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The ultimate piece of news I absorbed before falling asleep at a very late hour last night (or early this morn) was that 12 of the 13 West Virginian coalminers had been found, and that one was definitely dead. “Been found … what is that supposed to mean? Found alive?” was all I thought before plunging into one of the shortest nights of sleep in a long while. With txyankee leaving for Paris this afternoon to begin his “long commute,” the weather doing weird things and the haul of January ahead, insomnia has found me again.

Kristen of From the Lake to the River, the Tulane University-sponsored legal aid group that I introduced back in September, asks me to share the following with my blog community:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

NEW ORLEANS From the Lake to the River: The New Orleans Coalition for Legal Aid & Disaster Relief today released An Alternative Vision for Redevelopment, Rebuilding & Reconstruction, a report to Mayor Nagin’s Bring New Orleans Back Commission that addresses a number of challenges that lie ahead of the city. The report applauds officials for organizing a number of town hall meetings to solicit public input on the rebuilding process while offering broad recommendations on how best to rebuild the city and repair systemic issues that existed pre-Katrina. The full report, which includes recommendations from a number of Tulane Law School professors, community activists, educators, social workers, and others, along with an executive summary is available at www.fromthelaketotheriver.org.

Although there is much that needs to be rebuilt in the aftermath of Katrina’s destruction, people need more than bricks and mortar if they are to return. The region also needs to create social institutions — political, economic, educational, and others — that will effectively serve all city residents. This report seeks to offer a sound basis for public policy discussions, community economic development, urban planning and political negotiating in the challenging months that lie ahead. This report outlines a set of policies that will help ensure that the rebuilding process unfolds in a way that benefits all New Orleanians. It is our hope that local, parish and state officials might develop alternative policies and positions based on the proposals, recommendations and analysis that are set forth in the following pages.

“After Katrina, non-profit organizations, civic groups and community leaders united to help provide immediate relief to evacuees who had been displaced. Now is the time to turn our attention to repairing and rebuilding the city to ensure that those who were involuntarily displaced have a place to come home to. Because of the extent, in both distance and pervasiveness, of forced evacuation, it is critical that we build a New Orleans that facilitates the return of all New Orleanians,” said Bryan Mauldin, President of From the Lake to the River.

From the Lake to the River can be contacted at 866-NOLA-AID.

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Warm, muggy and sunny in Houston, Texas on January 1st. A good sign that 2006 is for me? Last night’s party was a blast, with almost all of the invitees present, even one with a bad back! The Mexican-German-Indian-American food and drink selection was a great success; cultural crossover gatherings make my globe-loving heart go pitter patter. Everyone smiled and joked, the party was at peace.

At one point in the evening, however, one of the guests began to complain about the amount of crime in his area of Houston and how life is so awful because his car has been broken into twice in the last few months. Suddenly, quite unprovoked, he turned towards me and said, “YOUR people are the cause of all of my problems right now.” MY people? Indian-Americans? Women? Geoscientists with black hair? Huh? What? The guest continued, “Ever since you people from New Orleans showed up, crime in Houston has skyrocketed. The cops have told me so.” Other guests protested, “You can’t blame all new crime on New Orleanians. Crime was already on the rise before Katrina. Of course, that’s what the cops are going to say if they cannot control crime.” etc. etc.

The guest stood accused of two things I loathe – cultural generalization, viz. “you/your people” and spouting unverifiable second-hand information and opinions as fact. My face took on what my brother and I refer to as Mom’s patented Daggers Look, the steely glare with eyebrows arched and the solemn promise that you are about to get your ass lopped off and handed to you.

“So, you know for a fact that all of this crime was committed specifically by New Orleanians? You have proof.”

“But, yeah, the cops told me.”

“Of course, they are going to say that to you if they want a criminal scapegoat. Have they told you that crime in that area is also generated by people with Houston addresses on their DLs?”

“Yeah, but I know … because I saw it.”

“You saw their identification cards yourself?”

“I videotaped a gang of 20 breaking into a car.”

