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Hurricane Katrina |
Confronted by a disaster on the scale of
Hurricane Katrina, we make no claims to providing "full coverage" of the
event. Rather, we will try to provide you with bits of news and
commentary that you might not find in the "major" media.
If you have other items you think we
should mention,
or comments of your own,
please send a note,
to be shared here.
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PHEWA launches initiative to revitalize dangerous New Orleans
neighborhood Grant fuels effort to develop
strong leaders via faith-based community organizing
[8-23-07]
Presbyterian News Service reports that the
Presbyterian Health, Education and Welfare Association (PHEWA)
is partnering to establish a grassroots faith-based community
organizing initiative aimed at revitalizing a notoriously
dangerous New Orleans neighborhood.
The effort, being funded through a $20,000
grant from a private foundation, calls for developing strong
leaders in the crime-infested Central City district of New
Orleans and training them to tackle problems that residents of
the neighborhood work together to identify.
The full
report >> |
How to Destroy an African-American City in Thirty Three Steps
–
Lessons from Katrina
[7-3-07]Bill Quigley, a
human rights lawyer and law professor at Loyola University New
Orleans, has laid out in a powerful way some of the things made
New Orleans such a disaster – after Katrina and still today. He
adds that "Every fact in this list actually happened and
continues to happen in New Orleans after Katrina."
This was published on June 28, 2007, by
CommonDreams.org |
NCC sending work team to
New Orleans
[6-22-07]We all said we would
not forget our brothers and sisters in New Orleans after Katrina. Now HERE
is a chance to make good on that commitment! You and members of your faith
community can join the National Council of Churches as they mark the
second anniversary of Hurricane Katrina by participating in a week-long work
project. Interested? Here's more:
Join Us in New Orleans for Worship, Witness
& Work
August 19-25, 2007
Two years after Hurricane Katrina devastated the Gulf
Coast, residents continue their efforts to rebuild. But they need our
support. The faith community was there as first responders. We will continue
to be there for the victims of this storm until the work is done.
Come to New Orleans as we worship, witness and work
together to help those in need as they rebuild their homes, churches,
communities and lives.
The Week’s Highlights include:
 | Hands-on rebuilding of homes, communities and lives
|
 | Clergy Listening Tour (Aug. 21-22)* |
 | Workshops and Resource Center |
 | Daily Worship Experiences |
 | "Gospel Explosion" Worship Service on Saturday
|
 | Opportunities to encourage and support those in need |
You can Support This Effort by:
*Space is limited. Please contact Rev. William Drayton to
register at (202) 544-2393.
For more information contact on how to be involved in this
important and exciting work, please contact: Rev. Leslie C. Tune or James
Stevenson at (202) 544-2350 or via email at:
Ltune@ncccusa.org
or
jesteven@email.arizona.edu.
And don’t forget ...
The Presbyterian Church (USA), through
Presbyterian Disaster Assistance, has been coordinating work teams in the
Gulf Coast area almost since the hurricanes struck. Right now their call is
for work teams, especially teams with skilled workers, to help in the
recovery and rebuilding phases. They add, "Please consider sending a team
from your congregation, Rotary club, Elks club, garden club or other civic
organization."
More on PDA relief efforts
>> |
|
Special report available on Gulf Coast relief efforts
Extensive coverage includes stories, video and photo
albums [3-3-07]
The Presbyterian News Service - in partnership with Media
Services and Internet Services - has released a special multi-media report
detailing progress in Gulf Coast relief efforts since Hurricane Katrina
devastated the area in August 2005.
See the Special
Report >> |
|
From Long Island to the Gulf Coast –
One congregation joins in Katrina relief
[2-15-06]
The Rev. Kent Winters-Hazelton, former
president of the Witherspoon Society and Interim Pastor at First
Presbyterian Church in East Hampton, NY, is just back from a week's stay in
Mississippi with a group from his congregation.
