The Nation reports on New Orleans' post-Katrina race war
I finally got around to reading the massive new investigative report in The Nation by A.C. Thompson and found it to be quite an interesting read. An excerpt...
The way Donnell Herrington tells it, there was no warning. One second he was trudging through the heat. The next he was lying prostrate on the pavement, his life spilling out of a hole in his throat, his body racked with pain, his vision blurred and distorted.
It was September 1, 2005, some three days after Hurricane Katrina crashed into New Orleans, and somebody had just blasted Herrington, who is African-American, with a shotgun. "I just hit the ground. I didn't even know what happened," recalls Herrington, a burly 32-year-old with a soft drawl.
The sudden eruption of gunfire horrified Herrington's companions--his cousin Marcel Alexander, then 17, and friend Chris Collins, then 18, who are also black. "I looked at Donnell and he had this big old hole in his neck," Alexander recalls. "I tried to help him up, and they started shooting again." Herrington says he was staggering to his feet when a second shotgun blast struck him from behind; the spray of lead pellets also caught Collins and Alexander. The buckshot peppered Alexander's back, arm and buttocks.
The attack occurred in Algiers Point. The Point, as locals call it, is a neighborhood within a neighborhood, a small cluster of ornate, immaculately maintained 150-year-old houses within the larger Algiers district. A nationally recognized historic area, Algiers Point is largely white, while the rest of Algiers is predominantly black. It's a "white enclave" whose residents have "a kind of siege mentality," says Tulane University historian Lance Hill, noting that some white New Orleanians "think of themselves as an oppressed minority."
A wide street lined with towering trees, Opelousas Avenue marks the dividing line between Algiers Point and greater Algiers, and the difference in wealth between the two areas is immediately noticeable. "On one side of Opelousas it's 'hood, on the other side it's suburbs," says one local. "The two sides are totally opposite, like muddy and clean."
Algiers Point has always been somewhat isolated: it's perched on the west bank of the Mississippi River, linked to the core of the city only by a ferry line and twin gray steel bridges. When the hurricane descended on Louisiana, Algiers Point got off relatively easy. While wide swaths of New Orleans were deluged, the levees ringing Algiers Point withstood the Mississippi's surging currents, preventing flooding; most homes and businesses in the area survived intact. As word spread that the area was dry, desperate people began heading toward the west bank, some walking over bridges, others traveling by boat. The National Guard soon designated the Algiers Point ferry landing an official evacuation site. Rescuers from the Coast Guard and other agencies brought flood victims to the ferry terminal, where soldiers loaded them onto buses headed for Texas.
Facing an influx of refugees, the residents of Algiers Point could have pulled together food, water and medical supplies for the flood victims. Instead, a group of white residents, convinced that crime would arrive with the human exodus, sought to seal off the area, blocking the roads in and out of the neighborhood by dragging lumber and downed trees into the streets. They stockpiled handguns, assault rifles, shotguns and at least one Uzi and began patrolling the streets in pickup trucks and SUVs. The newly formed militia, a loose band of about fifteen to thirty residents, most of them men, all of them white, was looking for thieves, outlaws or, as one member put it, anyone who simply "didn't belong."
Read the entire piece here...
Katrina's Hidden Race War






8 comments:
They should prosecute every single f-ing rube who was part of this makeshift posse.
Interesting article, Cajun Boy, but I think it failed to mention the white man most responsible for the complete loss of control in an American city.
That is the plot of a book:
http://www.amazon.com/Roof-Blowdown-Dave-Robicheaux-Mysteries/dp/1416548505/ref=sr_1_5?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1232061340&sr=1-5
What do you think of this guy's books? I'm kinda meh, but whatever.
Having watched this from afar, and listening to WWL over the internet...
what would happen in New York City if there was a total breakdown of law and order? I wouldn't be too quick to throw the first stone...
now that I've got that off my chest....I've wondered for the last couple of years about what happened with the Adjutant General of Louisiana and those National Guard units that were available....
edog, it wasn't just a white man responsible for the complete loss of control, it was a white woman by the name of Kathleen Babineaux Blanco who broke under pressure...and several black men, most notably C. Ray Nagin and his black chief of police....
i'd like to see this particular reporter talk to some of the young Coast Guardsmen about their experiences....of course what he'd hear isn't politically correct, but would go a long way in explaining what happened all over New Orleans...
