new orleans

61
My Trip to New Orleans By Hannah Banana This is picture of the Mississippi River as we flew over it to New Orleans

Upload: hannah

Post on 21-Jan-2015

573 views

Category:

Travel


1 download

DESCRIPTION

 

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: New Orleans

My Trip to New Orleans

By Hannah BananaThis is picture of the

Mississippi River as we flew over it to New Orleans

Page 2: New Orleans

5/31/09 at 4:45 am I arrived at LAX airport in order to catch my 6:00

am flight to Denver. After a 4 hour layover

we flew to New Orleans and arrived at 4pm New Orleans time. The first thing I noticed was the heat and humidity. The

weather strongly reminded me of Hong

Kong.

Page 3: New Orleans

A man on the plane told me about how he lost his house to the flood.

He showed me pictures of upturned cars, trees knocked down, and piles

of debris. He told me that he was going back to New Orleans for their first family reunion after the storm

and his daughter is SO excited about returning home. This

conversation really made me think and the pictures really hit home. I like calling this picture the Leaning

House of Lower 9th.

Page 4: New Orleans

Recognize the superdome? This is the same freeway bridge and

building where tens of thousands of people waited for food, water,

medical care, and rescue that did not come until at least 6 days later.

Page 5: New Orleans
Page 6: New Orleans

• We stayed at the Rebirth Unitarian church.

• I shared 1 indoor shower, 3 outdoor showers, 3 toilets, and 2 bathrooms with 40 other girls.

• We had 1 computer for the 40 of us who hadn’t brought laptops.

• There were 2 co-ed rooms and 1 all girls room. Each room had 8 bunk beds, meaning 16 people per room! Can you imagine 16 alarms going off in the morning? I can!

Page 7: New Orleans

We had plenty of chores to do each week in addition

to volunteering, reflecting, and meetings. I was in

team 6 so as you can see, I had to wash dishes twice

that week and mop on Saturday regardless of our

extreme exhaustion.

Page 8: New Orleans

We also had a weekly

schedule and a team schedule. During the 1st week my team did dry-walling construction

and worked at the animal

shelter ARNO.

Page 9: New Orleans

Here we are dry walling!

Page 10: New Orleans

Julie taught us how to drywall, tape, and

float. We used to be very slow at putting up walls, but by the

last day we were able to finish a room and

hallway within 3 hours. These are before and after

photos from our last day of dry walling.

Page 11: New Orleans

Construction was difficult and tiring in the 90

degree humid weather, but it was satisfying

being able to sign our initials on the walls of the hallways, bedrooms, and bathrooms someone will get to enjoy in the future.

Page 12: New Orleans

At ARNO we walked dogs and washed food dishes, litter boxes, pet carriers, and water bowls. We also disinfected cages, mopped,

laundered, swept, socialized kittens, picked up poop, suffered

allergy attacks, got bitten and scratched…etc. The bottle fed

kitty is only 8 days old!

Page 13: New Orleans

This is Buddy, the cutest puppy at ARNO.

This is a feral dog. It likes staring at me

Page 14: New Orleans

The work was really tiring. Animals are draining! For lunch, you walk the dogs, clean

their poop, wash their dishes, and once you’ve finished all of that they eat, they poop,

and you have to start all over again!

Page 15: New Orleans

We worked at Blair Grocery in the Lower 9th

Ward during our 2nd week here with a man

named Turner. Turner is an intelligent social studies teacher from

New York. He taught us a lot more about the issues plaguing New

Orleans and about why the levees broke.

Page 16: New Orleans

Working with Turner meant working in the Lower 9th

ward, which was hardest hit and slowest to recover after Katrina. Houses here look

like the hurricane happened just a few months ago. You

can still see the marks rescuers left each time they found a body, animal, or if

the gas was on.

Page 17: New Orleans

Blair’s Grocery store was the only grocery store in the Lower 9th

before the flood. After the flood, Turner bought the place and hopes to one day re-open the store. He wants to make the

store self-sustainable by growing his own

fruits and vegetables.

Page 18: New Orleans

Materials are scarce so Turner has to be

resourceful. He made planters out of tires and rocks.

He grows tomatoes, lettuce, cabbage,

eggplant, cucumber, squash,

snap peas, and watermelon. We had

to do a lot of weeding to keep his

plants healthy.

