It’s like a scene
out of a post-apocalyptic movie—a crowd of people gathered in the street
outside the local tavern in the Bywater district of the Ninth Ward. The
lower Ninth Ward, a few blocks away, is the scene of the worst destruction,
but this eclectic neighborhood, one of the centers of alternative culture in
New Orleans, has fortunately escaped heavy damage. Still, roofs are off,
houses are molding away from the inside, and the streets are piled with garbage
that, six weeks after the hurricane, has not been picked up.The people gathered
are black, white, gay, straight, a motley mix of artists and old-time Cajuns
and circus performers, all talking madly and hugging each other and drinking
beer. Malik, a founder of the Common Ground Collective, calls them to
order. He makes me think of an old lion, with his mane of dreadlocks,
turning his big head slowly from side to side, surveying an unruly pride. He
outlines the work Common Ground has done in Algiers, tells them that if they
can organize themselves, Common Ground can provide supplies and volunteers.
Everyone is talking at once and interrupting each other, but there’s
a lively, charged energy.
“What do you need here?” Malik asks.
“Garbage,” people thunder back. There’s a chaotic but
unanimous agreement that garbage pickup is their first priority, and several
people begin simultaneously to outline their failed attempts to get the city
to do something.
Malik stops them. “If the city won’t do it, you got to do like we
did across the river, and do it yourself. Now, who wants to do that? Who
will volunteer?”
Most of the people raise their hands.
“When do you want to begin?”
“Now!”
We meet the next morning in Washington Square Park, where a kitchen from the
Rainbow Family is providing the best free food in town, far, far better than
the Styrofoam-packed chili dogs or military ration MREs (Meals Ready to Eat)
available from the official relief organizations. Over eggs and pancakes,
we get organized.
Who will take out the garbage? It’s the question always posed to
any vision of utopia. Who will do the dirty work?
We will. Come on, it’ll be fun, you’ll enjoy it. And if we
just start doing what needs to be done, others will join us and the work will
go fast and pleasantly.
About fifteen of us head out, a mix of Common Ground volunteers and far fewer
of the local community than raised their hands the night before We start
at the corner by the bar where we met the night before, and begin picking up
sacks of trash, plastic bags full of rotting food waste, and all the debris
ejected from people’s flooded homes and shops. The small corner store
has half its roof off and its contents on the street. We sling the bags
into the back of pickup trucks, and pile it all on the meridian divider of a
main street nearby, where the city can’t easily overlook it. We
separate brush from mixed garbage, and stack anything usable separately. It’s
hard work, and dirty, physical and sweaty and fun, like going to the gym, but
more fun really because we’re working together. And satisfying as
only cleaning up a really, really dirty mess can satisfy.
Tomorrow we will try to get a flat-bed trailor and pick up refrigerators. Almost
every house on the block—in the entire area, has a dead refrigerator,
some taped shut. People are warned not to open them inside the house,
that you can’t get rid of the smell. You can clean them time and
again with bleach, leave them baking in the sun for days—and still days
later the smell will remain and bugs will be pouring out of the innards. The
phenomenal waste of the embodied energy in all these appliances is appalling,
but I can’t think of any real good use for them myself except possibly
to fill them with cob, cement them shut and stack them for natural building
blocks. A refrigerator-block wall—good insulation, poor thermal mass,
and really hard to get anything else to attach solidly. And the bugs would
still be a problem. But these are the sorts of things the mind ponders
while picking up trash.
Meanwhile Juniper makes a valiant attempt to alert the city agencies that the
trash will need to be picked up. She is told to call 211, for Emergency
Services. Emergency Services tells her that the Southern Baptist Convention
is responsible for solid waste disposal. Huh?? Even in Bush’s new
faith-based world, we can’t quite believe this. She tries the local waste
management company—they say that the mayor has replaced them the week
before with the Army Corps of Engineers. Juniper eventually gets through
to some puzzled woman at a phone service in Tennessee from the Corps who has
no idea what she’s talking about. After an hour and twenty-five
phone calls, she’s back to 211 and the Baptists. Now, the Baptists
are a fine religious organization but we had no idea they were experts in solid
waste management. Maybe it’s the immersion thing—some deep
religious connection to cleanliness? Accept Jesus into your heart, and
He will rapture your dead refrigerator into some other dimension? If every
Baptist in the south were to suddenly appear in New Orleans and pick up even
one sack of garbage, we could get the place clean in a day, but really, a few
Bobcats and some big garbage trucks would actually be more to the point. Couldn’t
we just go back to the Mafia? Or, what a radical idea, what if everyone
in the city and the country regularly tithed some of their income to provide
the services everyone needs, so we could pool our money and afford things like
bulldozers and regular trash pickup that actually got around to all the neighborhoods
where people lived? We used to have such a thing—it was called ‘government’
before Bush and his cronies on the far right began to systematically starve
it and convince people that it was better to depend on religious charity to
solve all their problems.
But the Baptists are not all that well schooled in solid waste management—we’re
not sure they even know that the City of New Orleans is expecting them to pick
up trash in the Ninth Ward. In any case, they are not in evidence here.
Instead, it’s a group of neighborhood folks and a few volunteers
I know for a fact are Pagans, anarchists, atheists and other undesirables, who
have just started doing it.
