From Margins of
Society to Center
of the Tragedy
By DAVID GONZALEZ, (NY
Times, Published: September 2, 2005)
The scenes of floating corpses, scavengers
fighting for food and desperate throngs seeking any
way out of New Orleans have been tragic enough. But
for many African-American leaders, there is a
growing outrage that many of those still stuck at
the center of this tragedy were people who for
generations had been pushed to the margins of
society.
The victims, they note, were largely black and
poor, those who toiled in the background of the
tourist havens, living in tumbledown neighborhoods
that were long known to be vulnerable to disaster if
the levees failed. Without so much as a car or bus
fare to escape ahead of time, they found themselves
left behind by a failure to plan for their rescue
should the dreaded day ever arrive.
"If you know that terror is approaching in terms
of hurricanes, and you've already seen the damage
they've done in Florida and elsewhere, what in God's
name were you thinking?" said the Rev. Calvin O.
Butts III, pastor of Abyssinian Baptist Church in
Harlem. "I think a lot of it has to do with race and
class. The people affected were largely poor people.
Poor, black people."
In the days since neighborhoods and towns along
the Gulf Coast were wiped out by the winds and water,
there has been a growing sense that race and class
are the unspoken markers of who got out and who got
stuck. Just as in developing countries where the
failures of rural development policies become
glaringly clear at times of natural disasters like
floods or drought, many national leaders said, some
of the United States' poorest cities have been left
vulnerable by federal policies.
"No one would have checked on a lot of the black
people in these parishes while the sun shined," said
Mayor Milton D. Tutwiler of Winstonville, Miss. "So
am I surprised that no one has come to help us now?
No."
The subject is roiling black-oriented Web sites
and message boards, and many black officials say it
is a prime subject of conversation around the
country. Some African-Americans have described the
devastation wrought by Hurricane Katrina as "our
tsunami," while noting that there has yet to be a
response equal to that which followed the Asian
tragedy.
Roosevelt F. Dorn, the mayor of Inglewood, Calif.,
and the president of the National Association of
Black Mayors, said relief and rescue officials
needed to act faster.
"I have a list of black mayors in Mississippi and
Alabama who are crying out for help," Mr. Dorn said.
"Their cities are gone and they are in despair. And
no one has answered their cries."
The Rev. Jesse Jackson said cities had been
dismissed by the Bush administration because Mr.
Bush received few urban votes.
"Many black people feel that their race, their
property conditions and their voting patterns have
been a factor in the response," Mr. Jackson said,
after meeting with Louisiana officials yesterday. "I'm
not saying that myself, but what's self-evident is
that you have many poor people without a way out."
In New Orleans, the disaster's impact underscores
the intersection of race and class in a city where
fully two-thirds of its residents are black and more
than a quarter of the city lives in poverty. In the
Lower Ninth Ward neighborhood, which was inundated
by the floodwaters, more than 98 percent of the
residents are black and more than a third live in
poverty.
Spencer R. Crew, president and chief executive
officer of the national Underground Railroad Freedom
Center in Cincinnati, said the aftermath of the
hurricane would force people to confront inequality.
"Most cities have a hidden or not always talked
about poor population, black and white, and most of
the time we look past them," Dr. Crew said. "This is
a moment in time when we can't look past them. Their
plight is coming to the forefront now. They were the
ones less able to hop in a car and less able to
drive off."
That disparity has been criticized as a "disgrace"
by Charles B. Rangel, the senior Democratic
congressman from New York City, who said it was made
all the worse by the failure of government officials
to have planned.
"I assume the president's going to say he got bad
intelligence, Mr. Rangel said, adding that the
danger to the levees was clear.
"I think that wherever you see poverty, whether
it's in the white rural community or the black urban
community, you see that the resources have been
sucked up into the war and tax cuts for the rich,"
he said.
Outside Brooklyn Law School yesterday, a man
selling recordings of famous African-Americans was
upset at the failure to have prepared for the worst.
The man, who said his name was Muhammad Ali, drew a
damning conclusion about the failure to protect New
Orleans.
"Blacks ain't worth it," he said. "New Orleans is
a hopeless case." Among the messages and essays
circulating in cyberspace that lament the lost lives
and missed opportunities is one by Mark Naison, a
white professor of African-American Studies at
Fordham University in the Bronx.
"Is this what the pioneers of the civil rights
movement fought to achieve, a society where many
black people are as trapped and isolated by their
poverty as they were by segregation laws?" Mr.
Naison wrote. "If Sept. 11 showed the power of a
nation united in response to a devastating attack,
Hurricane Katrina reveals the fault lines of a
region and a nation, rent by profound social
divisions."
That sentiment was shared by members of other
minority groups who understand the bizarre equality
of poverty.
"We tend to think of natural disasters as somehow
even-handed, as somehow random," said Martín Espada,
an English professor at the University of
Massachusetts and poet of a decidedly leftist
political bent who is Puerto Rican. "Yet it has
always been thus: poor people are in danger. That is
what it means to be poor. It's dangerous to be poor.
It's dangerous to be black. It's dangerous to be
Latino."
This Sunday there will be prayers. In pews from
the Gulf Coast to the Northeast, the faithful will
come together and pray for those who lived and those
who died. They will seek to understand something
that has yet to be fully comprehended.
Some may talk of a divine hand behind all of this.
But others have already noted the absence of a human
one.
"Everything is God's will," said Charles Steele
Jr., the president of the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference in Atlanta. "But there's a
certain amount of common sense that God gives to
individuals to prepare for certain things."
That means, Mr. Steele said, not waiting until
the eve of crisis.
"Most of the people that live in the
neighborhoods that were most vulnerable are black
and poor," he said. "So it comes down to a lack of
sensitivity on the part of people in Washington that
you need to help poor folks. It's as simple as that."
Contributing reporting from New York for this
article were Andy Newman, William Yardley, Jonathan
P. Hicks, Patrick D. Healy, Diane Cardwell, Anemona
Hartocollis, Ronald Smothers, Jeff Leeds, Manny
Fernandez and Colin Moynihan. Also contributing were
Michael Cooper in Albany, Gretchen Ruethling in
Chicago, Brenda Goodman in Atlanta and Carolyn
Marshall in San Francisco.