Everywhere the Line.
The Line caught my eye the first day we were on the streets of New Orleans. I saw it on the side of a house, wondering what it was. Then I saw it again on another house. Then another. At exactly the same level.
I gasped audibly when it hit me just what the Line indicated. It was the high water mark of floods following Hurricane Katrina. And, 18 months after the storm, it was still plainly visible.
The Line.
On any vertical surface that hadn’t been repaired, the Line marked the peak of the floods that saturated and devastated the city. Where I first noticed The Line, it was easily 12 feet above street level. On most houses, it was midway up the windows of their first floor rooms, since the first floors were usually up a half flight of stairs. In other parts of the city it was even higher.
What did these waters do? It was impossible to imagine. We could only see the results, 18 months later. And we attempted to respond in some small way to help the people and the structures.
Our team of 14 people left West Lafayette at midnight, Friday, March 9 and drove a three-car
caravan straight to New Orleans, arriving late afternoon of Saturday. We stayed at a house owned by Woodland Presbyterian Church in one of the few unflooded areas of the city. Woodland makes this house available to work teams, free of charge. And the house had been full for 30 consecutive weeks before we got there and was booked through the end of October 2007 by the time we left.People want to help.
On Sunday, we joined our host church, Canal Street Presbyterian Church for worship. CSPC is a small church on one of the grand streets through the heart of the
I was in awe of the work and the hours these people put in to make sure volunteers and resources got to the right people. In a city full of bewildering bureaucracy, process confusion and political fiefdoms, the caring, loving, tireless people in this little church managed to get something done. Against long odds. And with a sense of grace and compassion. To anyone in the city…church members or not…Christians or not…if they asked for help, they sought to help. And, as we discovered, this same process was happening in churches throughout the city.
stopped, we had spontaneous conversations with citizens from that area. Each had a story. Each had suffered terrific pain. Each had hope of reestablishing themselves. Each wondered if they really could. Each thanked us for trying to help, even a little.Words and photos can’t convey what we saw. But it truly changed us.
On Monday afternoon, quietly and seriously, we got oriented and organized for our work during the week. Our team of 14 was very fortunate to have three people with real construction skills. One was a general contractor and
And it seemed to work.
The folks at CPSC hooked us up with four different households. And the week took shape from there.
One dear lady was trying to rebuild her house. Life was hard, though. She was 80 years old, had lost her husband recently, had two knees in severe pain and was living in a small room with her son. She just wanted her house back in shape. The process, though, seemed overwhelming to her. Many contractors, frankly, had taken advantage of this elderly woman who had some insurance funds to work with. She needed some support and some action. Our
Another woman in her 60s had planned well yet had been ripped off badly by some contractors and her former employer. She lived in a FEMA trailer next to her home which was close to being rebuilt. Again,
A third lady, also quite elderly, had moved into a second-room floor of her house which was high enough to avoid damage from the flood waters (we found this to be a common process). But putting this small apartment together was itself overwhelming. Complicating this was a horrendous job of painting that a contractor had done on the interior. By using a
A fourth household was near a levee break
We tied up all this work late on Friday afternoon, cleaned up the guest house and headed back home late morning Saturday. I left with many mixed feelings.
On one hand, it was encouraging to have helped four households take a step towards normalcy. It was good to have played a role in CSPC’s efforts to be a point of light in a city that has suffered much. Our team functioned with a sense of service and humility, respecting the dignity of each person with whom we had contact.
I’ve been enormously blessed in my life. From a supportive family to the discovery of the personal role Christ has in my life to the transforming nature of how Christ has caused me to look at the world, I’ve been very blessed. So how does this inform my response to something of the magnitude of Hurricane Katrina? I’m mulling that and likely will be for some time. The trip was one step. I suspect there may be more.
There is a long, long path ahead for this great city. And no individual will ever erase The Line. Scrubbing it off, one house at a time, one life at a time, may be the best we can do.
5 comments:
Joe:
Very hard to imagine what the week was like but you have captured a lot. Thanks so much for sharing with these people and with us.
Love, Karen
Joe,
Wow. You personalized this in a way no news story could. Thank-you for going and thank-you for sharing.
H-O-L-Y CRAP Joe! That is just unbelievable. I guess I really shouldn't be surprised at all that, but DAMN!!!!
What can I say about you my friend? Perseverance doesn't quite fit the bill.
Kindest regards,
Wes
Joe,
That blog was encouraging and discouraging at the same time. I have heard stories from others who went but not as well written with so many pictures. Praise God you and the team went to help. One life/one house at a time does make a difference.
IN HIM, Hugh
Joe-
I'm a college friend of Anne's. She forwarded your summary to me. I went to New Orleans in February with 14 others from my parish in Dubuque, IA. We gutted two homes in the week that we were there. It was a very powerful experience for me and I could relate to many of your thoughts and feelings. Thanks for sharing! Paula
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