That same old wind just keeps on blowin'
The truth is, the visuals between the floods in Mozambique
and Katrina's disaster are relatively the same
Tala Dowlatshahi
September 3, 2005
iranian.com
Like many of you, my eyes have been
glued to the television to catch an update on the horrifying situation
in New Orleans and
Mississippi. As an Iranian journalist, I have been to the world's
most devastated regions like Afghanistan and Ethiopia. During my
time in both countries, I watched as hundreds of devastated communities
moved from one area to another, refugees stuck between a clichéd
rock and a hard place. War and years of corruption have ignited
civil war, but Mother Nature has also taken her toll with desertification,
drought and unreliable weather patterns--sparking much frustration
and anger from inhabitants.
I'll never forget that day I visited
a UNHCR refugee camp in Sefira, a town on the border between
feuding Ethiopia and Eritrea.
The hungry children,
their noble faces, smiling lips and eager eyes followed me around as I took
photos of the destruction surrounding the campsite.
I interviewed
their parents, if
they were still alive, and heard the usual stories of war and the disaster
that ensues. One mother told me that before the war, she had a
farm that made honey
and she sold it so well at the local marketplace that there was enough money
to support her whole family -- husband included. She had three children and
they sat quietly beside her, melancholy in their voices, smiles
on their faces as
they took candy from my hand as if I were giving them gold.
Their mother
went on to tell me how her husband had been killed a year ago
in the war. Her eldest
son who was now eight, found him face down in a dug up muddy trench just
above the family garden. He had been shot twice as he came away
from the front line.
He was Eritrean and grew up in Addis Ababa, but when the war started in
1998, he and his family fled the city to the border town. He defended
his land
with pride, his widow would tell me, until his very last moments
when he collapsed
in the garden on his way home.
We shot a documentary while I was in Africa and
it screened on American, British and African television programmes.
The video montage included the devastation
felt by so many Africans during the floods in Mozambique in 2000, as the world
watched African mothers and babies drowning, heads bobbing, land diffused by
the great strength of water.
We saw people desperately grabbing on to trees and
climbing on rooftops to save themselves from the enormous wind and torrential
rain. Many watched their neighbors drown right in front
of them, their stiff corpses carried away by the water to an unsolicited
grave in the middle of the
ocean. A grave of lost souls, with no one to help them until the very last
few days when helicopters fished mothers and children from rooftops
nearly floating
in the cold and deep waters.
For many of us watching from America, the visuals
were of a distant land already plagued with decades of government corruption,
civil war and disease. The problem
of Africa seemed too complex and too far away.
This week, we were once again faced
with these same images, pictures of Africans, this time American, dangling
from rooftops, begging for food and water, corpses
floating stiffly in a mix of slushy brown water, the rampant stench of disease
following the corpses along the bayou.
As an American citizen, I am truly disgusted
by what I have seen these last few days. One man had spent three days on his
rooftop, his wife carried away by the
water, his son the only remaining child of four, his three daughters missing.
He wept in his hands as he pleaded with the world: "Please, please I am
hungry, I need water, I am past my limit."
It is a tragic time in America today,
in this age of globalization, when the visuals we see are of poor Black people
who continue to suffer from an unfair
and hypocritical system within our borders. Too poor to escape the wrath of
Katrina, they had to fight it out. Some of those lucky ones were
able to make it to the
soggy dome that housed thousands of people, their tired and cold bodies, bottoms
in pain from sitting on concrete box seats for hundreds of hours waiting out
the storm. Many lost family members, their homes, livelihoods and farms.
The visuals we see now reflect the lawlessness and
anger that come with being treated as animals in a society that
prides itself as the "Great
Savior." It
took President Bush nearly five days to go and meet with families. He did,
to his credit, do a "fly-by" on day two of the disaster.
Nevertheless, as
this tragedy unfolded, the American people began to take note of his lack of
contact with "Real Americans" as his campaign team had so often pledged.
Real Americans, Mr. Bush, are the African-Americans who broke their backs building
this country during slave years, and now they are stuck in an institutionalized
slave system that has no regard for their well-being and survival.
Ironic
how it is poor Black and Latino men and women sent off to kill poor Middle
Eastern people. And now nearly a week after Katrina hit, Bush will
send over
twenty thousand troops to New Orleans and Mississippi to control the looting
and lawlessness. A mini-war it seems when all that was really needed was a
kind heart, open hands and a proper escort out of New Orleans before
the hurricane
blew in.
The truth is, the visuals between the floods in Mozambique
and Katrina's disaster are relatively the same. But I guess one
would expect more
from a country
that prides itself as the one true democracy that cares for all its citizens.
Same old story, same old wind.
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