Gram
was born. My cousin Jason and his fiancé Bridgette
had a baby. I was in New
Orleans on
the eve of Katrina to attend their wedding, and ended
up on my uncle's roof with cameras and not a roll
of film, surrounded by water, ignoring the dead bloated
bodies desperately waving at helicopters. They haven't
married yet. Bridgette wants to wait until she fits
in her wedding gown again.
Not
only do I live here, but I live with my incredibly
talented oh so crazy artist girlfriend in the upstairs
apartment of her flooded out house. She lost everything.
According to the mental health community, that is
why so many here are stressed, depressed and/or crazy.
According to some in the mental health community
since Katrina the suicide rate has increased. The
air of depression in the city is insidious.
For
a while the city was in shock, oddly calm, but the
legendary crime of the Big Easy is back, sort of.
The city is half it's former size, so mathematically
it just cannot be as bad as it was. A solid 75% of
post Katrina crime is Black on Black. The feeling
from the major media outlets is that this is the
only issue. It's big news, but in my opinion the
media is missing the point and the cause. It's too
simple and a social disservice to write it off as
drug or gang related. It's about poverty, mis-education
and hopelessness. When you are hopeless it's easy
to kill. Those that listen to rap music or live in
the former hood know the ghetto New Orlinean motto, "We
don't give a f***"! Another aspect of the murder
rate here is that many unsupervised teenagers have
made it back to the city alone. This was discovered
by the implementation of a new curfew. After arrest
the authorities realized no parents were around.
Unsupervised hopelessness is a living nightmare that
will do anything to survive. Instead of dealing with
the root issues the feds are sending attorneys, the
ATF, the FBI and La
Migra.
Though
slowly the city is being rebuilt. But like so many
cities in the U.S. a
community of misunderstood, unappreciated, undocumented
and uncounted Latino immigrants are doing the work.
One real story of this past year is all about race.
6-months-ago I use to see these Latino brothers shopping
at the market I go to. Over the past few weeks I've
been noticing that many of them are shopping with
their wives, and more than a few are pregnant.
"Can
I have a tamale with those craw fish please?"
New
Orleans has
a huge Latino population. There was a sense that
this mobile work force would come rebuild and leave.
Not so, the Latino wave is here to stay. The friction
and animosity between the Latinos and Blacks is palatable.
When
I'm feeling low I eat fried chicken, usually four
drumsticks. Two week-ends-ago on a rather sad night
I stopped at my neighborhood gas station/fried chicken
spot on Canal
St ,
in the Mid City neighborhood. A young brother with
his baseball cap coolly cocked to the side walked
up to the counter; I arrived close on his heels.
The Latino employees were finishing up a large order.
Two young Latino cats walked up to the counter next.
The Latina employee
asked them what they wanted in Spanish.
The
young brother next to me exploded in a calm voice, "We
were here first."
The
young lady behind the counter looked at the young
brother, but the Latino cats continued to order,
and she began to prepare their order.
"HEY
YO, WE WERE HERE FIRST!" the young brother yelled.
The
Latino cats yelled at the young brother with hands
waving, and at the end of their rant one mumbles
to the other, "Puto".
The
young brother flipped out. "Puto, puto, puto, I speak
a little Spanish. Keep talking I'll show you who
the puto is."
The
gentleman behind the counter quickly waited on the
young man and then me while the young lady continued
with the Latino cats. The Second Spanish-American
war was averted for now.
The
housing stock is another major story of the past
year, which brings me back to my first question,
what is New
Orleans being
rebuilt into? The developers are tripping over themselves
for the steal; I mean deal of the century. Much of
the city was destroyed. I have been trying to buy
my first house in one of the neighborhoods that wasn't
flooded. It's not working for me. The market here
has gone crazy. Prices have risen 16%. The national
average hovers around a 3% increase. Rental prices
are up 75%. Gentrification isn't a fitting term.
Usually poor people are inched out, but in New
Orleans the
poor have been shoved out. Except for one housing
project, all the others remain locked up, literally
with chain link fences. The new HUD, Housing for
Urban Developers has plans to demolish most of the
projects and replace them with mixed income housing.
As I become older I'm finding that I'm a right thinking
left acting cynic. I don't have the answers, but
I have observed that the mixed income equation almost
always screws poor people of color. The flavor of
poor Black folk made New Orleans what
it was, the food, the culture and unadulterated excitement
and fun amid the danger. If this first year after
Katrina is any indication that era is gone never
to return.
Stephen
Perry, President and CEO of the city's Convention
and Visitors Bureau is quoted in Ebony Magazine as
saying " New
Orleans is
the greatest African American city in the World".
He
is wrong. New
Orleans isn't
a Black city anymore.
New
Orleans Land will
be the largest drunk theme park in the world where
wealthy White folk can live as Latinos do the backbreaking
work and a few Black folk are around for authenticity
and entertainment.
But
seriously, if a tragedy of this magnitude would of
happened anywhere else in these United
States ,
except for Overtown Miami, East
Baltimore , North
Philadelphia ,
South Central Los Angeles or Gary Indiana, etc, things
would have been handled differently, wink, wink.
Clarence
Williams is
a distinguished visiting lecturer in photojournalism
at the University of Southern Mississippi. The
After Katrina Newswire is a project of the School of Mass Communication and Journalism at USM (www.usm.edu/afterkatrina).
This story can be reprinted with this credit included.
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