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Threatened With Eviction At Gunpoint, The Big Easy Holdouts Are Now Hailed As Heroes
The Telegraph (UK) ^ | 9-18-2005 | Toby Harnden

Posted on 09/17/2005 6:35:35 PM PDT by blam

Threatened with eviction at gunpoint, the Big Easy holdouts are now hailed as heroes

By Toby Harnden in New Orleans
(Filed: 18/09/2005)

A Starving Pit Bull Attacks A Bull Beside The New Orleans Bayou

Just days since they were being urged, sometimes at gunpoint, to leave their homes, the hardy band of residents who sat tight in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina are now being encouraged to stay put and help to restart the city.

In a remarkable U-turn, the authorities - who had previously reviled, goaded and even threatened force against the few hundred remaining "holdouts" - are hailing them as examples of the indomitable spirit needed to rebuild the "Big Easy".

Mica Rosenberg and her son Lazaro refused to leave

The United States Army has begun helping them to stay, rather than persuading them to get out. "They are people who have spent most of their lives right here and they can't imagine anything else," said Major Keith Ensley, a US National Guard officer.

"Now the mayor has indicated they can stay, we're offering them a little more help - water and food as needed. They've been real co-operative."

A marked change of mood has swept the city and its officials since President George W Bush promised last week to rebuild New Orleans with federal funds. The mayor, Ray Nagin. is urging businesses to return to the city he recently declared a no-go zone.

With the flood waters receding faster than anyone thought possible, the holdouts will now be joined over the next week by up to 180,000 of those who fled or were rescued from the hurricane, and are now being enticed back.

With hundreds of decomposing corpses - thanks to the reopening of the port and airport - finally removed, laboratory tests have found sewage and oil left behind by the filthy water, but no contagious diseases. The worst predictions about the city's demise have been set aside.

President Bush's contrite pledge appears to have guaranteed the future of New Orleans in some form. Now property speculators have moved in, buying up flood-ravaged houses in anticipation of a possible real estate boom.

"We survived!" said a triumphant Mica Rosenberg, 72, standing among the potted plants on her wooden porch in the old Bywater district. "We went to hell and back, but the only way they were going to take me out was in a bag," she said.

She and her son Lazaro, 36, a dealer in a casino, had stayed in their home without water or electricity, existing on stores of tinned food and bottled water. "The helicopters swooped down low to try and blow us out. The police got real ugly, telling us to grab our stuff and go.

"But yesterday, the National Guard came around with a box of apples and said they were full of admiration for the way we stood our ground. One sergeant told me we had showed others what was possible for the city and its future."

Now, she said, there was a chance to start afresh in New Orleans without "the hoodlums and dopes and robbers that infested this place like fleas on a dead cat".

Clyde Casey, 43, an artist who stayed behind, said: "It felt like the Gestapo was coming in. The government tried to punish us for being prepared when they hadn't been."

When Mr Bush first arrived to see the devastation, much of the small area of the city that remained above water was sealed off. "The police jumped on me and told me to get out of town," said Mr Casey.

"One put a Magnum against my head while another punched me and stamped on my glasses. I felt the presence of an almighty egotistical force that was really scaring the bejeebees out of people who had the legal right to be here. Today, I'm just one of the people here ready to rebuild."

Even in the worst hit parts of New Orleans and the outlying bayous and fishing villages of Louisiana, people were returning to the remnants of their homes last week and vowing to start again.

Darrell Domingue, 44, was using a chainsaw to clear branches and loading a few salvaged possessions from his home near Pointe de la Hache, which had been filled with more than 15 feet of water.

A neighbouring mobile home had slammed against one side of the house, his carport had disappeared and a huge bale of hay had smashed through the back.

As Mr Domingue surveyed the property he pointed out toys from his 10-year-old daughter's bedroom spilling out of a hole in the roof - dolls, an upside down Minnie Mouse and a contorted Gonzo from the Muppets.

A 35ft tidal surge had hit the house when it swept over the levee about 20 yards away. His parents' home, in which he had survived Hurricane Betsy as a boy of four, was swept half a mile up the road.

His father-in-law's metal coffin, in which he had been buried a month before the storm, was washed from its vault at the St Thomas the Apostle graveyard, which had been under several feet of water. Mr Domingue shook his head. "I don't know how to tell my wife he isn't there any more.