Page 19: New Orleans

Our First task was to chase the

chickens into the other pen. Good

thing they’re still so young because

they can really run!

Page 20: New Orleans

We had to ‘mow lawns’ in New Orleans because residents get

fined $100 per day after their lawn grows over 6 feet tall. As you can see, some of the grass at this house was taller than me!

Cutting grass this tall requires using a 1.5 ft long machete to hack away at the stalks. It was slow and painful

work.

Page 21: New Orleans

• After a few hours of cutting and raking we were finally able to see a considerable difference. Unfortunately a lot of these plants had spikes, bugs, and thorns so we ended up with bites and scratches all over our arms and legs. All of us got terrible sunburns.

Page 22: New Orleans

This is where the Battle of New Orleans, or Battle of Chalmette happened. We

toured the site and learned more about what

happened there. If Americans hadn’t won,

the British might still own the US today. Then Turner told us more about how we are trapped in our

world and about this huge crisis we face and about

how money rules our lives too much…etc.

Page 23: New Orleans

Here are some mustard seeds from Turner’s

garden.

Here’s a little caterpillar Josh found among the swamp grass we were cutting. We later found out that its spikes are poisonous! Not to worry,

Josh is alive and well.

Page 24: New Orleans

Compost at Turner’s Garden. It was a smelly

job, but we found a bright green gecko!

• We got bored so we made this wonderful rendition of our captain Kevin using a baby watermelon that got separated from its vine and bottle caps. Don’t you see the likeness?

Page 25: New Orleans

• Later in the 2nd week we worked for Project Greenlight. Their mission is to rebuild a greener New Orleans by installing CFL’s in every household in the city. We drove to people’s houses and installed the energy saving CFL’s for them. We got to see how the poor and the rich live. Poor homes may only have 5 lights in the entire house. On the other hand we visited rich homes with almost 60 lights!

Page 26: New Orleans

During our last few days in New Orleans, we worked at a day care for children from poor families in the lower 9th ward. The service is

free. Here I am painting with Paris

and Joshua.

• This is Paris. She was one of the sweetest kids at the center. We made her colorful rings, hair ties, and bangles. It was so much fun!!

Page 27: New Orleans

Here we are having our few moments of rest during lunch. Kids are much more exhausting than dogs. I don’t want

kids anytime soon! Joshua loves to paint. Here his is

painting a butterfly. He’s so cute and a joy to work

with!• While Josh was sweet, most

of the kids were violent, bossy, or bullies. I had to break up a lot of fights, stop chairs from being thrown, and stop metal rod and plastic bat – wielding kids from hitting other kids. One kid Sisi even pulled out a knife and our captain Kevin had to disarm him.

Page 28: New Orleans

Joshua gets emotional sometimes because he’s neglected at home so he will grab onto

someone’s leg and not let go for a long time. I guess he wants attention. He wasn’t the only neglected child there. Sisi saw his mother get

shot when he was very young and his dad deals cocaine. While all the other kids were picked up by their parents at 2:30pm, Sisi

was still waiting for his dad to arrive.

Here we are with Mr. Xyborg!!

Page 29: New Orleans

Jane and I loved playing with Paris. Here we are doing her hair and

making flowers : ) What most of these kids really need and want is a little

more love and attention. Sadly many of their parents either don’t have the time, or the will to give their children

what they really need.

• I played jump rope with the girls and made it to 33 jumps! It was a playground record

Page 30: New Orleans

The unique flavors there included cucumber and lavender honey.

As a treat for our 1st day of hard work, we went to The Creole Creamery, a delicious ice cream place.

Page 31: New Orleans

Jackson Square. There are many artists, a robot man, and a street jazz band from the local high school.

Page 32: New Orleans

Café Du Monde is very famous for its beignets

and coffee. Beignets are doughnuts covered in powdered sugar. They are truly heavenly and

go well with coffee.

Page 33: New Orleans

We wentshopping

We bought Jewelry

And tried on cute clothes!

Page 34: New Orleans

A car with crazy

decorations.

Group photo in Jackson square

Jazz paintings.

Page 35: New Orleans

On Wednesday we took the trolley to

Lafayette Square for the Jazz Festival where

we heard some amazing bands!

