What is
C’est si bon (translation: It’s so good)?
Is it a popular song recorded by Eartha Kitt? Is it
the name of a restaurant on St. Charles Street? Is
it a positive spirit to be found in New Orleans
among those committed to rebuilding a severely
damaged city? The answer is: all of the above.
Signs
throughout the city bravely declare, “We’ll be
back.” Meanwhile the presence of Dominican friars in
Louisiana continues as it has since 1911 and now,
two years after Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath
of flood, the men seem truly undaunted by the
monumental challenges that still lie ahead.
The Southern
Province has its Provincial office in Metairie. The
building sustained wind damage, but did not flood.
Fr. Emiliano Zapata, OP, Socius and Vicar
Provincial, shared that there are currently 19
friars living and ministering in the city. They live
in two priories and lead two parishes: St. Anthony
of Padua on Canal Street in Mid-City and St. Dominic
in the Lakeview district. The parish buildings,
including the schools, belong to the Archdiocese of
New Orleans, and were woefully underinsured for the
water damage they sustained.
We
caught up with Bro. Herman Johnson between classes
at Xavier University, an institution that is
Catholic and historically serves the Black student
body. With its purpose to promote a more just and
humane society, Xavier prepares its students to
assume roles of leadership and service in society.
Bro. Herman,
professor of Spanish in the Modern Languages
Department, is a native of New Orleans who elected
to remain in the city and assist his neighbors: 33
sick and elderly people who were trapped in their
homes. As was reported by Claudia McDonnell of
Catholic New York in October 2005, Bro.
Herman recalled that “Many of them were lying in bed
when we rescued them. The mattresses were already
floating. After we swam to them, we would walk in
the water, dragging the mattress. We floated them to
our house.”
For a time,
Bro. Herman, like so many others, had to learn to
cope without many of the things most of us take for
granted: a clean, safe place to live, a regular job,
a sense of normalcy. “But,” he said, “it’s helping
me to deepen my prayer life, to come to know who I
am as I am, [apart from] the externals that humans
use to define themselves.”
Bro. Herman is
thrilled that Xavier University was reopened as of
January 2005 and hopes the school will be able to
regain the students and teachers who were forced to
leave and have not been able to return. “I wanted to
return to continue our 75 + years tradition of
Dominicans at Xavier.”
“I’m
hopeful that we’ll again be a great city and a great
university, but it will take time. The city was
racked with social ills before Katrina. Racism is a
perennial problem in New Orleans.
In rebuilding the city,
it won’t work to ignore
the poor.”
We asked Bro. Herman what he would wish for if
guaranteed that he could be granted three. He told
us he prays
-
that the inner city
parishes and schools that were closed will be
reopened,
-
that there will be more
assistance for Xavier University students, 90%
of whom rely on financial aid,
-
that the priory will be
restored so that he can return there to live
with his brothers.
As he left us
to administer a test to his class downstairs, he
assured us, “Every day I do see grace to do things
in a new way.”
A
trip to St. Dominic Parish meant a sobering ride
through Lakeview which was flooded when several wall
panels of the 17th Street Canal levee failed. What
was once a lovely middle-class neighborhood of
12,500 households now looks like a war zone. Some
lots have been scraped clean, some homes have been
gutted, some are being rebuilt, but many more stand
in silent witness to the ravages of Katrina and the
flood waters, badly damaged, rotting and abandoned.
We
were fortunate to find Fr. Paul Watkins, OP, in the
trailer being used as the parish office at St.
Dominic, and he generously took time to show us the
priory and the church. “We had 3,600 families here
before Katrina; now we have 1,200,” he told us.
He showed us
the windowless second-floor stairwell where the
Southern Province Prior, Marty Gleeson, OP, friar,
Chrys Finn, OP, had taken shelter, set up an altar
and prayed before being rescued from the third-story
window by rowboat.
Fr. Paul smiled
as he showed us the work that is being done to
restore the priory where, at the worst moments,
eight to ten feet of water flooded the first
floor.
(In the photo, Linda - who is 5’ tall - is standing
next to the statue of St. Dominic outside the
church. Katrina’s flood waters covered all but the
statue’s right fingers and the star.)
Father Paul
was still smiling as he outlined the massive cleanup
that had to be done in the church, and the plans for
new lighting and new pews. The parishioners make do
for now with folding metal chairs.
It was
beginning to occur to us
that smiling is what one does
in this phase of the recovery of New Orleans,
because what is the alternative?
Next we drove
across town to St. Anthony Priory, where we came
upon Fr. Charles Latour, OP, busily overseeing the
restoration of the three-story, 80-year-old
building. “It’s a great day,” he told us, “because
today the friars’ mattresses were delivered. No
furniture yet, but the mattresses arrived!” When the
three story building is ready, the 11 friars
assigned to St. Anthony will be able to live in
community once again; for now they meet for evening
meals
and three friars live in a rented house nearby.
The pastor,
Fr. Ian Bordenave, OP, waved as he came from one
meeting on his way to another and expressed his
regret that he couldn’t stop to chat. While the
school was flooded, the church was not, and only
about 60 families have not returned since Katrina.
At the end of the day, we were tired. It wasn’t that
the day had been physically taxing. It was
because we had seen and heard so much that expressed
fear, confusion, loss, sadness and frustration. But
at the same time, we had witnessed many signs of
hope. The friars of the Southern Province we met are
sincerely energized by the work before them. In
fact, they see it as an opportunity to preach the
Word of faith in God, even in the midst of a massive
and slow recovery from one of this country’s worst
natural disasters.
Story Contributors: Al Judy, OP (St.
Albert), Donna Brunnell, OP (Hope), Kate Martin (San
Rafael), Lucy Sanchez (St. Albert), and Isabelle
Williamson (St. Martin)
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 "At a Glance" Snapshot view of this story.