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"Faith and Hope
in New Orleans:
Dominicans after Katrina"
Story Part 1:
Different Lives Living in the Same World
In some ways, one could not
imagine two more different women.
Shirley
is a tall black woman with a strong voice and an
even stronger countenance. A now-retired inner-city
music teacher, she speaks with great passion for her
field and for children. A robust laugh and
contagious smile offer a glimpse of the influential
educator she must have been.
Lou’s
slight figure, pale complexion, and quiet demeanor
stand in stark contrast. Her strawberry blonde hair
frames a soft face, revealing the calm, gentle
character of a grandmother and professional artist.
Even their experiences in the aftermath of Katrina
have been markedly different. Shirley’s family home
of more than
40
years – paid for with sweat and sacrifice over time
first by her parents, then by Shirley and her sister
after their deaths – stands in the abandoned Upper
Ninth Ward in an eerie time-warp state, where block
after block of homes remain as they were more than a
year and a half ago when the waters first receded
from their peak at 13 feet. Living in a cramped
apartment in another part of town, Shirley still
awaits information as to whether any funding through
HUD will be available to replace her home.
Lou’s spacious residence, which she and her husband
purchased when they relocated to New Orleans after
retiring a few years
ago,
sits along the river in the flood-damaged part of
town. Soft hues of paint on the walls and imported
tiles in the floors mask the fact that not long ago,
five feet of water filled the house. The couple did
not begin the renovations to their home until after
repairs to their other property – an art studio and
three rental apartments in New Orleans – were
completed. But, by Thanksgiving time last year, both
construction projects were finished.
In spite of their differences, Shirley Stewart and
Lou Jordan are friends – and have been for years.
And, their friendship runs deeper than their mutual
love of art and their experience of utter
devastation in Katrina’s wake.
They share a
common Catholic faith
and a common identity within that faith:
they are both Lay Dominicans.
As Dominican Laity, they are members of the
international branch of the Dominican Order where
lay women and men profess vows and choose to live
lives based on the Dominican pillars of prayer,
study, community, and preaching. They are two of
about 25 members of the St. Dominic Chapter who have
returned to New Orleans to rebuild their
communities, their churches, and their lives. Theirs
is a close-knit group that has grown even closer in
the wake of the post-Katrina devastation.

Greg, Maureen, Jo Ann, Lou, Shirley, Bruce
Prior to the storm, The St. Dominic Chapter of the
Dominican Laity had about 40 members. They formally
met at St. Dominic’s Church on a monthly basis to
study, read scripture, pray the Liturgy of the
Hours, and support one another as they strived to
live out the Dominican ideals in their daily lives.
The disaster that tried each member’s faith
individually also tried the Chapter communally; the
group not only weathered the storm, but the
experiences have strengthened their bonds to one
another.
The story of each Chapter member is unique.
-
Maureen and Gregory Wright,
moderator and formation director for the
Chapter, respectively, lost their home to mold
and water damage resulting from the more than
nine feet of water that consumed their
neighborhood after the levees broke. In an
effort to foster stability for their teenage
daughter, they made the difficult choice to
purchase a new home, rather than re-build their
old one.
-
Jo Ann Cotterman, vice
moderator for the Chapter, said goodbye to her
two-story house near the 17th Street Canal
before evacuating, but remarkably found upon her
return that just a few inches of water had
permeated the downstairs. Fires that burned
houses just a block away spared her property,
and she was able to move back in without much
ceremony.
-
Situated north of Lake
Pontchartrain, provincial moderator Bruce
Trigo’s home remained largely undamaged.
Immediately after the storm and even now, he and
his wife and children have opened their home to
friends and family who were not as lucky as they
were.
But as these members of the chapter relate their
separate experiences during and after the storm,
their stories soon intersect. All express the
profound relief they encountered when they were
finally able to connect with one another.
“You
worry about your Chapter just as you worry about
your family,” Jo Ann expresses. As moderator,
Maureen tried various times to initiate contact
with chapter members through blanket emails. “I
can’t explain the excitement the first time I
heard that cell phone ring,” she explains,
noting that especially in the beginning, they
found they were able to communicate via text
message, even as cell phone calling coverage was
inconsistent and unreliable. Little by little,
they were able to confirm one another’s
whereabouts and begin helping one another as
they were able.
Initially their contact took the form of prayer,
support, and just connecting with one another.
As the city opened back up, they were able to
accompany one another through the
process
of returning and discovering the devastation of
their homes. They helped each other in
recovering items from their properties and in
finding suitable places to stay. At one point,
Gregory was one of Bruce’s grateful guests, with
a one-month stay that enabled him to continue
working in the city and to look for other
accommodations while his family remained in a
hotel hours away. Whether in baby steps or in
great leaps, they have helped one another in the
long recovery effort – physically, emotionally,
and spiritually.
“Being a Lay Dominican, you know you are part of
a family,” shares Shirley. “But you never
realize just how big that family is until you
experience a disaster like this.” In recovering
from Katrina, Shirley and others found family
bonds not only within their chapter, but also in
the larger
Dominican
Family. She expresses profound gratitude for the
prayerful support she has felt and for the
concrete gestures of aid she has received,
including financial assistance through the
Dominican Foundation that has helped her get
back on her feet again. Of greatest treasure and
meaning to her is a hand-made quilt she received
from Dominicans in California, who sent numerous
quilts to Katrina victims in the aftermath of
the storm.
As in any strong family, members of the St.
Dominic Chapter of the Dominican Laity have seen
one another at their best and at their worst.
They have celebrated triumphs together and
carried one another through the worst of
tragedies. They share tears with one another as
easily as they share laughter, and they are able
to be themselves in one another’s presence.
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In the company of friends,
outspoken Shirley shows her timid, vulnerable
side as she describes the fear, frustration, and
grief she has endured.
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Soft-spoken Lou reveals the
strong woman inside her that has made tough
decisions and managed two major construction
projects in the name of recovery.
Even amid their outward differences, Shirley and
Lou – and the whole group of friends – know
their common bonds hold them more tightly
together than any societal stereotypes.
And so, almost two years after the disaster, the
recovery work continues, personally and
communally. Like so
many,
members of the St. Dominic Chapter of the
Dominican Laity say they have learned what
really matters in life, and they count one
another and the larger Dominican Family among
their most important treasures. They recognize
that not only with the city of New Orleans never
be the same, neither will they. And some of that
is not all bad.
Story Contributors: Karen
Clay (Columbus), Dusty Farnan, OP (Adrian) and
Peggy Ryan, OP (Caldwell)
Know the Whole Story:
Go to
www.domlife.org to read the entire story of
Dominicans in New Orleans after Katrina
and to view all the
photos.
Click here to
view the "Snapshot" of this story
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