Page 36: New Orleans

• Here we are at Jazz Fest eating snoballs (ice with syrup) and coche du po-boys (baby pig sub sandwiches). They were tasty! This is where I first noticed that black and white people don’t mix or associate with each other much. I also noticed that I was one of a few Asians there. By the end of the trip, I only counted about 10 Asian people!

Page 37: New Orleans

After Jazz Fest we wandered our way to Bourbon and Canal. This street is best if you’re 18 or older. There are lots of

souvenir and specialty shops.

Page 38: New Orleans

This is the Jazz band that plays on

Bourbon each Friday night. They have a

lot of energy and are very talented.

Apparently the band comes from the 5th

ward, where residents will come out of their homes and dance on the

streets to their music.

Page 39: New Orleans

All the shops sell Mardi Gras Beads. People on

the balconies drop some down to the

pedestrians walking below on Bourbon St.

I got stuck in thecolorful boas!!

I tried on a mask!

Page 40: New Orleans

My friends and I on Bourbon

Street! Someone asked me to

dance.

Page 41: New Orleans

Destroyed wetlands next to where the poor live. We think it’s partly due to pollution. The city

also dredges all the silt away that these plants rely on to live for

trade. The loss of the wetlands is a huge problem because this is

the city’s primary and most effective natural protection

against hurricanes and floods. Without them the aftermath of

future storms will become increasingly catastrophic. The ground that New Orleans rests on is basically a thin layer of

swamp. Without the wetlands, there will be no ground for New

Orleans to rest on.

This is the oldest part of the levee in the Lower 9th ward. It was built

in the 1960’s, but it’s still stronger than the ones that built

recently. Worrisome isn’t it?

LEVEE TOUR

Page 42: New Orleans

Doesn’t this wall remind you of a prison? Sometimes that’s how the residents here feel

like. The federal government has not invested a sufficient amount of money into these levees to insure that they will not break again. In the 50’s,

the government blew up the Lower 9th ward levees in order to save the richer and touristy

parts of New Orleans. Eisenhower helped rebuild their neighborhood, but the residents no longer trust the government to look out for their best

interests. This was shown after Katrina, when all the residents of the lower 9th accused the

government of blowing up the levees. Many residents giving a 1st hand account will tell you they heard a BOOM! and instantly water started

rising everywhere. Many barely escaped the water.

Others think the levee just broke because it was too weak. New Orleans didn’t get the worst of

Katrina. All this levee had to stand was equivalent to a category 1 storm, but it still broke! So when

the Army Core of engineers says that all the levees have been restored to “Pre-Katrina” standards, that is actually really bad! This picture was taken while

we were on the levee tour.

Some think the barge illegally

parked next to the levee by the city

crashed into the wall during the hurricane.

Page 43: New Orleans

Why are the most effective levees put next to the neighborhoods least

vulnerable to flooding? This also doesn’t make any

sense.

The levees below protect the rich

neighborhoods from harm and are the most effective levees in all of New Orleans. They also are covered in grass and have a park nearby. The scenery is beautiful. The

city is shaped like a bowl, so if the lower

9th’s levee breaks, the rich neighborhoods will flood anyways. Doesn’t it make sense to make sure all the levees can withstand a category 5

storm?

Levee in the middle class

neighborhood. See how their

levee is covered in grass and has

a trail? The residents can

enjoy the scenery and

don’t feel boxed in like the lower

9th ward residents with their concrete

levee wall.

Page 44: New Orleans

What you probably don’t know• What many don’t know about Katrina is what really happened. During one of our

talks about Katrina, one of the students asked our speaker Viola how to explain to his friends why New Orleans residents are not at fault for not leaving before the

hurricane hit.• There were many factors that caused people to be trapped when the flood hit.

