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Fifty Dollars and a Dream

By Billie Mizell, AlterNet. Posted March 2, 2006.


In Katrina's aftermath in New Orleans, an unlikely group of four men -- white and black, old and young -- came together to form a relief collective unlike any other.

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The young man who is about to show us around this cesspool introduces himself as Brandon, which (I hate to admit) is a name I still can't hear without thinking of "Beverly Hills, 90210." He speaks eloquently and could be every bit as dashing as a primetime soap star, except that he clearly hasn't showered in a very long time. Understandable, given that water is a rare and precious commodity here.

We are a long way from Beverly Hills. There are no mansions; the few people who call this place home live in tents. There is no Rodeo Drive; there is not really a store at all, but good Samaritans from around the world have sent regular donations of old clothes, canned goods and other nonperishable items to this desolate land. And there are no movie studios, although it does feel like I'm on the set of some chilling war epic.

Behind Brandon, I see mud-caked kids in makeshift hazmat suits "decontaminating" themselves, and I wish I had made time to get the immunization shots recommended before coming to this diseased area. Someone has dumped the contents of several random cans of food into a large aluminum pan, and the tent-dwellers start scooping out their dinner onto paper plates.

One looks up from his plate and asks if I have ever been here before. "I've never been anyplace like this," I answer. It's true -- in all my travels, I have never seen anything like what I witnessed here, and I was born and raised just 100 miles east. Until recently, most of my family made their homes within a few minutes of the barren spot I am standing on. I spent the weekends of my youth listening to the local music that once filled the streets here. But this isn't the city I knew. As I look around at the conditions these residents live in now, I can't wrap my brain around the fact that I am still within the borders of the richest nation on earth.

It has been six months since Katrina blew through New Orleans, but standing in the Ninth Ward, you feel like it all happened this morning.

Having grown up on the Gulf Coast, I understand how destructive hurricanes can be. After Hurricane Frederick, I saw grand oak trees that had been uprooted and tossed about like twigs, and we lived without electricity for weeks. Like the rest of the world, I watched as the water poured into the Ninth Ward, and I knew it would take more than a few weeks to rebuild it. What I didn't expect was to be walking through it 172 days later and still see total devastation -- and not one federal worker, not one state worker, not one paid construction worker.

For miles, the only people to be seen doing actual work are a bunch of kids, none of whom appear to have reached their 30s. They have traveled from all over the world and used their own money to get here. None of them are being paid for their efforts, unless you count the plates of mush they're fed at the end of the day, for which they are clearly very appreciative. They spend their days wading through diseased garbage, and their nights sleeping on the side of the road. They have no electricity and no running water. But don't call them heroes, or you'll quickly be told it's not heroic to just do the right thing.

As Brandon casually swats at flies buzzing around his face, talking about the goals they are trying to accomplish here, I wonder exactly how these kids ended up in this hellhole. While I have been shamed by the response of my government to this tragedy, this is a story that humbles me.

The day after New Orleans' levees broke and tens of thousands of people were frantically trying to get out of the sinking city, Brandon Darby and his buddy Scott Crow were desperately trying to get in. They hadn't heard from their friend Robert King Wilkerson, and they were worried that he hadn't been able to evacuate. So they came up with the idea of driving more than 500 miles and launching a 15-foot, flat-bottom skiff boat into the sea in hopes of eventually finding him. Neither had boating experience, but they understood that they were navigating the Gulf of Mexico in a vessel not created for the ocean.


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otto
Posted by: otto on Mar 2, 2006 5:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Stories and people like this keep giving me hope!

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» RE: otto Posted by: borepstein
A perfect story for Lent
Posted by: Daph on Mar 2, 2006 9:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you, all who practice what you preach. Being a Christian isn't about attending church or being pro or anti anything at election time. It's about walking the walk, not talking the talk. Truly thoughtful Christians, Jews, Muslims, etc. do exactly what Jesus preached: get down and dirty and do whatever you can to help others.

