Archive for August, 2006

Trying to Make It Home: New Orleans One Year After

Tuesday, August 22nd, 2006

August 21, 2006
New Orleans

Trying to Make It Home:
New Orleans One Year After Katrina

Bill Quigley
Quigley@loyno.edu

Bernice Mosely is 82 and lives alone in New Orleans in a shotgun double. On August 29, 2005, as Katrina hit the Gulf Coast, the levees constructed by the U.S.  Corps of Engineers failed in five places and New Orleans filled with water.

One year ago Ms. Mosely was on the second floor of her neighborhood church. Days later, she was helicoptered out. She was so dehydrated she spent eight days in a hospital. Her next door neighbor, 89 years old, stayed behind to care for his dog. He drowned in the eight feet of floodwaters that covered their neighborhood.

Ms. Mosely now lives in her half-gutted house. She has no stove, no refrigerator, and no air-conditioning. The bottom half of her walls have been stripped of sheetrock and are bare wooden slats from the floor halfway up the wall. Her food is stored in a styrofoam cooler. Two small fans push the hot air around. (more…)

Dear World – from Gaza

Saturday, August 12th, 2006

[This letter was written by Mohammed Mukhaimar, Psychologist, with children of Gaza]

Dear World

From here…from across the oceans…from Palestine…..the land of open wounds, from our hearts and souls……..we talk to you.

Every day, when the sun rises in the morning, and sets in the evening, and the moon appears, we know there is a big world out there, and there we find you.

We share the same sun, the same moon, but our days are not like yours, neither our nights……we do not know why? (more…)