Here's his report >> |
Raising the roof in Mississippi
500 volunteers clear storm debris, fix 75 houses in weeklong 'blitz'
[1-12-06]
Presbyterians organized and funded a six-day roofing
"blitz" during the week after Christmas, to aid hurricane survivors, fixing
homes in Biloxi, Long Beach and Bay St. Louis, all in Mississippi.
Volunteers, most of them Presbyterians, came from as far
away as Ontario, Canada, to participate in the $250,000 effort, which was
coordinated by Presbyterian Disaster Assistance (PDA), Mississippi
Presbytery and Westminster Presbyterian Church in Gulfport.
Most of the building materials used in the effort were bought with
contributions raised through a PDA appeal issued shortly after Hurricane
Katrina. So far, the disaster-response agency has raised $20 million for
church rebuilding, pastoral support and general community work, according to
PDA's coordinator, Susan Ryan.
More
>> |
Pervasive loss &
persistent hope.... from post-Katrina southern Louisiana
Michael Adee, National Field Organizer for More
Light Presbyterians, who grew up in south Louisiana and taught at
Louisiana State University, writes after a visit to New Orleans and Baton
Rouge [12-12-05]
His letter concludes:
Over and over again, it was clear to me that "everyone is neighbor"
here in New Orleans and Baton Rouge as people were reaching out to lift
one another up in the aftermath of these disasters. The typical,
unnecessary barriers of race, ethnicity, age, sexual orientation, gender
or class make no difference here in these difficult times. They seem to
dissolve away into our common humanity in these sacred moments.
My hope and prayer is that our Church, nation and world could find ways
to "see, recognize, respect and love everyone as neighbor" in ordinary
times as well. This is the mission and vision of More Light Presbyterians
as we are working together to "Build a Church for all God's people."
The whole letter >> |
Katrina and Rita -- 3 months later
[12-6-05]As the disasters of
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita begin to look more like history than like
current, urgent problems, it may be helpful to look at those critical events
from the perspective of three months of action ... or inaction.
Gene TeSelle, Witherspoon's Issues Analyst, considers the
disasters from two angles:
 | the
policy issues surrounding actions by the federal and state
governments, and concerns raised by the
Coalition on Human Needs, |
 | and the
prospects for the future -- who should have a voice in the
decision-making, what sort of reconstruction would be best, and much more. |
For the latest news -- and needs for help! -- check out
the Presbyterian Disaster
Assistance page. |
So, is God a
terrorist?
[10-5-05]
Berry Craig, writer and professor of history, shares some of the things
that have been said recently about the wrath of God being shown through the
destruction and death wrought by Hurricane Katrina. He doesn’t much like
that view of God as terrorist. |
Presbyterian responses to Hurricane Katrina
[9-21-05]
For current information >>
The Peacemaking Offering
(October 2!) and Hurricane KatrinaAlso:
The Peacemaking Program has written
a letter reflecting on
the Peacemaking Offering and the need to respond to Hurricane Katrina.
The letter may be used by pastors, peacemaking committees, mission
committees, worship committees and others to promote the offering.
And:
How collegiate
ministries can respond to Hurricane Katrina |
|
Another Witherspoon member checks in from New Orleans
[9-24-05] Soon after the Gulf Coast was devastated
by Hurricane Katrina, we contacted some Witherspoon members in that area,
just to let them know we’ve been thinking of them. We
soon heard from a couple of them, but this response came just yesterday,
Sept. 23. Our thoughts and prayers continue to be with the people of
the Gulf Coast as they now deal with Hurricane Rita.
I just got e-mail service today. I and my family
returned last Saturday after 20 days in Dallas where the Red Cross paid my
entire motel bill. I have a little roof damage, and small minor things
broken up. I have a rare location, 15 feet above sea level. The political
posturing around this awful storms evoke cries for justice. Conservative,
right wing, administrations have concerned themselves only with the super
rich, and the poor get nothing. Why can't Americans see what is happening?
Peace, and thank you for your concern and prayers.
