From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Friends and Allies,

The new issue of Left Turn Magazine is in stores now, featuring excellent 
coverage of New Orleans, the environment justice moevement, social 
movements in the Arab world, and much more, including the article below by 
poet and journalist Walidah Imarisha.

You can subscribe - or order an individual issue - online at www.leftturn.org.


----------------------------------------------------
 From the Ground Up:
Race and the Left Response to Katrina

By Walidah Imarisha

In the wake of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, thousands of progressives, 
radicals, anarchists, activists, hippies and college students — the 
majority of them white — have gone down south to aid in relief and 
rebuilding efforts, and white organizations across the country have 
dedicated time and resources. But in their rush to help, are they 
recreating the racist dynamics we have seen from the government?

Is the white left racist? Sakura Koné would answer this question, for the 
most part with a “no.” “I’ve been impressed with the response of the white 
left, liberals, progressive and radicals who have joined us out here.” 
Kone’ works as the media coordinator for Common Ground Collective, Common 
Ground Relief and Rebuild Green, three different arms of a New Orleans 
grassroots organization started after the hurricanes to provide relief and 
focus on alternative energy/sustainable rebuilding. “They are not just 
coming down here and telling us what to do, but they are listening to what 
we have to say. They do it our way. They are not coming like missionaries. 
We welcome the white left to our communities here.”

“Our church is full of white volunteers right now,” Victoria Cintra of 
Mississippi Immigrant Rights Alliance (MIRA) says. “We have hundreds of 
volunteers from the North Carolina Baptist Men Disaster Relief. They were 
here before FEMA, before Red Cross, when no one was helping out, and 
they’ve committed to being here for two years.”

Others, however, have had serious problems with white volunteers’ behavior 
and attitude throughout the south. Curtis Muhammad, of Community Labor 
United and the People’s Hurricane Relief Fund, would answer the question of 
whether the white left is racist with a qualified “yes.”  “Every white 
person who shows up has the disease called white supremacy, and if they 
don’t confront it and work on it, they are going to continue to have it. 
That’s just the reality of racism.”

Tamika Middleton, southern regional coordinator for Critical Resistance — a 
national prison abolitionist organization with an office in New Orleans — 
applauds people’s willingness to come down and do work, but wants white 
people coming to acknowledge the privilege inherent in that. “For a lot of 
people, people of color from New Orleans and the south, we’re all trying to 
put our lives together. If we had the means, if we had the same privilege, 
we would be here too, we would be organizing and fighting for our 
community. It’s important for people to realize the privilege they have and 
others don’t have.”

Au Hyunh, who is working in Vietnamese communities throughout the south, 
says that there are different cultural standards people are not aware of. 
“When I was at Common Ground, the volunteers would be really disrespectful. 
They are serving a historically disadvantaged community, but they’re not 
bathing or showering and they’re serving people food, and they don’t see 
that. A lot of white activists are appropriating poor culture when they 
have a lot of class privilege.”

White supremacy

Muhammad says that PHRF is working to counter that disease of white 
supremacy. “We are talking about doing trainings, we are asking some groups 
down here who specialize in this to help train volunteers about their white 
supremacy. Some of them are taking it and some are not. Some are running 
around acting like slave masters.”

Kone’ says Common Ground provides that kind of orientation. “We tell them, 
‘Look, you’re not from here, listen up, this is what’s happening. This is 
what the community is about, this is the history of the community, this is 
what’s been going on since Katrina. You’ve got a good heart, because you’re 
here. You have to take the leadership from the community.’”

“White people are going to have to learn to obey and follow directions. 
They are not runaway slaves. They aren’t now and they weren’t during the 
Underground Railroad days. They can help us, feed us, house us, but they 
are not the slaves. They can’t lead us,” Muhammad finishes.

It’s not just individuals who are having race issues. Organizations are 
also bringing their own assumptions and agenda to the table. “Some white 
organizations are trying. But white folks don’t like to chastise 
themselves. The left does that too, it will not punish white people for 
their white supremacy, they won’t hold white folks accountable and as long 
as they can do this stuff without punishment, they’re going to keep doing it.”

Tamika Middleton says the white left has wasted a lot of time and energy 
focusing on debating whether the issues in the gulf are the result of class 
or race. “It’s impossible to separate race from class, especially in the 
south, because historically, culturally, it is one and the same.”

