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NEW ORLEANS—“Booty, booty, booty,” the DJ played at a club here in the
famous French Quarter, a neighborhood still rollicking in a city now
reeling.
Five Harvard undergraduates moved bashfully from the dance
floor toward Fat Catz’s stage. Their backs to the crowd, the students
followed the instructions of the DJ and grooved to the hip-hop beat.
If the service trip had been a shocking exposure to the
devastation of Hurricane Katrina, last Thursday night gave volunteers a
glimpse of New Orleans as it had existed before Aug. 29. It provided
insight into a city many of them hadn’t known before the storm.
Undergraduate volunteers, like other tourists, come to the
French Quarter to experience the city’s culture. Organizers say the
service trips are meant to be as much an education as a labor donation.
When the students weren’t gutting homes or working with elementary
school children, they were listening to the stories of survivors or
watching local artists perform. They wanted to understand the city.
Coming to clubs like Fat Catz is a part of that process.
“It just helped to put your service into a little more
context,” said Amara A. Omeokwe ’08, who led one of the service groups
dancing last Thursday.
Though extraordinary damage had swept over much of the city,
Bourbon Street, which remained relatively unscathed by the flooding,
offered the volunteers a taste of happier times.
“When you go to a jazz club or get beignets, you see why
bringing back New Orleans is needed,” Omeokwe said. “It makes you want
to work harder, because you want the culture to come back, and you know
why it should be rebuilt.”
SIREN’S CALL
Bourbon Street symbolizes much of what tourists knew to be New
Orleans prior to Katrina. Outsiders thought of the city in terms of
Mardi Gras beads and jazz, and this tourist hub was quick to provide
the goods even after the storm. Though slightly less crowded now, the
neon stretch still glows, populated by conventioneers and college
students.
Bourbon Street bounced back within months of the catastrophe,
and a strip club on the street was among the first businesses to
reopen, serving relief workers and policemen.
Bourbon Street’s siren’s call was hard to ignore. If the
students needed to witness the widely-reported destruction in the Ninth
Ward, they also needed to see the legendary lane.
Bar-hopping by night, the students said, gave them a way to empathize with storm victims by day.
“Some of them asked, ‘Have you seen our city? Have you taken
the tour? Have you been to the French Quarter?’” Omeokwe said. “It was
another level of connection to have with the residents and New
Orleans.”
‘THEY’RE BOUNCING BACK ALREADY’
Bourbon Street didn’t demand the kind of manual labor performed
in devastated neighborhoods. Still, supporting Bourbon Street was
another way for the students to sustain New Orleans. Tourism drew $5
billion of spending to New Orleans in 2004, and the Big Easy will need
many of those visitors if it is to rise again.
In a city battling for its own survival, the commercial success of Bourbon Street is a small sign of life.
“They don’t want to be pitied,” Gayatri S. Datar ’07 said of New Orleanians.
An organizer of several service trips, Datar joined fellow students at Fat Catz Thursday night.
“The city wants us to know they can still have a good time,
they’re bouncing back already,” she said. “The fact that Bourbon Street
is still vibrant is a testament to the resilience of the city, even
though it was affected less.”
After the students went on a tour of the city, one New
Orleanian told them to not grieve, but rather take positive steps
toward the city’s hoped-for rebirth.
“She even told us, ‘Buy souvenirs. Buy alcohol. By little
steps you are helping,’” Datar said. “I’m not going to say that’s the
reason we went out, but that’s definitely a side part.”
With every $7 drink, they invested in New Orleans’ survival.
ROCKING ON
The Harvard contingent wasn’t alone. College students from all
parts of the country, organized through service organizations and
church groups, have poured into New Orleans. At work, the student
volunteers were scattered at sites across the city. At play, they came
together at bars.
On one night, Bunagan’s Mather House group went to Rock ‘n’
Bowl, a club with cult popularity. Alongside fellow volunteers from
other schools, they bowled right next to the bar. The following
morning, as usual, they worked on homes in the Ninth Ward, helping to
bring hope to a place that needed it too much.
—Staff writer April H.N. Yee can be reached at aprilyee@fas.harvard.edu.
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