John Spaulding
John is a retired minister, living in Jefferson, LA, which
is within New Orleans. |
| Groups urge hurricane relief,
temporary amnesty to illegal immigrants [9-21-05]
Tens of thousands of illegal immigrants displaced by
Hurricane Katrina should be allowed to receive humanitarian relief and to
remain in the United States for now, advocacy groups told Congress today.
The National Alliance of Latin American and Caribbean
Communities urged the government to allow desperate immigrants to receive
all benefits bestowed on other victims of the storm.
More>> |
| Education Under Attack in
Katrina's Wake [9-21-05] The Wall
Street Journal recently exposed that President Bush and his allies in
Congress are plotting to take advantage of hurricane relief measures to
"achieve a broad range of conservative economic and social policies, both in
the storm zone and beyond." On the table are more tax cuts for the wealthy
and the suspension of desegregation measures and environmental safeguards.
Following last week's waiver of wage protections for federal workers,
education is now targeted by two legislative initiatives that could come up
for a vote as early as today.
More>> |
| Sojourners is circulating a "Katrina
Pledge: A commitment to build a new America"
You too may find this a helpful way to let people
articulate and focus their concerns, and commit to acting out of those
concerns. [9-21-05] |
|
Leaders Who Won't
Choose In Washington, it's business as
usual in the face of a national catastrophe.
[9-21-05]
Fareed Zakaria, editor of Newsweek International,
offers a sharp moral critique of the "frivolous" response of American
political leaders to Katrina disaster. |
| Church leaders call for halt
in budget process Kirkpatrick, 4 others say
federal spending plan would empty cupboards of poor and hungry
[9-21-05]
The devastation and suffering left in the wake of
Hurricane Katrina have given church leaders an opportunity to call again for
the U.S. Congress to halt the federal budget-reconciliation process, which
they say promises to gut programs for the poorest and most marginalized
Americans.
The
Presbyterian News Service report >> |
Moderator reflects on
the human aftermath of Katrina
[9-19-05]
In a "blog" note posted on Wednesday, Sept. 14, Rick
Ufford-Chase reported on the effects of Hurricane Katrina through the eyes
of his Vice-Moderator, the Rev. Jean Marie Peacock, who is associate
pastor of a congregation in New Orleans.
Not long after his conversations with her, Jean Marie
Peacock joined the Witherspoon conference on mission for peace and justice
at Stony Point Center. She talked with us freely and movingly about what
has been happening in the storm-ravaged Gulf Coast area, and about the
many ways Presbyterians are responding to the overwhelming needs there.
For more recent blogs from Rick as he visited various places in Louisiana
and Mississippi, go to his blog
page.
Sisters and Brothers,
I don’t know about you, but it took several days for Katrina’s significance
to sink in for me. I had a series of "aha" moments that unfolded through my
conversations with Jean Marie Peacock, the vice-moderator of the General
Assembly and associate pastor at Lakeview Presbyterian Church in New
Orleans. Early on, I was horrified, like all of us, by the horrific violence
of the storm. I, along with Jean Marie and many others, breathed a huge sigh
of relief when New Orleans appeared to come through the storm battered but
not destroyed. Then the levies broke, and I felt my anxiety begin to rise
like the rising of the water in the city of New Orleans.
Later that day, I spoke again with Jean Marie as she and her husband Peter
headed for her parent’s home in Urbana, IL (where they still are two weeks
later). She told me that Lakeview Presbyterian Church was the closest
Presbyterian Church to the break in the 17th Street levy, and that it was
quite likely under at least twelve or fifteen feet of water (a guess that
turned out to be accurate). Her own home was also in one of the flooded
areas, and she and Peter were just beginning to come to grips with the fact
that they probably have lost everything they own. Even now, more than two
weeks later, they have no news of the condition of their home.
Two days later, Jean Marie and I spoke again. This time, she told me that
she couldn’t watch the news footage from the city any longer because it was
just too much to take in. At that point, she and Lakeview’s Senior Pastor,
Neil, still hadn’t managed to track one another down, and she had only
spoken with two or three of the several hundred members of Lakeview. How
does one do the work of pastoring, I wondered, when you don’t know where
your congregants are, how to contact them, or whether they are o.k.?