Untold stories

Many populations are just being ignored both by the mainstream and the 
white left. John Zippert is the director of program operations for the 
Federation of Southern Cooperatives in Alabama, and works primarily with 
poor black farmers, a population he says has been greatly overlooked by 
government, media and nonprofits alike. “Our experience is that the 
Department of Agriculture takes care of the largest farmers first, rather 
than the smallest and poorest, which is generally where black farmers are… 
So the government isn’t there for people. We have gotten some assistance 
from organizations, but it’s been limited.”

Big corporations are getting huge contracts to do construction, and many of 
them are using immigrant labor to do so. MIRA says many people they work 
with — the majority of whom are Latino — are either not being paid the 
wages they were promised or not being paid at all, are working under unsafe 
conditions, and are not given any accommodations and forced to sleep in 
tents in the cold.

Workers are being recruited to the south to do this rebuilding work. When 
the job is done, they are fired and then arrested by the INS, often by the 
prompting of their former employers, according to Cintra. “That’s sad and 
sick. They are rebuilding our coast and we are treating them like animals,” 
she says.

In New Orleans East, the Mary Queen of Vietnam Roman Catholic Church is 
seeing first hand that the city’s rebuilding plan is quite literally built 
on top of people of color. The church, which is in the heart of a thriving 
Vietnamese community and has served as a distribution center and gathering 
place for people coming back to the community, is serving 1500 people a 
week. It is also right in the middle of an area that the city wants to 
build an airport and business industrial complex on. “They are going to 
take our community away; they are going to dismiss us,” says Father Luke, 
one of the priests at the church. “We come back here as an action to say to 
them that we are here, we are back here to rebuild the community, to 
rebuild New Orleans.”

History class

New Orleans and the south are what they are because of the input of people 
of color, and people have to be aware of the culture they are coming into. 
“Why do people aspire to come to New Orleans? The music, the culture, the 
food, and what is the origin of those? Black people!” Kone’ intones.

All of the people interviewed for this article spoke of the history of 
slavery, immigration issues, labor rights, gentrification, police 
brutality, governmental misconduct, a history of neglect and racism, and 
the need for white organizations and individuals to understand that. It’s 
vital that people understand the roots of the poverty and deprivation. “The 
problems that are happening now are not happening because of Katrina. They 
didn’t just arrive; they didn’t come out of smoke. These things are 
historical,” says Middleton.

“You have the compounded issue of race and poverty together, a 
concentration of people who are poor and black and have been that way since 
slavery, even in the urban areas,” Zippert explains.

“You can see the intersection of race, class and gender by who was left 
behind in New Orleans. Most of the images you saw of people who were left 
behind, who were stranded, are poor single black mothers. That’s the fall 
out in a culture that is racist and patriarchal,” Malcolm Woodland of the 
Malcolm X Grassroots Movement says.

Salvation army

While this is the largest fundraising effort in the history of the US, with 
hundreds of millions of dollars pouring into groups like the Red Cross and 
Salvation Army, people on the ground are skeptical as to how effective 
those organizations are.

Cintra summed up the sentiment when she said, “I wouldn’t give a penny to 
Red Cross, and I would encourage others not to.”

The problem is the way major non-profits have operated in communities of 
color globally, says Woodland. “The fact that people continue to give to 
organizations that have historically not operated in the best issues of 
people of African descent suggests that people aren’t fully aware of the 
history of these organizations, and what they are doing now, and not aware 
of alternative methods of being able to give directly to the people affected.”

Several people interviewed for this article talked of the ways in which the 
Red Cross gives preferential treatment to areas that are predominately 
white and was much slower to react in communities of color. Middleton says 
her biggest problem is the criminal background checks that keep out people 
who were formerly incarcerated, and that this is a race issue as well.

Hyunh spoke of the language and access barriers that aren’t being 
addressed. Hyunh, an activist who moved just outside of New Orleans after 
Katrina, offered her services as a professionally licensed Vietnamese 
translator to both Red Cross and FEMA. “They both turned me down, they said 
they didn’t need any interpreters.” Hyunh went down to the south to see for 
herself, and found a complete lack of translation.

“The police were trying to evict a single Vietnamese mother living in a 
housing project in Biloxi. The entire projects were flooded. The police 
tried to arrest her for remaining there, but there was nowhere for her to 
go, and she didn’t speak English. She couldn’t even find out where the Red 
Cross shelter was,” Hyunh explains.