Across the street, a battered white house sports a big American flag. The
man inside, a big Cajun guy in a baseball cap, comes over and offers us water.
He’s an ex-marine who used to train the Contras in Honduras to attack
the Sandinistas, I’m told, until he became sickened by what was going
on. He’s delighted we’re cleaning up the neighborhood, tells us
stories of the hurricane, how after it was over the neighbors all got together
and had a big barbecue with the meat that would otherwise rot in their freezers.
He tells us how he worried about the older black folks across the street
who had diabetes, tried to get them fruit and keep them fed.
“I don’t understand racism,” he says. “I’ve
got six kind of blood in my veins. My people been here for generations,
five thousand years. I’m part Chittimacha Indian. The reason I look white—my
mother married a German, but my great-grandaddy was a six foot African man.”
He was one of the snipers, who sat on his roof with his rifle to shoot suspected
looters. The area is full of signs that say, “We are home, you are being
watched!” “Mean dogs inside.” “This area
protected by Smith and Wesson.”
He put up his flag as soon as the wind stops—but he hates the government.
To him, that flag means the American people.
“This is so great,” he says as he brings us over cold water and
hand sanitizer. “And that it’s people doing it, not the government.”
At the end of the day we go over to BJ’s, the neighborhood bar where everyone
hangs out. “This is our living room,” one woman tells me. They
are newly back—today is the first day many people have come home, and
it is so beautiful to see how happy everyone is to be back. They are running
up to each other and hugging their neighbors, laughing and crying. One
of them buys beers for everybody on the cleanup crew—we have forty offered
to us within half an hour, more than we can drink.
It’s what’s so wonderful about New Orleans, and so different from
most cities in this country—these tight-knit communities, where neighbors
know each other and care about each other and have place where people go and
meet and hang out together, Cajuns and radicals and artists and circus performers,
newcomers and old timers all.
“Click your heels together three times—we’re home!”
says another big guy in a baseball cap, beaming. They all hug us and thank
us. They’re dealing with the damage in their own homes, trying to
clean up and clear out and make them liveable before they get back to work—if
they still have jobs.
“But will people come back, do you think?” I ask a blond woman who
is trying to get me inside to play pool.
“They’ll be back,” she assures me. “You won’t
be able to keep them away. We have a neighborhood blog, and we’ve
kept in contact, and everything all over it is all, “when can we go home?’
‘When will they let us back?’ ‘We want to go home!’
Then Juniper and Lisa and I head out. We decide to drive through the lower
Ninth Ward. Today is the first day that people are being let back in, to all
but the very worst-hit neighborhoods. But we talk our way through the checkpoints,
and drive through the blasted streets where the levee broke and the homes were
assaulted by a mini-tsunami, a twelve-foot high wall of water. It’s
a scene of unbelievable devastation. Streets reduced to piles of rubble,
houses that are nothing but a roof in a sea of mud. One house has floated
off its foundation and rests atop a car. A truck has careened into the
side of a house, its front end resting on the lintel of a second story window.
Other houses are simply piles of wood and scattered shingles.
There is no going back here, no happy homecoming for this neighborhood. No
bomber, no invading army, could level it more thoroughly. It is Iraq brought
home, literally, because the agent of destruction here was not the hurricane,
but human neglect and warped priorities. The money that should have maintained
the levees, like the National Guard that could have contained the looters, went
to Iraq. Homeland Security, brought to you by Bush and neocons. Do you
feel safer, now?
We walk briefly on the street closest to the break in the levee, a sea of churned
mud. A room is ripped open, the whole house destroyed, but inside, a chandelier
hangs intact. I’m thinking of a story I read somewhere, about a
poor Southern family, where the mother’s deepest desire, her symbol of
everything that meant comfort and safety and beauty and a good life, was a chandelier.
In the story, they finally got one, and then some catastrophe struck,
I don’t remember what. But this chandelier, intact among the ruins,
seems to symbolize that some hopes and dreams can survive even this devastation.
They might not be my hopes, or my dreams, or my vision of what is beautiful,
but they are someone’s.
And that’s my own particular faith—that if we support each others’
dreams, if we deal with the garbage, if we take care of each other and do what
needs to be done, some beauty will be born out of all of this mess. Click
your heels together. There’s no place like home.
Hundreds of groups are collecting money to aid hurricane victims. If you
want to help the efforts of these grassroots groups, you can donate directly
to Common Ground at their website:
http://www.pagancluster.org/
http://www.commongroundrelief.org/
Tax deductible donations
can also be sent to:
ACT
1405 Hillmount St.
Austin, Texas
78704
U.S.A.
Come join us! If you
have skills to offer, particularly medical training, building skills, child
care experience, counseling, or just a general willingness to clean up garbage
and do what needs to be done, there is lots of work to do. Volunteers will be
needed for months to come, as relief turns to rebuilding. You can come
for a short time or the long term.
For more information:
An e-mail to katrina@pagancluster.org
will get a response as soon as possible. If you need to call someone,
you can call Juniper at 512-431-7988 or Elizabeth at 336-877-5571.
There is also useful and updated information at:
http://www.vfproadtrips.org/