Jean Marie opened my eyes to still more that I was too ignorant to have
thought of. How do churches that can’t collect offerings on Sunday mornings,
many of whose members have been personally devastated and who don’t know
whether they still have jobs, continue to pay the salaries of their staffs?
In Lakeview’s case, that includes musicians, administrative and program
staff, the sexton, and the teachers for an independent but church-related
childcare program. Many of those folks have families, and they depend on
each week’s paycheck to survive, just as you and I would.
On Wednesday morning the thirty-first of August, I was invited to sit in on
a conference call of the leadership for Presbyterian Disaster Assistance.
(Please link to PDA at
http://www.pcusa.org/katrina/ to find out how you can get
involved.) PDA’s trained teams were already en-route to the Gulf Coast,
call-centers were being established for Presbyterians who wanted to help,
Medical Benevolence Foundation (http://www.mbfoundation.org/)
offered its warehouse in Houston, and international partners were calling to
offer help as well. But I confess that I had yet another "aha" moment during
the phone call, as it dawned on me that this wasn’t just disaster
assistance. PDA was also talking about the long-term housing and possible
resettlement of many of the victims. Katrina will impact the lives of many
Presbyterians outside the affected region as they open their homes and work
to help families resettle, either for the short-term or for the long-term.
Yet another of my new realizations came as I watched the news from a hotel
in Chicago over the following weekend and saw the complete chaos and
desperation of folks who ended up in the superdome and the convention
center. I know that hard questions about political responsibilities will be
asked by and of our politicians, but the church has some tough questions in
front of us as well. This is (another) clarion wake-up call to all of our
churches that we are a long-way from overcoming racism and class division in
this country. Our churches should be leading the way in lifting up the
biblical call to become a beloved community – a community that overcomes the
obvious class and racial barriers that made it possible for tens of
thousands of our (mostly) African American brothers and sisters to be left
behind because they simply didn’t have the resources most of us would count
on to get out when the storm warnings came.
"Aha" moments are a gift to me from God. As children of God, we are called
to create the kind of community where all people feel God’s love. We are
called to witness to God’s compassion, to rebuild lives with the kind of
attention God offers even to the "least of these." We are called to work for
God’s justice whenever clear inequities exist in our communities. I give
thanks for my own, gradual awakening to the magnitude of the challenge as we
respond to the destruction of Katrina.
Thoughtfully,
Rick |
|
Witherspooners deal with the disaster
[9-6-05]
A couple days ago we sent e-mail notes to some
Witherspoon Society members in the flood-ravaged states of Louisiana and
Mississippi.
Here are replies from two of them, both
telling of what is being done for others.
If you know of other
friends in the disaster areas,
and want to share of them, or just ask for news,
please send
a note, to be posted here.
From Mary Fusilier, in Natchitoches, LA:
Hi Doug,
Thanks for your e-mail and concern. We were not affected by the hurricane
weather but have thousands of evacuees now in this part of the state. Our
church website details the efforts to help:
http://www.fpcnatchitoches.org/
Once on the web page, click on the link for "How can you help in the
Hurricane relief effort" then click on the letter from Joe Hill (left
column of the page).
This coming Sunday, we will take a special collection to furnish the
Presbytery of the Pines retreat, Camp Alabama, so that some evacuees can
stay in the cabins there. It will give them more privacy and comfort than
the school gyms where they are now being housed.
Matthew (my son) and I send our prayers and best wishes to all of you
attending the mission conference and also to any Witherspoon members in
Mississippi and South Alabama who may have been affected by the storm.
– Marcy
And from George Marquis Smith, in Fafayette, LA, in the Presbytery of
South Louisiana:
Thanks Doug! I'm fine. Lafayette sustained minimal damage from Katrina.