Cajunboy:
I've been a quiet reader of yours for a while, but I'd like to put my two cents in on this...
I'm a NOLA native who was in New Orleans when Katrina hit and 3 days after.
I was in the CBD/quarter and Bywater area during the ordeal...this article and most of the other articles pertaining to race problems in NOLA due to Katrina have the advantage of hindsight and being able to see images of what was happening during the storm on a city-wide level. After the storm, we had no tv and only the radio to guide us...we heard plenty of gunshots throughout the day and saw roving bandits of people (black/white/etc) who had stolen police cars and mail trucks and rode around the neighborhood with rifles brandished. No one knew what the hell was going on--we didn't know where the water was coming from, we didn't know where help from the state/national government was, and I certainly had no idea what was going on when I saw an armed group of 15 people breaking into the condo building across the street and coming out of it with electronics--not food. You didn't know who you could trust, regardless of their race.
I'm not denying that some ugly racial tension reared its head during the storm, BUT I do feel that the national news seized the opportunity of Katrina to focus on the city's inflated racial problem. I've lived in NYC for 5 years, and honestly, I don't think race problems at home are worse than they are here.
The white men talked about in this article, yeah maybe they were racist rednecks, if all of this truly was a hate crime, then fuck them...
but I think pieces written about NOLA during Katrina need to keep in mind that the place was practically a twilight zone and if we're going to talk about race crimes during the storm, it's necessary to commit to finding substantial evidence that indicates the men watching for people who "didn't belong" were the ones who shot Donnell and his friends.
I hate to say it but New Orleans right now is like a prison with no locks. I was there not 2 months ago and I would carry a shotgun and an uzi if I go back. For Christ sake, there are still people sitting on the porch with the big "X" that was put there during the post Katrina search efforts. How much does a pint of paint cost? Tent cities under every interstate. People everywhere just drunk and yelling at cars. I am sorry but if i lived there I might be a little trigger happy myself. I find it hard to believe that those boys were just innocent little schoolboys out for a stroll. I use to think they should bulldoze that piss stained city, but now I have to endure the rising crime rate in my "host" city. Build it back Brad Pitt so we can dump these scurges back to the toilet that is Bourbon Street.
@edog...there is most definitely a lot of blame that falls at the feet of the federal government and the person in charge of it. no doubt.
@patricia...i'm the same as you. meh. nice guy though. the real deal. but for whatever reason i could never get into his books.
@vl butch & mb...i posted the excerpt and the link to the piece without really making any comment other than "interesting" on purpose. mainly because i'm torn and see both sides of all this and, for once, don't really know what to make of it and don't really feel like i can state a definitive opinion on it, other than it was a remarkably fucked up situation.
@anon...yes, parts of the city are stagnant and that makes me and plenty of other, yourself included presumably, incredibly sad.
I need to pipe in on this (read: about to hijack your comments). This may be the first time I ever "defend" that asshat Bush or FEMA for that matter. He didn't fuck this up alone. There are chains of command that have to be put in place to get help and money and things went awry from the city level to the parrish level to the state level. Bush's actions were the mere icing on the shit-stained cake.
In regards to this article ... I lived in Algiers post-storm and can tell you all about the wonderful divide that is Opelousas Avenue. Malik (who was quoted in the article) worked/works hard to bring people together, to take care of each other regardless of the color of their skin, or what side of that street you live on. I met countless people in the lower 9th that took care of each other, fed other people's dogs, cooked for their neighbors and fucking delivered babies in the attics of houses. Over in Algiers these gun-toting assholes have to "protect" their land/homes from "outsiders". This sickens me.
I get what MB is saying about being fearful and not having access to the news and whatnot. However... what the fuck kinda connection in your brain misfires when collecting guns and shooting at other human beings becomes your "norm". Like it's totally fucking ok under ANY CIRCUMSTANCES to hunt other humans!!!! WHAT.THE.FUCK? If it's that easy to treat people like pheasants, a deep-seeded level of racism, fear and ignorance runs through your body pretty thick.
And finally, I have grown pretty tired of people commenting about race relations, those who speak on "racial tension", those who talk about their experiences as though they were plucked off heir rooftops in the lower 9th as if they get that. Listen MB, I don't know what your situation was during the storm, but I do know this much. You're white. So you can't actually speak about race relations in New Orleans OR New York because you belong to the privileged class. No matter how "down" white people are, you still ain't black.
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