People say hi to each other.
People want to know why you are here and when you tell them you are here to work on houses, they express a great thankfulness.
This is a city that is broken, that is struggling to get back, that is depressed in most areas while in others everything appears normal.
People are missing from the neighborhoods because they have been sent elsewhere and they have nothing to come back to.
This is still a common sign on many houses.




This is a common sight on buildings that used to be small, neighborhood businesses.





It doesn't look like it was a real cheerful place before Katrina and of course now looks really bad.


Today I spent the entire day working with an electric drill with a wire brush attachment working on the scroll work paint of the wrought iron work on the front porch. Other people were scrapping off the paint on the rails, all so it can be repainted.
We have spent two nights at a great barbeque restaraunt but tonight we headed in to the French Quarter and went to St. Anna's Episcopal church for a service and then community dinner and music. St. Anna's mission is to the musicians. There was a man with a wonderful voice singing acapello during the service and then we made a $5 contribution for dinner and then put money in the hat for the musicians where played during the evening. Great music...from jazz to blues and just awesome stuff! I could have stayed there longer but we had to go because we have to be at the warehouse tomorrow at 8am for our job assignments.
This is a trip that I am really enjoying. The woman of the house where we have been working cooked us a spaghetti lunch yesterday which was so much better than our little sandwiches with two small pieces of ham and one piece of American cheese. We appreciated it very much! It was a wonderful way for her to say thank you to us. But many of us have expressed our gratitude that we were able to come down to do this. There are so many emotions going through my head...a lot to be sorted out. But not tonight.
4 comments:
Thanks for sharing this, Liz. Our former church, in Santa Rosa, went down last spring to work on homes for a week. I think it is a tremendous outreach.
I think it is unconscionable that there is still so much devastation in parts of NO.
I am in balmy SF. We arrived today to 80+ temperatures.
What a wonderful thing you are doing! and thank you for telling us about it.
Hi Liz, it's nice to hear what is really going down there from real people rather than the media. And really wonderful what you're doing to help!
A powerful reminder of what still remains to be done. How satisfying it must be to participate in doing so much good.
Post a Comment