Of course the Presbytery of South Louisiana has been dealt a blow. There
are many from the NO area I have not heard from yet, but expect to in the
coming days/weeks.
I now have friends living with me from one of the hardest hit areas. We
will be family to one another for the next couple of months or so.
Your thoughts and prayers are appreciated.
George
Send him an email note >>
|
|
Notes from inside New Orleans [9-6-05]
John Flaherty, an editor of Left Turn Magazine, writes
from his experience inside New Orleans – in a refugee camp, talking with
rescue workers, police and military people, and more.
He draws a very grim picture, not only of the natural
disaster, but of the racism and corruption and government neglect which have
made it so much worse.
He says:
Race has always been the undercurrent of Louisiana
politics. This disaster is one that was constructed out of racism, neglect
and incompetence. Hurricane Katrina was the inevitable spark igniting the
gasoline of cruelty and corruption. From the neighborhoods left most at
risk, to the treatment of the refugees to the the media portayal of the
victims, this disaster is shaped by race.
And he concludes with an urgent
message:
Now that the money is flowing in, and
the world's eyes are focused on Katrina, its vital that progressive-minded
people take this opportunity to fight for a rebuilding with justice. New
Orleans is a special place, and we need to fight for its rebirth.
The
whole article >>
Thanks to Witherspooner Amy Ukena for
sending this article.
She adds her own plea:
These are our sisters and brothers and we cannot stand
idly by while these things are going on, AND unreported. Please do
something, ANYTHING, that you can think of, no matter how small or
seemingly insignificant. Together we make a difference.
|
The Flood: Presbyterians and others act to help
[9-3-05]
Direct Action to Aid Victims of Hurricane
Katrina Now!
Pastors for Peace Organizes Aid Caravan for Louisiana and Mississippi
If you can organize a collection drop off point call: John Waller (718)
810-8426 For donations and other information: IFCO/Pastors voicemail (212)
926-5757 Or email: P4P@igc.org
Pastors for Peace has moved quickly to mobilize a Gulf
Coast caravan. We are collecting tons of bottled water, powdered milk,
diapers, food and personal hygiene items for southern Louisiana and
Mississippi. The aid will be delivered to local community and church groups
who are feeding and caring for their neighbors.
We cannot simply stand by and not act in the face of this
monstrous disaster. The incompetence and callousness of government officials
is unspeakable. We are moved to direct action because the racism and
inaction of those who should be caring for ALL the people victimized by
Hurricane Katrina have not done so.
The aid is being collected at drop off centers in ten
states in the Northeast and Midwest and South. What we need now are
volunteers to organize drop off points in those areas. The caravan convoy,
made up of busses, box trucks and other vehicles will take a limited number
of volunteers in order to maximize space for humanitarian aid.
Urgently needed financial donations for those who want to
contribute funds and to offset the fuel costs of this caravan, can be sent
to IFCO/Pastors for Peace. 402 W. 145th St. New York, NY 10031. Those
wishing to make credit card donations can call IFCO Pastors communications
director Lucia Bruno at (347) 423-4330.
Speaking with supporters this week, Rev. Lucius Walker,
executive Director of IFCO/Pastors for Peace said "Despite the urgent
campaign to free the seized computers bound for disabled Cuban children we
must respond to the needs of families hurt by Hurricane Katrina right now".
For more than two decades, Pastors for Peace has delivered
humanitarian aid to families in Chiapas, Honduras, Nicaragua, El Salvador
and Cuba. These Friendshipment Caravans have focused on aiding victims of US
foreign policy. Today, we extend this work to the domestic frontier.
Families on the Gulf coast have been victimized twice over -- by Hurricane
Katrina and again by the callous disregard of a system that was responsible
for protecting them and did not.
We must do our part to demonstrate the love and concern
that exists in communities throughout the US for our brothers and sisters
torn apart by this tragedy.
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Presbyterians respond to the victims of
Hurricane Katrina
Note: We’re passing along the first reports we’ve heard
of specific actions by Presbyterians – as congregations or institutions or
individuals – to offer help in this crisis. If you’re aware of other such
actions, please let us know.