White fright tends to amuse and scare me at once; for a second, I almost lost the glare. Since when does it take 20 “hardened career criminals” from anywhere, much less New Orleans, to break into a car? For pete’s sake, just get me a wire hanger.

My next question was “Did they have special markings on them that identified them as New Orleanians or did you walk up to them and bravely ask to see their ID cards?” But, it wasn’t to be as John arrived to stand between the guest and me, and Mark attempted to ameliorate the situation by vouching for me: “Her people? Indians are some of the most hardworking and nice people I know.” This was when I shook my head with that “No, that’s not the point, either” look, glanced at John, rolled my eyes, and walked away. At which, the whingy guest said, “Well, I don’t know about all Indians …”

“That Mumbai Mafia and their vendettas …” was all they got as I joined the other partyers in the study.

Let me reiterate my gratitude towards Texas, and Houston in particular, for generously taking in people from the storm-ravaged parts of this nation. The disruption to your daily life and strain on your city is more than duly noted, but we would do no less for you if you were in this situation. You may also notice that quite a few of us have well-paying jobs here, pay non-FEMA rent or live with friends and family, and put money into your economy everyday, money that we ought to be spending in New Orleans. And, for the record, a New Orleanian friend has had his car broken into twice now, both times by Houstonian perpetrators. This isn’t a tit for your tat, but presenting some more sides of the given situation.

I also understand that while most of the nation welcomes and supports its fallen neighbors during this tough time, there are a few who have the tendency to place the grand blame of social ills on one party or the other. This time it happens to be New Orleanians. Who’s it going to be tomorrow?

Yet another point to ponder: I don’t deny that the criminal element of New Orleans, America’s pre-Katrina murder capital, has now moved to the rest of the nation. How did the plan for this? Did they think that some bad habits would fritter away if their bearer was taken out of his or her environment? Did they believe that a storm makes everyone suddenly nicer and socially responsible?

Again, they have. Criminals and gangs usually form when employment and the vision of a future, much less a bright one, are absent. Moving to new territory has presented many New Orleanians with economic and educational opportunities they did not have before. For example, a family of four from the Ninth Ward, with an underemployed mother and unemployed father and two kids faltering in school, now live in Janesville, WI with both parents gainfully employed and happier kids. Taking a lot of New Orleans’ children out of a failing educational system and spreading them across the nation may just help them. While they deal with the trauma of losing a home and their heritage, they gain the tools for a better future than before.

Quite a few New Orleanians were and are contributors to the American economy, and now have a greater ability to do so. This is one of Katrina’s gifts, if I may attempt to find some good come of a very sad sequence of events.

This morning, I awoke to a Washington Post article on New Year’s Eve revelry in New Orleans. All of it sounded good until I read two things: the Lower Ninth resident who is suspicious of the Army Corps of Engineers’ plans to raze whole neighborhoods, and the tourists who brought in the new year in New Orleans because “we felt it would be good to put some money in the city … we feel so bad for the people here.”

Two things the city of New Orleans does not need right now:

* Wholesale and bad design decisions based on sympathy for former residents of areas below sea level or the environment, i.e. the sentiment that an entire neighborhood should be completely dispatched back to nature. For my part, I don’t believe that there is A Grand Plan to rid the city of its economically-malnourished. I also think that, if we don’t jump onto Grand Unifying Rebuilding Bandwagons and now, there is a way in which humans and nature can live side by side. Both are going to have make some sort of compromise as we move forward.

* Pity. Do not come to New Orleans because you feel bad for us. Sure, we can use the money, but the principle behind your presence matters to me. We don’t need a pattern established in which you gain karmic brownie points by visiting the city.

On that fateful day of September 11th, 2001, I cried as an American and sent money to New York City’s firefighters because my nation was hurting. I, too, want to visit Ground Zero, but not out of pity for the citizens of New York. Please visit to enjoy what New Orleans has the ability to offer, just four months after a major disaster, and stay a while with your fellow Americans.

