"Faith and Hope
in New Orleans: Dominicans after Katrina"
Story Part
11:
Water Memories:
My Personal Aftermath of New Orleans,
August 2005
Sister
Patricia Rogers, OP was principal at St. Mary
Academy in New Orleans when Hurricane Katrina hit.
She had been in that school for three years. The
school was not rebuilt. She left New Orleans with
five other Sisters. After 11 hours on the road, a
man and woman they had never met
offered
their home to the group, providing food and needed
medication. After a week, the Sisters were invited
to stay at a convent in Rayne, LA. Sr. Patricia is
now Director of Vocation Ministry for the Sinsinawa
Dominicans in the United States and living in
Chicago.
Water brings to
mind different thoughts and memories for different
people. Listening to or watching a slow moving
stream, a waterfall, or waves on a
lake
or an ocean is a spiritual experience for many. The
calming effect of water can create positive energy
and inner peace and helps some commune with God.
Waters many properties and characteristics are what
make water so special. Its beauty and calming effect
are so romanticized in our culture that we overlook
the damage poor water quality has on life and
waters power to destroy.
Hurricanes are
storms that form over a body of water. A hurricane
is composed of high winds, rain, and thunderstorms.
The reported by-products of a hurricane are
tornados, floods, wind and hail storms, mass
destruction, and deaths.
August 29,
2005, marks the date of the worst flood in U.S.
history. Most people name this event "Hurricane
Katrina", but the fact is Katrina did not make a
direct hit on the city of New Orleans.

Inadequate
levies were the cause of these devastating flood
waters. All who witnessed the rising, rushing water
fill the city first hand or the aftermath a few
weeks later have a new understanding and respect for
water.
The TV accounts of the flood in those first few
hours could only cover the destruction of property
and life.
The real devastation in those first few days
of the flood
was the loss of family.
As time and days moved on, the devastation expanded
to include
the loss of community, friends, and livelihood.
It
was the flood water that caused:
-
the
separation of family members;
-
the
displacement of neighbors, parishioners,
schoolmates, coworkers and friends;
-
people to
be left without basic needs and the financial
means to survive.
I am a non-native
member of the New Orleans' city community
-
Many New
Orleans' family members, friends, and neighbors
have been reunited or at least found where they
re-located and are now re-connected by phone or
e-mail.
-
Some native
and non-native members of our NOLA community
were never found, and some - who may have
survived - will never be reconnected or
reunited.
-
The loss of
people through displacement and distance is hard
for the non-natives who became part of the New
Orleans community. Our lack of financial or
family ties to the city and our unwelcome need
to live elsewhere have created feelings of
hopelessness in returning and reconnecting.
As
a non-native who was privileged to "move on"
away from the everyday presence of devastation,
the loss is different but painful. Living
without the presence of those who surrounded me
daily or the folks I looked forward to seeing in
the market places and in church is my
devastation. Most people plan a move away from
family, friends, or a city. Most people have the
option of a farewell party, or how and if they
want to say goodbye. Even if one left in a
hurry, often theres a chance to return to
familiar faces and places. My stolen chance to
say goodbye and the impossible task of locating
familiar faces created a hole that only time can
fill.
The
threat of storms will forever cause me to think
of the children in New Orleans who cry each time
it rains and of the community I loved. I pray
that those affected by storm waters will someday
soon remember the romantic water thoughts they
once had.
by Patricia Rogers, OP (Sinsinawa)
Water Memories is the final story
in our 2007 series "Faith and Hope in New
Orleans: Dominicans after Katrina." But be
assured that this is not the end of our
participation with our NOLA Dominican Family in
the recovery and restoration of this city
community. We care. We hear your plea. We are
with you. We are FAMILY.
Click here to return to the
Caldwell Katrina "Table of Contents" page.
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