There's abundant compassion but a great deal of confusion about the best places to send charitable donations to help the victims of Hurricane Katrina. Here's a list of progressive, grassroots organizations in Louisiana and elsewhere around the country. These groups are already on the ground and are poised to deliver aid to those who need it most.
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Summer of the Superhero
Adam Howard: Superhero-themed films are dominating the summer box office. Is it just about the bottom line or our national longing for genuine heroism?
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Recount: A Nightmare Revisited
Adam Howard: HBO's Recount will bring back bad memories, which is precisely why you should see it.
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A Guide to Grassroots Charities
Adam Howard: Send your relief donations to charities whose values you can trust. Here's a list of resources.
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Kanye West, Unplugged
Adam Howard: NBC took offense when Kanye West took an unscripted swipe at President Bush during a benefit concert for hurricane victims. But somebody had to say it.
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Hip-Hop Voting Bloc?
Adam Howard: If everything goes according to plan, a voting bloc as influential as the religious right, but progressive, could be established.
ACORN is one of the oldest and most successful organizations serving low-income communities in the United States, especially African-American communities, and it has a strong, longstanding base in New Orleans that will enable those affected to speak in their own names and hold politicians at all levels accountable over the long term.
Reprieve
Reprieve is a nonprofit run by Billy Sothern, an
attorney who lives in New Orleans and represents
indigent people facing the death penalty. Tax-deductible donations can be made online.
Community Labor United
Community Labor United is a coalition of progressive
organizations in New Orleans formed in 1998. Their
mission is to build organizational unity and support
efforts that address poverty, racism and education.
CLU organized in the areas hardest hit by the
hurricane.
Contact: Curtis Muhammad.
Charity Hospital
Charity Hospital is a public hospital in New Orleans serving
low-income people. It was among the last to be
evacuated, while private hospitals were able to pay
for transport and care for their patients days
earlier.
Louisiana Coalition Against Domestic Violence
LCADV is a network of twenty domestic violence programs and
shelters throughout the state. Four shelters
and two nonresidential programs are completely closed, and two or three may be completely
destroyed. Donations will be used to assist battered
victims from the following parishes in Louisiana:
Orleans, Jefferson, St. Tammany, St. Bernard and
Plaquemines. To make a credit card donation, call (225) 752-1296. Or
fax a voided check with the amount of your donation to
(225) 751-8927.
NAACP
The NAACP is setting up command centers in Louisiana,
Mississippi and Alabama as part of its disaster
relief efforts. NAACP units across the nation have
begun collecting resources that will be placed on
trucks and sent directly into the disaster areas.
Also, the NAACP has established a disaster relief fund
that can accept monetary donations to aid in the relief
effort.
Modest Needs
Modest Needs has launched an initiative designed
to ease the financial burden placed on those
who have opened their homes to friends, family
members and others displaced by Katrina.
Louisiana Environmental Action Network
LEAN members have provided airdrops of
food, water and medical supplies to the trapped
residents of St. Bernard, Washington and Plaquemine parishes. LEAN is
raising funds to give local people, working with
local government leaders, immediate assistance.
Baton Rouge Area Foundation
Since 1964, the Baton Rouge Area Foundation has helped
local philanthropists create a lasting legacy of
community development. The Hurricane Katrina Displaced
Residents Fund will benefit those individuals
evacuated to Baton Rouge. The Hurricane Katrina New
Orleans Recovery Fund will focus on rebuilding infrastructure.
National Youth Advocacy Coalition/National Center for Lesbian Rights
In partnership with many organizations around the
country, NYAC and its partners, including NCLR, have
launched the Hurricane Katrina LGBT Relief Fund to
ensure that LGBT youth and families receive the
critical support they need to regain stability in
their lives.
National Network of Abortion Funds
The National Network of Abortion Funds (NNAF) has
established an emergency fund to provide abortion care for
women and girls affected by the hurricane.
AmeriCares
AmeriCares is providing medical relief to aid
Hurricane Katrina survivors in Louisiana,
Mississippi and Alabama.
Operation USA
Operation USA can provide medical supplies and cash grants to
smaller local clinics that are not Red Cross affiliates.
Louisiana Welfare Rights Organization
Located in New Orleans, WRO is one of the oldest welfare-rights advocacy organizations in the area. Among the services provided are job training and low-income housing. Donations should be sent through the Direct Action Welfare Group.
Malcolm X Grassroots Movement
The Malcolm X Grassroots Movement is sponsoring a food
and clothing drive for hurricane victims.
Contact: (718) 254-8800
Lewis Temple CME Church
272 Medgar Evers Street
Grambling, LA 71245
Contact: Rev. Dr. Ricky Helton (318) 247-3793
S.H.A.P.E. Community Center
3815 Live Oak
Houston, Texas 77004
Contact: Deloyd Parker (713) 521-0641
St. Luke Community Life Center
6211 East Grand Street
Dallas, TX 75223
Mohammad Mosque 65
2600 Plank Road
Baton Rouge, LA 70805
Contact: Minister Andrew Muhammad (225) 923-1400 or (225) 357-3079
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