With the dawn of a new year and a new life for our city, I ask New Orleanians and America to gauge the kindness of your heart before you offer it. And try to see what effect it will have in the long run for yourselves, the nation and, a new stretch, the rest of the planet. What seems like a mindless sweeping generalization, kind word or gesture on your part may actually be an insult to the receiving party. Each unchecked utterance and passive-aggressive response to it piles into a mountain of mutual resentment, something you, me and our cities can do without. Of course, New Orleans cannot go forth in a squeaky-clean manner, with happy-face confetti and permanent goodwill everywhere, but some things can and ought to be headed off at the pass with honesty.

The power to foresee the future may not be ours, but if we are aware, proactive and go at it with the spirit of ingenuity and cooperation, we have a stab at a better tomorrow.

More hurricanes notwithstanding.

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Joseph Campbell’s The Inner Reaches of Outer Space: Metaphor as Myth and as Religion mentions Black Elk and his concept of the center of the world, “which is everywhere and from which he viewed in a ‘sacred manner’ all things. It is not a geographical place, but the state of mind of one released from the vortex of delusory desires, fears and commitments by which lives in this world are compelled to their sorrows and pains.” This mentality is akin to a stage prior to moksha or nirvana, in Vedanta and Buddhism respectively.

Before you think I’ve fallen off the far reaches of outer space, let me state that neither do I apply Campbell’s analysis to anything metaphysical, nor do I assume the wisdom achieved by the likes of Black Elk. Instead, I utilize the idea to expand on a recent realization: I feel most comfortable in New Orleans, Madison, downtown Chicago, and in the homes of my closest friends because these places are the center of my world. They embody my state of mind, from which I view all things in a healthier and more peaceful manner, if not sacred.

It’s not a trivial thing to know where you feel the most empowered, the most refreshed, the most unthreatened, the most yourself. As I said in a recent email to a friend, “Guess people like us should thank our stars that, at the least, we know who we are and where ‘our place’ is.” Even if we can’t live there all of the time, or haven’t been there yet.

New Orleans = the pull of a hurting, yet strong, friend.
The recent police shooting of an angry and knife-wielding black man has me a bit upset given that it occurred three blocks from my home, the whole sad incident started at the Walgreen’s I shop and get my prescriptions filled in, and that several officers fatally shot a man, albeit a large and mobile one, armed with a knife.

But, the head prevails and I remind myself that this is nothing new in New Orleans, where I used to hear gunshots fired across the street from our first place there. I remember instances of D telling me to get away from the windows and quickly. This time it’s the cops doing the shooting. Should I feel good that the situation was attended to by approximately 10 NOPD officers?

Chris Rose scribes everyone’s fears and hopes in his latest, “Is it depressing here? Yes. Is it dangerous? Maybe. The water, the air, the soil … I don’t know … But we’re going to help pick up the pieces. Starting today.”

Chicago = my kind of big city. Hectic to stable in a matter of minutes.
A great evening on ol’ Halsted followed by a nice day of walking through Millennium Park, museum wandering and shopping on Michigan Ave. the next day.

Two favorite Halsted haunts are now gone, however – first, Private Idaho, and now, The Prodigal Son. R.I.P., Trappist ales with un-subtitled Kung Fu movies and a bad punk band playing in the background.

txyankee and Mimosa understand Chicago’s allure, and the former hasn’t even been there.

Madison = intelligent calm and welcoming hearths.
Lounging with my laptop and a blankie (and watching a Discovery Channel show on Houston!) on a cold Wisconsin afternoon after Christmas. Ate everything everywhere. Drank everything everywhere. Tonight, great Indonesian food on Willy St. followed by a movie at South Towne, despite sinus issues and what feels like a rave in my stomach.

It’s nice to have lived in a few varied and great places and to have made some of the warmest friends on this planet. They all provide home (and cute kitties and pups) on the go. That said, there’s no place like your own. Soon enough.

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Violence Against Women Before And After Katrina: It amazes me the crimes people, including NOPD, are willing to believe happened in the wake of Katrina. But, what angers me are the acts of violence faced with incredulity, namely rapes reported by the supposed victims themselves. And I say “supposed” because, unfortunately, there are liars who make it hard on the real victims.

