the street Aaron is barbecueing jerked chicken. Rain is dancing with a
boy of about thirteen who just plainly adores her, and a mix of medics
and volunteers from all over the country are chatting, relaxing, and enjoying
the sunshine.
The idyllic quality of this scene, like a poster picture of racial harmony
and community, is all the more remarkable because a month ago this community
was on the verge of a race riot. Immediately after Katrina, when much
of the Louisiana National Guard was in Iraq and the police failed to keep
order, white vigilante groups were roaming the streets, shooting at any
young black man they suspected of being a looter. Black citizens were
arming themselves in response, and the neighborhood was on the verge of
a race riot.
Then Malik, a neighborhood organizer, Green Party member and former Black
Panther, put out a call to some of his long time allies and the activist
community in general, for help and allies. Scott Crow, a young white organizer
from Austin, came down and sat on the porch with Malik to defend against
the vigilantes. When the immediate threat eased, they turned to meeting
other needs - for food distribution, water supplies, medical care. Out
of that effort came the Common Ground Collective. And long before the
Red Cross, FEMA, or any official aid arrived, they were distributing supplies
and helping people to remain and return and resist coercive evacuation.
I duck inside the clinic for a tetanus shot. A big room is divided into
screened cubicles and office spaces. The woman at the desk smiles at me,
a young volunteer comes over, takes me aside, and quickly takes my vitals.
He's been here for a month, and looks tired but proud. The clinic is a
month old and in that time, with no federal or state assistance, has served
over two thousand people, many of whom have no regular medical care because
they can't afford it and there is no permanent clinic that serves this
neighborhood. It's warm and friendly - in contrast to the official clinics
which, when they finally did open, are under armed guard.
I can't remember when I last had a tetanus shot, and the medic and I joke
about the fact that I'll surely remember this one - my Katrina shot.
There are two National Guard in camo fatigues wandering through the crowd,
and Baruch tells me they are guarding us from the police, who have been
systematically harassing clinic personnel along with the general citizenry.
Across the river, police arrested three of the young volunteers who were
helping Mama D, who is cleaning up her 7th Ward neighborhood so that when
people return, they will have something to come back to. Two were white,
one was black: they beat the black kid severely, kicking him viciously
in the chest, and stole his money. They were in jail with lots of people
who were arrested simply sitting on their own front porches. In the French
Quarter, someone videotaped a group of cops viciously beating an old man,
and this makes the news and provokes outrage. But there are a hundred
incidents like it, every day, that no one sees.
Racism is like the black mold eating away at the long-submerged houses.
It permeates everything, and it spreads, corrupting everything in its
path. The police, the slow and neglectful response of officials, the differing
values placed on human life according to color and class. So often, it's
below the surface, lurking as spores of privilege, a deeply unconscious
sense of entitlement, or lack. But the floods have wet everything down,
and now it is visible, and growing. Unchecked, it destroys strong foundations
and sturdy structures - and that what we've seen happen here, some of
the basic structures of government, of simple human decency, collapsing.
And that's why we're here, really - to try, at least in a few places,
to root it out, to save some of the beauty of the old structures and to
make it possible to rebuild anew. Mold abatement.
Sunlight kills spores. Rain and Joshua are dancing, Miss Beverly presiding
over her cauldron of beans and rice, the bubble mixture is finally right,
and the bubbles float over the scene, iridescent spheres as ephemeral
as a rainbow after a flood. And even if it's just for this moment, the
sun shines down.
Starhawk is an activist, organizer, and author of The Earth Path, Webs
of Power: Notes from the Global Uprising, The Fifth Sacred Thing and other
books on feminism, politics and earth-based spirituality. She teaches
Earth Activist Trainings that combine permaculture design and activist
skills, www.earthactivisttraining.org
, and works with the RANT trainer's
collective, www.rantcollective.net
, that offers training and support for mobilizations
around global justice and peace issues.
Donations to help support Starhawk's trainings and work can be sent to:
ACT
1405 Hillmount Street
Austin, Texas 78704
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