Many residents of the lower 9th did not have cars. They were promised buses by the city that did not come. There was Amtrak service that was running, but no one was

told and many trains left with no people on board.• Those who are fortunate enough to have the means to get out always face terrible gridlock traffic. It’s nearly impossible to evacuate an entire city with millions

of people in it all in 1 day, yet the city only announces 1 day for evacuation. My construction supervisor Julie told me she left home at 8am, got gas, waited 18 hours

in traffic, and then finally got out of the city at 2am. Many like Julie are used to doing this a few times a year. A hurricane happened just before Katrina so many

people were low on survival supplies and were less motivated to leave New Orleans because it’s always such a hassle. Katrina also happened at the end of the month

when many poor people are starving and waiting for their next paycheck. Many did not have the money to drive out of state, buy water, or buy food so they were

unprepared. This caused a large number of people to choose or be forced to rough out the storm at home. All these factors created the perfect conditions for a

catastrophe.• Viola and her family were fortunate enough to have some savings to dip into to

drive out of New Orleans. They stayed at the nearest motel they could find once out of the city. The next day the news showed that sky in New Orleans was blue and the

sun was shining. They were very happy and decided it to go home. Most people thought it was over and that it was ok to go home. Those who didn’t have a lot of

money to spend like Viola wanted to go home as soon as they could. Other wealthier families may take a 2 week long vacation somewhere nice.

Page 45: New Orleans

Surviving• When Viola and her family got home they saw that the ground was dry. Everything was

fine and they got settled down at home. She remembers how they were just relaxing on their front porch and chatting when all of a sudden they heard a huge BOOM! Out

of nowhere water was all over the ground and rising fast. By the time Viola grabbed all her valuables, the water was up to her knees. By the time she got the the refrigerator

to get some food, the water was up to her thighs. By the time she got to her emergency drawer, the water was up to her waist. And by the time she finally got to

the stairs, it was almost up to her chest. She made it up the stairs and got to the second floor of her house. Looking back as she went, she saw her refrigerator, chairs, bottles, and food floating around downstairs. But the water did not stop. A few inches

of water flooded her entire 2nd floor before the water finally stopped rising. • Viola was lucky to have such a big house which was also on stilts. Some of her other

neighbors had houses with only 1 floor or no stilts. The ones who survived came to her house and stayed for 6 days rationing their food as they searched for help.

• Viola remembers having to pass floating dead bodies of men, women, children, and babies as she searched for help while neck deep in water. She never felt so bad for animals before. They were all trying to cling onto whatever they could reach, dogs

were swimming around trying to find a dry land, and animals were fighting with humans for things to hold onto. There were fires burning on top of the water and Viola

would have to push the water away in order to avoid getting burned. Everyone was looking for someone or something and no one seemed to be able to find what they

were looking for. Viola never learned how to swim, but she had to in order to get past certain obstacles. She was scared but managed to get to safety. It seemed like

everyone needed help, but no one could provide it.

Page 46: New Orleans

Help!• Eventually she became one of the many people waiting on the freeway for a bus to pick them

up to bring them to safety. They encountered hostile policemen pointing guns at them and treating them like criminals. She remembered how badly African Americans were treated by the racist police, who called them names and assumed they were up to no good.

• They waited 6 days before help came. She was put on a bus for 12 hours and not told where she was going. Her family was one of many that were split up. Husbands were separated from wives and children taken from parents. People didn’t find out where their loved ones were until at least 2 weeks later. Viola did not know where they were going till they finally saw a sign with ‘Welcome to Houston, Texas.’ on it.

• Viola was lucky she had food and water to last those 6 days. Others died because they couldn’t get access to fresh water.

• For a long time after the hurricane she and her family could not get back into New Orleans. The city wouldn’t have let them in even if they did have the money. They were stuck and forced to settle down in Houston.

• Many people don’t understand why anyone would want to go back to New Orleans. What most will say is their parents, grandparents, great grandparents, and great great grandparents before them have lived there for centuries. New Orleans is more than a home. It is where their ancestors came from. It’s where they belong and where they feel they should be. That’s why all of them will go back given a chance. A lot of African Americans don’t really feel like Africa is their home. None of them can trace their family tree any farther back than from the time of slavery, so really the only home they have is New Orleans. Caucasian people’s families have been here for generations too and there’s a lot of history in this town.

Page 47: New Orleans

But It’s Not Over Yet• The problems in New Orleans are complicated due to this very issue. There was a 65%

ownership rate in the Lower 9th, higher than anywhere else in the US. No one has the ownership papers to prove they are the owners anymore, so no one knows who should pay for fines, damage to the house…etc.

• After Katrina, people went to the government in order to get money, but were faced with a 100 page application, long lines, and trying to afford the transportation fees of going back and forth to New Orleans. Others fortunate enough to have flood damage were told the damage to their house was only worth $20,000. This was for a $50,000 house that was irreparable.

