海角大神

This article appeared in the August 28, 2020 edition of the Monitor Daily.

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After a hurricane, helping hands and open hearts

Adrees Latif/Reuters
Lonnie Gatte and Teri Goleman kiss after returning to their residence, a 40 foot camping trailer, to find it completely destroyed in the aftermath of hurricane Laura in Sulphur, Louisiana, on Aug. 27, 2020.
Laurent Belsie
Senior Economics Writer

The places change, the images do not. The wrecked homes, flooded streets, downed power lines left in the wake of Laura鈥檚 landfall early Thursday will look all too familiar to the survivors of powerful storms of the past like Harvey, Andrew, and especially Katrina, which also hit the Louisiana coast 15 years ago this week. And while the worst predictions of destruction did not come to pass, Laura is still linked to at least six fatalities.

What鈥檚 less visible is the human response to such disasters. You can glimpse it with videos of the at Lake Charles, Louisiana, hospital to care for 19 babies in neonatal intensive care, the volunteers manning emergency feeding stations, and the woman in Texas .

Even more powerful are the acts we don鈥檛 see. Neighbors making sure everyone is safe. People sharing with strangers food that otherwise would go bad in a refrigerator without power. The collective cleanup that begins even before the emergency crews arrive. I鈥檝e witnessed it firsthand covering hurricanes and tornadoes, starting with Andrew in south Florida three decades ago. It鈥檚 as if the winds that tear down walls also break down the mental barriers that keep us separate.

When all that is familiar is twisted beyond recognition, we reach out and reaffirm our common bond. Hurricane recovery is a long hard slog. But just as Miami, Houston, and New Orleans rebuilt, so will Lake Charles and the surrounding countryside.


This article appeared in the August 28, 2020 edition of the Monitor Daily.

Read 08/28 edition
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