New Orleans After 24 Months
by Greg Palast
 “ They wanted them poor niggers out of there and they ain’t had no intention to allow it to be reopened to no poor niggers, you know? And that’s just the bottom line.â€
It wasn’t a pretty statement. But I wasn’t looking for pretty. I’d taken my investigative team to New Orleans to meet with Malik Rahim. Pretty isn’t Malik’s concern.
We needed an answer to a weird, puzzling and horrific discovery. Among the miles and miles of devastated houses, rubble still there today in New Orleans, we found dry, beautiful homes. But their residents were told by guys dressed like Ninjas wearing “Blackwater†badges: “Try to go into your home and we’ll arrest you.â€
These aren’t just any homes. They are the public housing projects
of the city; the Lafitte Houses and others. But unlike the cinder block
monsters in the Bronx, these public units are beautiful townhouses,
with wrought-iron porches and gardens right next to the tony French
Quarter.
Raised up on high ground, with floors and walls of
concrete, they were some of the only houses left salvageable after the
Katrina flood.
Yet, two years later, there’s still bars on the
windows, the doors are welded shut and the residents banned from
returning. On the first anniversary of the flood, we were filming this
odd scene when I saw a woman on the sidewalk, sobbing. Night was
falling. What was wrong?
“They just messing all over us. Putting
me out our own house. We come to go back to our own home and when we
get there they got the police there putting us out. Oh, no, this is not
right. I’m coming here from Texas seeing if I can get my house back.
But they said they ain’t letting nobody in. But where we gonna go at?â€
Idiot me, I asked, “Where are you going to go tonight?â€
“That’s what I want to know, Mister. Where I’m going to go - me and my kids?â€
With
the help of Patricia Thomas, a Lafitte resident, we broke into an
apartment. The place was gorgeous. The cereal boxes still dry. This was
Patricia’s home. But we decided to get out before we got busted.
I
wasn’t naïve. I had a good idea what this scam was all about: 89,000
poor and working class families stuck in Homeland Security’s trailer
park gulag while their good homes were guarded against their return by
mercenaries. Two decades ago, I worked for the Housing Authority of New
Orleans. Even then, the plan was to evict poor folk out of this very
valuable real estate. But it took the cover of a hurricane to do it.
Malik’s
organization, Common Ground, wouldn’t wait for permission from the
federal and local commissars to help folks return. They organized
takeovers of public housing by the residents. And, in the face of
threats and official displeasure, restored 350 apartments in a
destroyed private development on the high ground across the Mississippi
in the ward called, “Algiers.†The tenants rebuilt their own homes with
their own sweat and their own scraps of cash based on a promise of the
landlords to sell Common Ground the property in return for restoring it.
Why, I asked Malik, was there this strange lock-out from public housing?
Malik shook his dreds. “They didn’t want to open it up. They wanted them closed. They wanted them poor niggers out of there.â€
For
Malik, the emphasis is on “poor.†The racial politics of the Deep South
is as ugly as it is in Philadelphia, Pa. But the New Orleans city
establishment has no problem with Black folk per se. After all, Mayor
Ray Nagin’s parents are African-American.
It’s the Black
survivors without the cash that are a problem. So where New Orleans
once stood, Mayor Nagin, in connivance with a Bush regime more than
happy to keep a quarter million poor folk (i.e. Democrats) out of this
swing state, is creating a new city: a tourist town with a French
Quarter, loose-spending drunks, hot-sheets hotels and a few Black
people to perform the modern version of minstrel shows.
Malik
explained, “It’s two cities. You know? There’s the city for the white
and the rich. And there’s another city for the poor and Blacks. You
know, the city that’s for the white and rich has recovered. They had a
Jazz Fest. They had a Mardi Gras. They’re going to have the Saints
playing for those who have recovered. But for those who haven’t
recovered, there’s nothing.â€
So where are they now? The sobbing
woman and her kids are gone: back to Texas, or wherever. But they will
not be allowed back into Lafitte. Ever.
And Patricia Thomas?
The middle-aged woman, worked sweeping up the vomit and beer each
morning at a French Quarter karioke joint. Not much pay, no health
insurance, of course. She died since we filmed her - in a city bereft
of health care. New Orleans has closed all its public hospitals but for
one “charity†make-shift emergency ward in an abandoned department
store.
And the one bright star, Malik’s housing project? The
tenants’ work was done this past December. By Christmastime, they
received their eviction notices - and all were carried out of their
rebuilt homes by marshals right after the New Year, including a
paraplegic resident who’d lived in the Algiers building for decades.
Hurricane
recovery is class war by other means. And in this war of the powerful
against the powerless, Mr. Bush can rightly land his fighter plane in
Louisiana and declare that, unlike the war in Iraq, it is, indeed,
“Mission Accomplished.â€
Greg Palast is an investigative
journalist and author of the New York Times bestseller, ARMED MADHOUSE:
From Baghdad to New Orleans -- Sordid Secrets and Strange Tales of a
White House Gone Wild. Read other articles by Greg, or visit Greg's
website.
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