Cintra said it is even worse than ignorance or benign neglect on Red Cross’ 
part. “Red Cross is evicting people from shelters because of the color of 
their skin. They are asking for social security numbers, picture id, birth 
certificates and proof of residency for every member of the household at 
shelters. That’s alienating a large group of people.”

Middleton says the issue is really about giving funds to organizations that 
can build for the future. “Red Cross and other big non-profits create a 
different kind of problem. It’s like, ‘I’m going to deliver all this food 
to you, but not create sustainable options for you to grow food.’ There is 
no long term plan; there are no ways for people to be part of rebuilding 
their communities.”

The People’s Hurricane Relief Fund (PHRF) was started to provide an 
apparatus for survivors, local grassroots organizations and displaced 
people to have control over funds coming in. “We demand resources to 
rebuild our community under our control,” Muhammad says.

Leadership position

That’s why it’s important, organizers say, for people of color to have a 
leadership position in the relief and rebuilding efforts

James Rucker, who helped found Color of Change (colorofchange.org) after 
Katrina as an online mobilization tool to enhance black people’s political 
voice, says black people have to mobilize to lobby politicians and hold 
them accountable. Color of Change grew to over 10,000 members in the first 
month and had thousands of people sign different petitions.

Rucker says it’s so important for organizations of color to speak up 
because it can push white organizations. “Race is just not a focal point 
for liberal white America… When groups like ours are out there, we can 
embolden other white organizations to talk about race more. They will do 
better than if there weren’t any organizations of folks of color speaking 
in terms of race.”

While Color of Change is working to build up political pressure, others 
feel the way to change lies in grassroots organizing.

Malcolm X Grassroots Movement (mxgm.org), a national black human rights 
organization, put out a call on Sept. 13, 2005 that framed the issue again 
in terms of race and class. It was a framing of the issue around race that 
had historical memory and was not often being articulated. The demands 
included a right of return, the right to organize, the right to an income, 
the right to living wages, the right to access, the right to education and 
health care, and the right to self-determination.

Woodland, one of the coordinators for MXGM’s Katrina Relief program, says 
it’s really about the black community relying on itself. “My inclination is 
not to worry about what white folks are doing, because they’re going to do 
what they have done historically. Every once in a while they will surprise 
you and I’ll take it as a surprise, but my concern has been with how folks 
in our community have really stepped up, and I’m particularly proud of the 
response of black organizations.”

Long term

It is not enough, though for organizations of color to lead the rebuilding 
efforts, but for those organizations to be made up of people most directly 
affected by the disaster. “Many of our black leadership, non-profits and 
all, are from the middle class. Our coalition said upfront, we are 
listening to the voices of the poor,” Muhammad says.

MXGM says they are working to provide resources and training to displaced 
people. “Here in New York we’re already seeing this develop so that people 
who have been displaced are beginning to say, ‘Hold on, we don’t need 
people to speak for us, we can speak for ourselves,’” Woodland explains.

Woodland hopes that other organizations will support those affected, as 
well to take the lead. “I think you will see MXGM move to the periphery in 
terms of being visible and really be a back up and provide support for 
those individuals as needed and requested,” he finishes.

Most of the organizations interviewed are working on long term plans and 
goals that would empower the communities affected while furthering the 
rebuilding efforts.

Zippert says the Federation of Southern Cooperatives is encouraging people 
to use cooperatives and credit unions as tools poor people can use to 
rebuild. “We want to help people create worker owned cooperatives to do 
certain jobs created by the storm that went to Halliburton and these other 
companies. We can help poor people get the training and assistance to best 
deal with this post Katrina situation.”

Common Ground wants to rehabilitate the 9th ward, which was the most 
heavily damaged section of New Orleans, “to show people and the powers that 
be that contrary to their observations, the 9th ward is salvageable,” Koné 
asserts.

Everyone I spoke with agreed that if changes are going to happen, it will 
happen only by people on the ground pushing for those changes, and that as 
we move forward, race will continue to play an intricate part in the south, 
as it has since this country’s inception.

“We all have to get on ground, roll up our sleeves and go to work. I do not 
believe FEMA or the American government...is capable of rebuilding our 
city; they have no intention of helping poor black people return. We are 
going to have to demand it,” Muhammad declares.

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Walidah Imarisha is a poet and an independent journalist who works with the 
Philly-based prisoner family organizing group The Human Rights Coalition, 
AWOL Magazine and is part of the poetry duo Good Sista/Bad Sista 
(www.poetryoffthepage.com).  She can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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