Just
send a note and we’ll share it here!
Westminster College, Fulton, MO,
will assist college students in hurricane
As part of the hurricane relief, Westminster President, Dr. Fletcher M.
Lamkin, has extended a generous offer - free tuition and place to stay for
the Fall semester for any student that was enrolled in a college or
university that was affected by Hurricane Katrina.
The college understands the impact that Hurricane Katrina has had on so many
and that students need a place to continue their education until their
institution can be reopened. The offer will be extended to up to 20 students
for the Fall semester.
If you are an interested student or know of a student that is currently
enrolled in a college or university that has been affected by the hurricane,
please contact Ms. Kelle Silvey at the Westminster College Admissions Office
at 1-800-475-3361 more information.
Thanks to the Rev. Brad Sheppard, Chaplain of Westminster College
Macalester College, in Saint
Paul, MN, has offered free tuition, room and board to 50 to 60 students this
fall from Dillard University, a historically black college in New Orleans.
Does Macalester have room for so many new students? "We'll
make room," said Laurie Hamre, Macalester's dean of students. "It's one way
we can help."
from a Sept. 2 report in the
Minneapolis
Star Tribune |
|
The Flood: Actions have consequences
[9-2-05]
If ever we’ve seen a terrible "natural disaster" which was
largely a human creation, the flooding in New Orleans and along miles of the
Gulf Coast seems to be it.
Jim Wallis was right, a few months ago, when he insisted
that a budget is a moral document – a statement of values being brought to
realization (or not) through the allocation of money.
And in the ghastly mess of the New Orleans Superdome, and
throughout the whole area, that truth has unfolded this week. Choices about
money for "liberating" Iraq and cutting taxes for the rich do seem to make
big differences.
Two reflections along these lines:
Molly Ivins: Why New Orleans Is in Deep Water
Ivins says that this is a column for everyone who ever
said, "I'm sorry, I'm just not interested in politics," or, "There's nothing
I can do about it." She makes a point that needs to be hammered home again
and again, and that is that government policies have real consequences in
people's lives. Katrina illustrates this very point.
More >>
And William Rivers Pitt writes on TruthOut that
Actions have consequences. What you see on your
television today is not some wild accident, but is a disaster that could
have been averted had the priorities of this government been more in line
with the needs of the people it pretends to serve. The city of New
Orleans, home to so much of the culture that makes America unique and
beautiful, is today drowning underneath an avalanche of polluted, diseased
water. This, simply, did not have to happen.
More >>
~~~~~~~~~~~~
We can help ...
Offer housing
Witherspooner Kay LeMosy sends this suggestion:
Just wanted to make sure you know that MoveOn.org has set up a site for
those who need temporary homes to find them. I have offered my guest room,
although it only holds one and I'm awfully far away. Witherspooners need to
know about this. More information >>
~~~~~~~~~~~~
For a little perspective ...
This is not the first time
If you’re interested in how this happened, Gene TeSelle suggests looking at
a book published about ten years ago, which has already been mentioned by
commentators as offering some indications of the political fallout from a
natural disaster like Katrina--
John M. Barry, Rising Tide: The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 and How
It Changed America (Simon & Shuster, 528 pp., Paperback $10.88 at
Amazon)
It goes into the "background," including competing theories from civil
engineers about how to deal with the Mississippi (some were for
channelization, straightening it out so that it would scour out its path,
and building levees to prevent overflow, while others were for keeping its
meanders and letting it overflow into its flood plain). The 1927 flood was
the result of weeks of rains in the Mississippi watershed, and there was
plenty of time to think ahead. As the river rose, ships in the port of New
Orleans could clearly be seen above street level. In order to save New
Orleans, levees were dynamited so that agricultural areas would be flooded,
and these were occupied by poor Cajuns.