I don't know what else life could possibly be about. (But you can email me if you know better.)

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» RE: A perfect story for Lent Posted by: montims
starchild
Posted by: starchild on Mar 2, 2006 10:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Having spent a week at Common Ground over the holidays (commongroundrelief.org) I can attest to better food than cans dumped into a big pot. We had excellent meals 3 times a day prepared with fresh veggies for both vegans and mean eaters and the kitchen was kept extremely clean. Common Ground has 2 medical ctrs set up operating FREE for the city. One in Algiers and a new one just opened in the 9th ward. All volunteers and not all under 30 (I'm not). They also have several communitiy centers where people can come and get free supplies (water, food, clothes) as well as tools to rebuild. They never turn anyone away who needs a place to sleep. Brandon is just plain awesome. The whole group is out there hands on trying to make a difference.

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» RE: starchild Posted by: brookish
Thank You AlterNet!!!
Posted by: LizFun on Mar 2, 2006 12:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks Alternet, for continuing to bring the Common Ground Relief Collective story to the public. I worked with Common Ground over Thanksgiving, and they are doing amazing work! (I, too, am over 30.)

Here's a recount of my experience written at the end of November:

Liz Millsaps

Hi All!

Here's the scoop on my trip to New Orleans last week: I worked primarily in 9th Ward with the Common Ground Relief Collective's RoadTrip for Relief: linked text

FYI: Grass roots relief groups have set up a Welcome Home Center in Washington Square Park near the French Quarter and have just avoided eviction and received permission to operate through the end of the year. The Welcome Home Center is the ONLY place in New Orleans serving free hot meals open to all residents and relief workers. There is NO FEMA center or Red Cross center on the French Quarter side of the Mississippi!!! Unbelievable! No housing tents or trailers, no meals - no nothing! There is a FEMA tent city for FEMA workers ONLY. I haven't figured out what they do - not much, it seems. Read more at bottom of this e-mail.

As best I could tell, there were about 250-300 of us working with the Common Ground Collective this week. So many cool people! About 50 were from the San Francisco Bay area. Everyone I met, no matter where I went, was friendly and filled with hope and love. I also felt safe everywhere.

We did all kinds of things throughout the city, but the primary aid we gave was to help gut houses. From what I saw, in the Upper 9th, flood levels were mostly limited to the first floor of the houses, and many of these houses are able to be saved. (You quickly learn to notice the waterlines on all the buildings, cars, etc. There were literally thousands of flooded out cars in all neighborhoods.) Water and sewer were working, however, electricity has not been restored to this area yet or even in most of New Orleans, however, on Tuesday, electricity to the street lights at the Common Ground Convergence Center was restored, which is 4 blocks from 8th Ward. Common Ground workers indicated that this effort was made because of the arrival of the RoadTrip volunteers (who are mostly white, if you get my drift).

I actually ended up doing a variety of things, from clearing roofing materials, to creating signs for a rally regarding the unfair evictions, to working security at the Convergence Center, making sure non relief workers did not enter our living quarters, protecting the supply tent, and guiding those who stopped by to where they needed to go.

Common Ground has many centers throughout the city - I am amazed at how far reaching this group is!

1 - Malik's home in Algiers, across the Mississippi from what most of us know as New Orleans is the headquarters and where this group started.

2 - Common Ground has a Community Center in the heart of the Upper 9th Ward, which we worked on repairing.

3 - Soon after Katrina, they created a Medical Center for the residents in Algiers in a Mosque, and have received permission to continue operating there through the end of the year.

4 - Also, in 9th Ward, near the Community Center they've created a Distribution Center to get supplies out to the residents.

5 - On the border of 8th and 9th Wards, they're setting up a Technology Center in a former daycare called Kids of Excellence. This is actually where I stayed, and we called it the House of Excellence. It's tough to run the computers on generators as the power is not consistent. Someone had been letting them use their broadband connection, but revoked it in order to protect the integrity of their security, so it's all done on 56K modem at the moment.

