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LA Laureate Responds:
Those of us who were able to leave the City of New Orleans before the hurricane are scattered and waiting
to return to begin again. From such places as Shreveport and Baton Rouge, Louisiana, we receive reports of rapes, looting,
shooting and fires.
To many people, home is simply the most recent place they've worked or lived. These are the people who wonder why
we bother living there. New Orleanians have ties that go back many generations. My own family goes back to slavery and freedom
there. And there is no way I will not return on the first possible date.
Americans know New Orleans primarily as a tourist destination, a playground of tourists
and wealthy businessmen. The fact is that this is one of the greatest cities this country has known. It is unique in the history
of the nation, and through such industries as oil & gas, shipping and transportation and the growth and spread of jazz
and the music culture that has grown out of it, has provided the backbone for much of what the rest of the world knows and
thinks of as "American." Years ago we were dubbed "the City that Care Forgot," "Big Easy," "Silver City" not only because
we knew how to enjoy life, but because we were and are an open-handed and open-hearted people.
The City that has played host not only to the nation but to the world
is now stranded across the nation. Those of us who have family and friends to take us in are the fortunate ones. The masses
of people who have populated the world's television screens for the past week are the poor, the broken. If they are in any
wise refugees, however, the refuge they seek is from the race and class prejudice and neglect that comes with being Black
and poorer than most Americans can imagine.
New Orleanians, however, are a people of unimaginable strength and resilience. Great fallen cities have been rebuilt
since ancient times. And New Orleans will be rebuilt as a great city. Tell that to the world again and again.
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