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POETRYETC  2005

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Subject:

Re: Artistic New Orleans

From:

Annie Finch <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Poetryetc provides a venue for a dialogue relating to poetry and poetics <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Tue, 6 Sep 2005 13:54:42 -0400

Content-Type:

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> There was also a film from the late 1970s, Pretty Baby, with one of
> the Carradine brothers (Keith? David?) and a kiddie-porn Brooke
> Shields, who was all of 12 years old at the time. Shades of Jodie
> Foster in _Taxi Driver_. I think Susan Sarandon was one of the whores
> and Shields was her daughter whom Bellocq married!

I stayed a week, eons ago, as a guest in a house where part of that
movie was filmed. Crumbling courtyard with iron-wrought fencing and
what a gate. What a week.

I also lived in Houston a while, and maybe one reason N.O. thrived
before air conditioning is that the mighty Mississippi gives it energy
and breezes that Houston simply doesn't have. Houston just sits there.
  New Orleans pulses--even the landscape does.


Speaking of Anne Rice, someone just sent me her response to all this:

Published on Sunday, September 4, 2005 by the New York Times
Do You Know What it Means to Lose New Orleans?
by Anne Rice

What do people really know about New Orleans?

Do they take away with them an awareness that it has always been not
only a great white metropolis but also a great black city, a city where
African-Americans have come together again and again to form the
strongest African-American culture in the land?

The first literary magazine ever published in Louisiana was the work of
black men, French-speaking poets and writers who brought together their
work in three issues of a little book called L'Album Littéraire. That
was in the 1840's, and by that time the city had a prosperous class of
free black artisans, sculptors, businessmen, property owners, skilled
laborers in all fields. Thousands of slaves lived on their own in the
city, too, making a living at various jobs, and sending home a few
dollars to their owners in the country at the end of the month.

This is not to diminish the horror of the slave market in the middle of
the famous St. Louis Hotel, or the injustice of the slave labor on
plantations from one end of the state to the other. It is merely to say
that it was never all "have or have not" in this strange and beautiful
city.

Later in the 19th century, as the Irish immigrants poured in by the
thousands, filling the holds of ships that had emptied their cargoes of
cotton in Liverpool, and as the German and Italian immigrants soon
followed, a vital and complex culture emerged. Huge churches went up to
serve the great faith of the city's European-born Catholics; convents
and schools and orphanages were built for the newly arrived and the
struggling; the city expanded in all directions with new neighborhoods
of large, graceful houses, or areas of more humble cottages, even the
smallest of which, with their floor-length shutters and deep-pitched
roofs, possessed an undeniable Caribbean charm.

Through this all, black culture never declined in Louisiana. In fact,
New Orleans became home to blacks in a way, perhaps, that few other
American cities have ever been. Dillard University and Xavier
University became two of the most outstanding black colleges in
America; and once the battles of desegregation had been won, black New
Orleanians entered all levels of life, building a visible middle class
that is absent in far too many Western and Northern American cities to
this day.

The influence of blacks on the music of the city and the nation is too
immense and too well known to be described. It was black musicians
coming down to New Orleans for work who nicknamed the city "the Big
Easy" because it was a place where they could always find a job. But
it's not fair to the nature of New Orleans to think of jazz and the
blues as the poor man's music, or the music of the oppressed.

Something else was going on in New Orleans. The living was good there.
The clock ticked more slowly; people laughed more easily; people
kissed; people loved; there was joy.

Which is why so many New Orleanians, black and white, never went north.
They didn't want to leave a place where they felt at home in
neighborhoods that dated back centuries; they didn't want to leave
families whose rounds of weddings, births and funerals had become the
fabric of their lives. They didn't want to leave a city where tolerance
had always been able to outweigh prejudice, where patience had always
been able to outweigh rage. They didn't want to leave a place that was
theirs.

And so New Orleans prospered, slowly, unevenly, but surely - home to
Protestants and Catholics, including the Irish parading through the old
neighborhood on St. Patrick's Day as they hand out cabbages and
potatoes and onions to the eager crowds; including the Italians, with
their lavish St. Joseph's altars spread out with cakes and cookies in
homes and restaurants and churches every March; including the uptown
traditionalists who seek to preserve the peace and beauty of the Garden
District; including the Germans with their clubs and traditions;
including the black population playing an ever increasing role in the
city's civic affairs.

Now nature has done what the Civil War couldn't do. Nature has done
what the labor riots of the 1920's couldn't do. Nature had done what
"modern life" with its relentless pursuit of efficiency couldn't do. It
has done what racism couldn't do, and what segregation couldn't do
either. Nature has laid the city waste - with a scope that brings to
mind the end of Pompeii.


I share this history for a reason - and to answer questions that have
arisen these last few days. Almost as soon as the cameras began panning
over the rooftops, and the helicopters began chopping free those
trapped in their attics, a chorus of voices rose. "Why didn't they
leave?" people asked both on and off camera. "Why did they stay there
when they knew a storm was coming?" One reporter even asked me, "Why do
people live in such a place?"

Then as conditions became unbearable, the looters took to the streets.
Windows were smashed, jewelry snatched, stores broken open, water and
food and televisions carried out by fierce and uninhibited crowds.

Now the voices grew even louder. How could these thieves loot and
pillage in a time of such crisis? How could people shoot one another?
Because the faces of those drowning and the faces of those looting were
largely black faces, race came into the picture. What kind of people
are these, the people of New Orleans, who stay in a city about to be
flooded, and then turn on one another?

Well, here's an answer. Thousands didn't leave New Orleans because they
couldn't leave. They didn't have the money. They didn't have the
vehicles. They didn't have any place to go. They are the poor, black
and white, who dwell in any city in great numbers; and they did what
they felt they could do - they huddled together in the strongest houses
they could find. There was no way to up and leave and check into the
nearest Ramada Inn.

What's more, thousands more who could have left stayed behind to help
others. They went out in the helicopters and pulled the survivors off
rooftops; they went through the flooded streets in their boats trying
to gather those they could find. Meanwhile, city officials tried
desperately to alleviate the worsening conditions in the Superdome,
while makeshift shelters and hotels and hospitals struggled.

And where was everyone else during all this? Oh, help is coming, New
Orleans was told. We are a rich country. Congress is acting. Someone
will come to stop the looting and care for the refugees.

And it's true: eventually, help did come. But how many times did Gov.
Kathleen Blanco have to say that the situation was desperate? How many
times did Mayor Ray Nagin have to call for aid? Why did America ask a
city cherished by millions and excoriated by some, but ignored by no
one, to fight for its own life for so long? That's my question.

I know that New Orleans will win its fight in the end. I was born in
the city and lived there for many years. It shaped who and what I am.
Never have I experienced a place where people knew more about love,
about family, about loyalty and about getting along than the people of
New Orleans. It is perhaps their very gentleness that gives them their
endurance.

They will rebuild as they have after storms of the past; and they will
stay in New Orleans because it is where they have always lived, where
their mothers and their fathers lived, where their churches were built
by their ancestors, where their family graves carry names that go back
200 years. They will stay in New Orleans where they can enjoy a
sweetness of family life that other communities lost long ago.

But to my country I want to say this: During this crisis you failed us.
You looked down on us; you dismissed our victims; you dismissed us. You
want our Jazz Fest, you want our Mardi Gras, you want our cooking and
our music. Then when you saw us in real trouble, when you saw a tiny
minority preying on the weak among us, you called us "Sin City," and
turned your backs.

Well, we are a lot more than all that. And though we may seem the most
exotic, the most atmospheric and, at times, the most downtrodden part
of this land, we are still part of it. We are Americans. We are you.

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