• Other stories include a woman who’s house was swept away by the water into a tree. The insurance company told her they couldn’t cover her house because it was not on her property.

• Others who were fortunate enough to have money to rebuild have been scammed by people claiming to be contractors. They say you have to give them money so they can buy the materials to start building. They’ll build a little bit of your house, but badly because they’re not real construction workers, make off with the rest of the money, and leave. Those poor people ended up even more in debt and have to rely on volunteers like myself to build the rest of their houses properly. Yet sometimes the volunteers who come are not skilled and don’t do a good job. Volunteers must at least be under the supervision of a skilled construction worker before they will really do some good for the house.

• For many victims of Katrina, it’s been 4 years and they still don’t have a home. If everything goes well for Viola, she will have a home within the next 3 months. But can you imagine how much hard work it was for her if she’s been waiting 4 years in order to make her dream of moving back come true?

Page 48: New Orleans

Swamp Tour

• ^ This is our tour boat.

• I got to hold a baby gator!

Page 49: New Orleans

A Herring.A snake!!

Below Is a hidden alligator, yikes!

• This gator liked my soft shell crab po-boy.

• Gators can get as long as 12 feet.

Snapping Turtles also live in the swamps. They like

sunbathing

Page 50: New Orleans

Phyllis got a scare from a freeze dried

gator hand

• Swamps are actually quite beautiful and baby gators are actually pretty adorable!

Page 51: New Orleans

We went to the Zydeco Festival, which celebrates Cajun Food and

music. Here we are eating alligator

sausage on a stick!

• Here is the French market where you can find great deals like $3 sunglasses and $10 coach purses. There’s also lots of yummy food to be found, jewelry, clothing, and other keepsakes.

Page 52: New Orleans

We went to get mufalettas from Central Grocery. They are sandwiches packed with olives, gourmet salami, and

fresh cheese. It was absolutely delicious!

• This is the hardest to pronounce street name in New Orleans. Locals call it ‘chap-a-too-less.’

We couldn’t resist another trip to

Café du Monde!

Page 53: New Orleans

Audobon Aquarium was a lot of fun. We saw seahorses, penguins,

hammerhead sharks, great whites, sting rays, jellyfish, turtles, gators,

barracudas, swordfish, giant eels, and more!

Page 54: New Orleans

What irony that the sponsors of this exhibit are

the very oil companies who

are actually causing many endangered

marine species to go extinct.

Page 55: New Orleans

A lot of the sea life we saw were huge. There were fish that looked like they could swallow a human if they wanted. The barracudas look

much fiercer up close!

Page 56: New Orleans

• My friends and I had fun at Audobon Park, which is also called “The Fly.” It has beautiful scenery and is perfect for relaxing and playing card games.

Page 57: New Orleans

• This is Queen of the Ball, which sells snoballs. Snoballs consist of shaved ice smothered in sweet colored syrup. You can also get condensed milk on top, which really adds to the texture. They come in at least 30 different flavors and are all delicious. They make a great treat after a hard day of working under the sun.

Page 58: New Orleans

Unfortunately for many of us, fast food became a

staple of our diet in New Orleans.

Nothing felt better after work than walking into an air conditioned Burger joint and ordering a cheap

meal.

To help relieve the heaviness of the day, we

played telephone pictionary. It’s really

addicting!!

Especially after machete day, my feet and ankles looked like everyone else’s: covered with bug bites and scratches.

Page 59: New Orleans

• We always rode in our vans. Louisiana has no seatbelt rules, no rules about how many people should be in each car, and no rule saying you can’t sit in the hatchback. So… we experimented a bit just so we could say we did! But don’t worry it was in an empty parking lot : )

Page 60: New Orleans

• At the very end of our trip we hosted a community dinner at the Rebirth church. Our supervisors, some of those we helped, and others involved with this project were all there. We said our goodbyes and ate a delicious dinner. Julie was there and we took a group photo with her. Thanks to her we all know much more about construction and we’re a lot more appreciative of whoever put walls in our bedrooms and homes. It was still a little sad knowing we’d have to leave a place that has so much good food, such a unique culture, and such interesting people.

Page 61: New Orleans

The End!!

Beignet: ‘Ben-Yay’