NPR does a New Orleans “human” piece before 6:30AM almost everyday and manages to depress the hell out of me before the day has even begun – hey, at least it’s informative, better than Houston schock-jocks badmouthing New Orleanian evacuees and the price to pay before receiving the news of the day. Today, I woke up to Morning Edition investigating the veracity of the rape claims mentioned above (More Stories Emerge of Rapes in Post-Katrina Chaos). Through the course of the show, my brain performed its usual cautious fencesitting on such issues. However, this statement made by Judy Benitez, of the Louisiana Rape Crisis Group stood out to help beget a clearer view:

“The fact that something wasn’t reported to the police doesn’t mean it didn’t happen,” Benitez says. “We know about all the other things that happened, all the thefts, all the robberies. There was all kinds of crime taking place on a much higher level than usual. Why would we think there was less rape typical of any given week in the city? It doesn’t make any sense.”

Regardless of whether an individual woman was raped or not, logic dictates that the number of acts of violence against women could not have decreased while other types of crime were on the increase. Our horribly-understaffed and strained police force had shooters and looters to contend with, and could not thoroughly patrol flooded neighborhoods and what they thought were safe havens. Yet, rape is a serious human violation, too, and leaves an indelible mark on mother, sister, wife, daughter and friend. At times of crisis and lawlessness, women need additional protection.

“We’re not downsizing anything,” [commander of the sex crimes unit with the New Orleans Police Department, Lt. David] Benelli says. “I’m telling you the number of reported rapes we had.

“I admit that rapes are underreported … I know more sexual assaults took place. I’ve expressed many times that we’re willing to investigate any sexual assaults that happened in this city at any time. We can only deal with what we know.”

While the police can only act on and the justice system can only prosecute that which they have evidence against, there has to be a way that unreported rapes are statistically recorded in the system, especially for this period of time in New Orleans history. The fact that Lt. Benelli “knows more sexual assaults took place” should count for something in the final reporting and prevention plans for the future. Otherwise, we should simply add Misogynists Who Look The Other Way to the growing list of derisive labels applied to New Orleanians today.

According to the NPR story, a series of rapes allegedly occurred in my greater neighborhood, Irish Channel, in a housing complex for the aged. The proximity of the attacks strikes a nerve and reminds me of the fragility of our safety and presumed civilized existence. Don’t even get me started on how a lot of this could have been prevented had the military shown up immediately after the hurricane hit. There is no pardon for that botch in a gaffe in a failure.

Reducing Agents: Why would I want to win a Katrina t-shirt?

“Enter to win the NOLA.com Katrina comemorative T-Shirt today!”

Arguably, this is an advertising move on the part of the T-P to attract readers and to keep them interested in the news. [What’s boring about it?]

There is also a certain feeling of kinship involved in this very American phenomenon – the wearer of a post-K New Orleans t-shirt shows ownership, participation and pride concerning the disaster and recovery efforts. Yet, if you know me, you know how I feel about causes reduced to t-shirts, rubber bracelets and slogans.

I give this one three-and-a-half out of five Bah Humbugs.

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A magnitude 3.0 earthquake hit southeastern Louisana, west of Lake Maurepas and east of Baton Rouge at 6:52PM CST on Monday, December 19, 2005.

COOL!

Completely bypassing Locusts and Alien Attacks, we have moved to Earthquakes on the disaster list. So what if it’s just a 3.0, bring on the Emergency Declaration and FEMA money stat!

[Just for your reference, this is nothing but a tremor. My 130-year-old house probably experiences a 2.5 every time the Magazine St. bus goes by.]

Some details from the USGS page on the quake:

An extremely shallow quake which was probably subsidence-related. This Louisiana seismicity map gives me all of squat in terms of a deformation trend, but looking at this (most rudimentary) structure map of Lake Pontchartrain leads me to surmise that the earthquake belongs to the en echelon fault trend shown on the map.

The largest earthquake LA has experienced was a 4.2 back in 1930, which “damaged chimneys and broke windows at Napoleonville and cracked plaster at White Castle” near the epicenter. “Many people in the area rushed into the streets.” Louisianans have practice with running amok, it seems.

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