In Louisiana politics, the flood gave impetus to the careers of Huey Long
and Leander Perez. Nationally, it was the last time the federal government
refused to offer disaster assistance of any kind. President Calvin Coolidge was succeeded by
Herbert Hoover, who directed the relief efforts. And the flood helped
prepare the way for the New Deal, with its conviction that only the federal
government has the capacity to deal with large-scale public problems.
|
Presbyterian officers send
"a letter
after Hurricane Katrina"
[9-2-05]The three top officers
of the Presbyterian Church (USA) have sent a letter to all congregations,
reporting on some of the effects of the storm and flooding on Presbyterians.
Vice-Moderator Jean Marie Peacock, who lives and ministers in New Orleans,
reports that she and her husband are staying with her parents. From aerial
photos they suspect that their home is under water and they have lost
everything in it, and that their church and many home of their members are
also under water.
Certainly many congregations are deeply affected, but no
clear information is available yet.
The writers urge us to contact Presbyterian Disaster
Assistance online at
http://www.pcusa.org/pda/
. There you will find
several items: daily situation reports, directions for making a financial
contribution, answers to frequently asked questions, information about
volunteering to help, and much more. If you cannot find what you need
online, then call PresbyTel toll-free at (800) 872-3283 for assistance.
|
"Water, water everywhere, nor any
drop to drink."
[9-2-05]Peter Sawtell looks at
the Katrina disaster as an environmentalist and theologian. He comments:
In this morning's news, there are astounding words from Michael Brown,
the director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency. He said that
those trapped in New Orleans bear some responsibility because of their
decision not to evacuate.
Oh, yes, there are some folk who thought about leaving, and decided not
to. I'm sure that they profoundly regret that decision.
But Mr. Brown's callous comments deny the reality of New Orleans. In
that impoverished city, there were tens of thousands of people who don't
own cars, who have no money to buy a bus ticket (as if any bus seats were
available in the 36 hour evacuation window), and who have no money for
food or shelter elsewhere. There were people in nursing homes who had no
choice, and others whose health conditions made travel extremely
difficult, if not impossible.
Multitudes in the disaster zone did not "chose" to stay at home and
ride out the storm. They had no options. What's more, their lack of
options was well known to politicians and disaster planners for years in
advance.
He concludes:
One of the painful realizations of this week is that "national
security" demands that we come to grips with the way we live as part of
the natural world. The environment is not a pretty amenity that we might
decide to preserve after we've taken care of more urgent concerns. The
environment is the basis for our very survival. When we ignore it or abuse
it, the costs will come back to us -- and especially to the poor among us.
Read the whole thing >>
The Rev. Peter Sawtell is Executive Director of
Eco-Justice Ministries
|
Michael Moore
wonders where the helicopters are
[9-2-05]
If you like Michael Moore (and we are aware that some
folks are not fond of him) you might enjoy his letter to President Bush,
which begins:
Any idea where all our helicopters are? It's Day 5 of
Hurricane Katrina and thousands remain stranded in New Orleans and need to
be airlifted. Where on earth could you have misplaced all our military
choppers? Do you need help finding them? I once lost my car in a Sears
parking lot. Man, was that a drag.
Also, any idea where all our national guard soldiers are? We could really
use them right now for the type of thing they signed up to do like helping
with national disasters. How come they weren't there to begin with?
More >> |
| |
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|
A major
Ghost Ranch event this summer!
July 28 - August 3, 2008
Paths toward Peace and Justice:
Spirituality, Earth-Care, and the Prophetic Word in a time of
Violence
More info >>
Register
BEFORE May 20th and you can save $100! |
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If you like what you find here,
we hope you'll help us keep this website going ... and growing!
Please consider making a special contribution --
large or small -- to help us continue and improve this service.
Click
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9650 Clover Circle
Eden Prairie, MN 55347 |
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An index of
our reports
from
BECOMING NEIGHBORS:
An Invitation
to Global Discipleship
A Witherspoon conference
on global mission and justice
September 16 - 19, 2007
Louisville, Kentucky |
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Check out our report from the
Conference
on
Terror, Torture,
and Security |
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