2008 Service Trip to New Orleans

Visible reminders make healing difficult

evan.jpgMany of the locations that we’ve visited have visible water marks that reach as high as 15 feet. A local man told us that these marks were formed only after the flood waters had settled several weeks after the storm had passed. All of the folks that we’ve spoken with have stressed that these marks do not even begin to reflect how high the flood waters reached at their highest levels. On our drive to the St. Bernard Parrish community resource center, I noticed that the vast majority of houses have been marked with a large “X”. We were told that these marks signified that the house had been checked after the storm. We also learned that that number found just below the “X” represents the number of people that clean-up crews found dead in each house. Our drive home after our work for the day was complete took on a much different tenor than our morning departure. I found myself paying more attention to the large, spray-painted numbers and water marks on the houses we passed than to the road and heavy New Orleans traffic in front of me. Many of the houses we passed had numbers other than zero on their fronts. I found strange irony in the fact that many of these very visible X’s were painted in blood red. I cannot understand how a city can be expected to heal after such a great tragedy when such visible and macabre reminders of the day that permanently altered the lives of so many remain present on nearly every street corner two and a half years later. The people of New Orleans seem like a VERY resilient group but I think that even they would admit that seeing these marks on their morning drives to work, on the way to the grocery store, and in nearly every other public space conjures up memories and images that by now they’d rather forget. With each day and with every new encounter, I am reminded of how truly blessed and fortunate I am.


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