Nationally
Televised Telethon Friday, Sept. 9 from
7:30 pm to 10 p.m.
The
Urban League has joined with Black
Entertainment Television (BET), Essence
Magazine, and top entertainers to raise
funds for the Hurricane Katrina disaster
fund of the American Red Cross!!!
Available
for Media Interviews: MarcMorial@MaximsNews.com
MaximsNews
Columnist
Marc
Morial
 Hurricane
Katrina

After Hurricane
Katrina:
The Labor Days
Facing America
by Marc Morial, former two-term Mayor of New
Orleans
Marc Morial, President of the National
Urban League, is the former two-term
Mayor of New Orleans, former President of the
U.S. Conference of Mayors and author of To Be
EQUAL. He is a Columnist for MaximsNews.
MarcMorial@MaximsNews.com
Please
see All of Marc Morial's MaximsNews columns
below.*
UNITED NATIONS - 7 September 2005 / www.MaximsNews.com
/ Before
last week, few Americans could have imagined
the disaster that has befallen the rural
areas, the towns and villages and three of the
major cities of the Gulf region.
And
even fewer, I suspect, could have imagined the
harrowing conditions that many endured in its
aftermath throughout the area and especially
in New Orleans.
But
the news reports of the toll taken—and, it
must be said, those that have shown Coast
Guard officers and other military personnel,
beleaguered police officers, and private
citizens acting heroically in the face of
great danger—have provoked multitudes in the
U.S. and abroad to prove once again that a
profound reservoir of human kindness binds
human beings together far more tightly than we
often otherwise acknowledge.
I
saw that quality—an entire community
expressing its solidarity with the victims of
Hurricane Katrina—on wondrous display for
myself while visiting Houston, Texas on Labor
Day.
I
was there visiting the Astrodome and the
Reliant Center, where thousands of evacuees
are being housed, with Senator Hillary Rodham
Clinton, Democrat of New York, Senator Barack
Obama, Democrat of Illinois,
Representatives Sheila Jackson-Lee and
Al Green, Democrats, of Texas, Mrs. Barbara
Bush, Governor Rick Perry, Texas’ Republican
Governor, and Houston Mayor Bill White.
We
were there to support former Presidents George
H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton who had been asked
by President Bush to organize the Bush Clinton
Katrina Fund to aid the evacuees.
Once
the two former presidents had spoken, Wal-Mart
President and Chief Executive Lee Scott
announced that Wal-Mart and the Walton family
foundation were contributing a total of $23
million to the fund.
He
also said that the company would hire any
displaced Wal-Mart worker at its other stores
across the country.
As
impressive and inspiring was the evidence of
Houstonians’ generosity and skill at helping
people in need.
From
the full-scale medical unit set up inside the
facility, where pharmacists from the
Walgreen’s drug store chain filled
evacuees’ prescriptions at no charge; to the
children’s library/play area/internet café
the city’s park and library departments had
built; to the rows upon rows of shoes and
clothing neatly arranged in racks for
evacuees; to the beauty salon and barbershop
volunteer barbers and hair stylists had
organized there, Houston welcomed the evacuees
in the same way they’re being welcomed
everywhere: as
neighbors.
Our
Houston affiliate, the Houston Urban League,
has also been in the forefront of the effort
to find evacuees housing, jobs and other
needed services.
Indeed,
like many community organizations, all of our
100-plus affiliates in 34 states and the
District of
Columbia, have mobilized to help direct
resources to stricken Gulf communities and to
aid evacuees coming their way.
The
Urban League as a whole has also joined with
Black Entertainment Television (BET), Essence
Magazine, and top entertainers to stage a
nationally televised telethon Friday,
September 9 from 7:30 p.m. to 10 p.m.
The
monies raised will go to the Hurricane Katrina
disaster fund of the American Red Cross.
Houstonians,
and many thousands more elsewhere, have shown
us that, appropriately in the wake of Labor
Day, the rest of us must let the disaster of
Hurricane Katrina lead us to do something
more: to
use our imaginations.
The
public and private sectors of America must imagine
a new Gulf region—a region with its city
and towns and economy rebuilt, a region with
its people whole
again.
One
of the means to accomplish that is through the
establishment of a Victims Compensation Fund
to aid those whose lives have been wrecked by
the calamity and its aftermath.
A
second is a Gulf-wide rebuilding effort that
also has a built-in job-training component and
a substantial commitment to a diverse
workforce up and down the ladder in order to
insure that all of the citizens of the Gulf
benefit from the billions of dollars that will
be needed for its reclamation.
The
commitment to racial and economic diversity
must be especially evident in the rebuilding
of New Orleans, so that the city is rebuilt
substantially by those who called it home and
that the vibrant diversity that made it so
attractive continues.
Thirdly,
there must be a national commission to study
what went wrong with the early-warning system
and relief effort and identify how best to
protect not just New Orleans but also other
cities and regions from such natural
catastrophes in the future.
These
broad ideas are just the beginning of the
discussion that must occur in the wake of
Hurricane Katrina.
But
they outline the shape of the only fitting
memorial to its victims—to act in a way that
improves the lives of all Americans in and far
beyond the Gulf.
What’s
now needed most of all is imagination.
MarcMorial@MaximsNews.com
Marc
Morial's Columns in MaximsNews
After
Hurricane Katrina... 7
September 2005
Hurricane
Katrina... 31
August 2005
The
Supreme Court Nomination... 7
July 2005
Ex-Felons
and Voting Rights... 24
June 2005
Vicente
Fox's Foolish Words 24
May 2005
Reject
the Nuclear Option 11
May 2005
Kenneth
B. Clark 4
May 2005
The
State of Black America 11
April 2005
The
Main Event in American History 16
February 2005
Never again! 1
February 2005
Jack Johnson, American 27
January 2005
The
Mississippi Arrest:
Bending Toward Justice... 11
January 2005
Reforming America's Obsession with
Incarceration... 7
December 2004
A
Pre-Election Snapshot of Black America... 26
October 2004
Issues
for the Candidates -- and for Us...
19
October 2004
The
"Routine" Tragedy in the Sudan... 2
September 2004
A
Wonderful Life... 26
August 2004
America,
We Have A Problem...
19
August 2004
Looking
Forward; Leaving No One Behind... 28
July 2004
Empowering
Communities, Changing Lives...
8
July 2004
July:
The
Other Black History Month... 30
June 2004
Justice
for History's Sake—and Our Own... 24
June 2004
Let
America Be America The Beautiful...
16
June 2004
Quiet
Activism on The Movement's Front Lines... 8
June 2004
Vernon
Jarrett, Dreamer and Doer
... 2
June 2004
Buddy
Fletcher's Gift...
26
May 2004
The
Murder of Emmett Till: Still
Seeking Justice...
20
May 2004
The
Meaning of the Brown
Decision... 12
May 2004
The
Complexity of Black Achievement...
4
May 2004
USA
Today's Con Artist...
27
April 2004
The
"Moving Target" of Black Educational
Progress
... 13
April 2004
Elaine
Jones: Energized
by Adversity... 6
April 2004
The
Urban League in Washington: Bringing
Reinforcements... 30
March 2004
The
Pain of Those Left Behind... 17
March 2004
Deeply
Desiring Denial... 9
March 2004
One
Step Forward; Two Steps Back...
3
March 2004
Innocent
of the Crime, But Almost Executed Anyway...
24
February 2004
Civil
Rights: America's
Unfinished Business... 17
February 2004
What
Will They Do Now? 2
February 2004
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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