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» My account - Part 2 Posted by: LizFun
» My Account - Part 3 Posted by: LizFun
» My account - Part 4 Posted by: LizFun
just my two cents...
Posted by: borepstein on Mar 2, 2006 2:40 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great article! All the content very much in line with what I got to see while down there. Personally, I feel priviledged to have met the people like the ones described in this article. I met some of the Common Ground volunteers too, including Megan (Meg) Perry who, unfortunately, is no longer with us...

Here are some of my thoughts about Common Ground and the like volunteer groups.

Boris.

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A volunteer's response
Posted by: cutlassrave on Mar 2, 2006 7:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Always glad to see Common Ground get more publicity, but as someone who volunteered there for two weeks in January, I have some corrections and comments:

* Volunteers were quite well fed, three times a day and always with fresh produce. It was rare that I was served a meal I didn't enjoy.

* No one, so far as I know, slept on the side of the road. Most people slept on cots in a gutted community center or in tents. We had running water (including hot water for showers), electricity (somewhat unreliable), and clean, working toilets.

* The majority of volunteers showered fairly regularly, given the circumstances.

* A couple of problems with the repetitive use of the word "kids": 1) Plenty of volunteers were over 30, and 2) "students" or "young people" might be a more tactful term. However, your basic point, that it's kind of crazy for the majority of relief workers to be untrained youths, is true.

* I was disappointed that you spent so much time on the Angola 3 (an amazing story, of course) and so little on the current philosophy and strategy of Common Ground.

Sorry to be so critical, but I didn't want misinformation on Common Ground to go unchallenged.

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» RE: A volunteer's response Posted by: legaleagle
Beautiful!
Posted by: legaleagle on Mar 3, 2006 10:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have read about Common Ground before so I am so glad you did not tell the same story about philosophy and strategy. Anyone who still needs that information can go to the website link provided. This was an amazing piece of history that I have not heard before. I was fascinated at how the lives of these very different people have intermingled together over the last 30 years and all that has come from that. Seeing the historical progression really shows how little has changed over the years and how much work is still left to be done, but it also shows what has been accomplished by people who had nothing more than a desire to change the world. More than the hurricane, the people of the 9th Ward were victims of indifference and racism. This article showed very well that it can happen to three men locked away in silence and it can happen to people fighting loudly for equality who called themselves the Black Panthers… and it can happen to a community of thousands who have just lost everything. The government thinks it can keep doing the same thing over and over again, each time on a larger scale, and Americans will just turn their heads. Thank you for reminding me that there are real Americans out there accomplishing the seemingly impossible despite the government, not because of it. I needed something to give me hope today and this story certainly gave it to me.

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RE: A Volunteer's Response
Posted by: CGBBGM on Mar 3, 2006 12:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If the author was there 172 days after the storm, that was hours before FEMA kicked thousands out of their hotels and everyone with Common Ground was incredibly busy as you can imagine. Food preparation was not as high on the priority list as it may have been when you were there, but I agree we usually ate healthy, tasty food. Also, I slept on the side of the road. I was in a small tent, but our tents were on the side of the road, which is a striking image to see and I think that was the point that was being made here. I showered outside behind a blue tarp when I could. It was below freezing in February. And if I could do it all again, I would not change a minute of my experience. I am not a student, but still a kid to most I am sure; I find nothing derogatory about that term and I am sure it was not meant that way. It was just meant to illustrate that Generation X AND people with no political experience are getting more done than the old guys in Washington. This was the most compelling thing I have read about the WHOLE story. More people will feel compelled to learn about the strategy and philosophy and politics of Common Ground after they know about the flesh and blood human beings who got it all rolling.

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wow.
Posted by: r.morgan on Mar 3, 2006 8:44 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
what an incredible story. i wish i could go volunteer but no vacation time. it certainly inspired me to get out my checkbook. i hope others do the same thing.

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