Carencro, LA
Nearly a week out of New Orleans now, we sit in our friends' living room and watch as our city is dismembered. Neighbors in this small town stop by with clothes, a bicycle for our daughter, a scooter for my son. We meet them at the front door as CNN's cameras pan across the faces of our dying neighbors.
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The Charter School Flood
Michael Tisserand: Drastic changes in the educational system are leaving New Orleans's public schools behind.
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The Katrina Factor
Michael Tisserand: There's little evidence so far that Democrats will push for reconstruction in New Orleans.
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Linking to New Orleans
Michael Tisserand: As New Orleans rebuilds, so does its Internet community. Here's a list of the Big Easy's liveliest sites.
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Don't Mourn, Link
Michael Tisserand: After the storm hit, the Internet was one of the few reliable sources of information for New Orleans. A year later, it remains a critical tool for citizens' participation in their city's reconstruction.
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Bush's New Storm
Michael Tisserand: The Bush Administration failed to protect New Orleans and has yet to rescue its displaced citizens. We need an independent investigation to force accountability.
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Beyond Shelters
Michael Tisserand: Advocacy groups like ACORN want New Orleanians to play a role in the rebuilding of the community they had to leave. The biggest issue so far: getting refugees of the storm back home.
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Living Like a Refugee
Michael Tisserand: Not since the days of the Dust Bowl has America seen such a massive migration of refugees. Who becomes one of this tribe is a matter of race and class.
A French Quarter bar manager named Bigfoot rode out Hurricane Katrina in the Iberville Project, the substandard public housing development that many of the French Quarter's waiters and busboys, dishwashers and maids called home.
He writes in a storm survivors' blog (www.livejournal.com/users/interdictor) that attempts by Iberville residents to flag down police resulted in guns being aimed. Here's what else he says: "The people are so desperate that they're doing anything they can think of to impress the authorities enough to bring some buses. These things include standing in single-file lines with the elderly in front, women and children next; sweeping up the area and cleaning the windows and anything else that would show the people are not barbarians. The buses never stop."
Now comes the journey of the survivors.
My wife, a pediatrician, went into the town of Lafayette yesterday to try to find work. She returned and told me that she encountered a few people talking about the refugees who have come to town, worrying about possible looting. Across southwest Louisiana, people have been generous, the city's public school system even undertaking the task of registering more than a thousand New Orleans kids who washed up here.
But as time passes, how will people feel about those of us who don't find a way to move on? My family and I got out of New Orleans in time, and have been embraced by friends. We're very sad and very scared but eventually we'll do fine, as we mourn a lost community and try to piece together our résumés.
But what does the future hold for the tens of thousands of our neighbors now finally being bused to sports arenas across Louisiana and Texas?
Woody Guthrie would know. The Dust Bowl created by the storms of the 1930s and the rise of agribusiness led to the first massive movement across the country of American refugees, and those were Guthrie's people. That might be why he could write so starkly about another group of victims in his song "Deportee (Plane Wreck at Los Gatos)": "You won't have your names when you ride the big airplane. All they will call you will be 'deportee.'"
New Orleans has led the nation in poverty, in children at risk, in illiteracy, in its murder rate. Now, as we flee this water bowl together, we have become the second major movement of American refugees. Rather than shanties and camps, we're sheltered in homes and arenas--those of us who are still living.
My neighbor Kiki Huston is here with her three children, staying with friends in the town of St. Martinville. This week, her daughter Olivia announced that she wanted to go to Lafayette's Cajundome to help the people camped out there. When they arrived, they were turned away. "You're from New Orleans," they were told. "You should be relaxing."
North of Carencro, about ten miles from where I sit, a bus just overturned, filled with refugees. Back home in New Orleans, fires are breaking out near my old neighborhood. Woody Guthrie sang it: I ain't got a home in this world anymore.

Buzzflash
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