"I haven't shed a tear yet and neither has she. I couldn't imagine this was possible, but what can you do about it? You rebuild and you move on."

At what was once the fishing village of Ycloskey, tales of miraculous escapes have entered local lore. Nephus "Fats" Wilson, a Pointe de la Hache oysterman, rode out the storm in a boat called Tide and emerged from the woods four days later with a full bottle of whisky in his hands.

Back in New Orleans, volunteers dispensed vegetarian food and power bars to Mrs Rosenberg and her son.

"We're just trying to cheer people up and lend a hand," said Randall Amster, 39. "There's no place in the world like this. The energy here, the full-on, crazy, in-the-moment vibe never left. That is what will bring people back."


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: banglist; big; easy; eviction; gunpoint; hailed; heroes; holdouts; rkba; threatened
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To: blam
"We survived!" said a triumphant Mica Rosenberg, 72, standing among the potted plants on her wooden porch in the old Bywater district. "We went to hell and back, but the only way they were going to take me out was in a bag," she said.

snip

Now, she said, there was a chance to start afresh in New Orleans without "the hoodlums and dopes and robbers that infested this place like fleas on a dead cat".

I have a feeling the people of N.O. aren't going to put up with as much as they had had to tolerate in their town. At least I hope so. I've read several references from citizens regarding the criminal element being cleaned out of town by Katrina.

21 posted on 09/17/2005 8:03:04 PM PDT by eyespysomething ("The Constitution is the court's taskmaster and it's Congress' taskmaster as well" John G. Roberts)
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Comment #22 Removed by Moderator

To: ncountylee
Yeah, the hoodlums, dopes, and criminals have been exported to better pickins in Texas and other erst while states.
23 posted on 09/17/2005 8:28:40 PM PDT by MissAmericanPie
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To: ambrose

pb ping.


24 posted on 09/17/2005 8:37:57 PM PDT by Shermy
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To: claudiustg

"---"One put a Magnum against my head while another punched me and stamped on my glasses. I felt the presence of an almighty egotistical force that was really scaring the bejeebees out of people who had the legal right to be here. Today, I'm just one of the people here ready to rebuild."---

Do the police down there still carry revolvers?"

Either the artist or the writer embellished the story.

Or the artist was particularly insulting.


25 posted on 09/17/2005 8:39:02 PM PDT by Shermy
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To: blam; All
Image hosted by TinyPic.com
26 posted on 09/17/2005 8:49:31 PM PDT by ATOMIC_PUNK (secus acutulus exspiro ab Acheron bipes actio absol ab Acheron supplico)
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To: kublia khan

---Don't know but it just doesn't sound right to me---

Like this Clyde Casey, artist, is a bullsh*t artist, perhaps?


27 posted on 09/17/2005 9:07:54 PM PDT by claudiustg (Vote for one Democrat, vote for them all...)
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To: blam

I just noticed the name Adam Nadel on the pic with the idiotic dog. This guy goes anywhere there is a war, famine, death and destruction..etc...

Here is a link to some of his work: http://www.polarisimages.com/nadel.html


28 posted on 09/17/2005 11:30:33 PM PDT by Peace will be here soon (Liberal definition of looting: " Self-help Humanitarian Aid.")
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To: Peace will be here soon

That image of the guys on the ground next to the tank is totally fake. He gaussian-blurred the tank. It is really blatant.

The perspective difference between the men on the ground and the tank cannot allow the type of visual blur on the tank. It is without a doubt, a photoshop creation.

It really makes me think the image of the dog and the steer (not a bull) is fake as well.


29 posted on 09/17/2005 11:37:55 PM PDT by MediaMole
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To: MediaMole

That particular photo looked kind of strange to me as well. The lighting was really odd.

I just gave the link so everyone knew who this guy was and the kind of photos he takes, and then they could draw their own conclusions.


30 posted on 09/18/2005 8:56:57 PM PDT by Peace will be here soon (Liberal definition of looting: " Self-help Humanitarian Aid.")
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To: MediaMole

Oh, I almost forgot. The pit bull doesn`t seem to have a shadow.

If you look at the bulls shadow, the dogs should be visible somewhere in the picture and it isn`t.


31 posted on 09/18/2005 9:00:08 PM PDT by Peace will be here soon (Liberal definition of looting: " Self-help Humanitarian Aid.")
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To: blam
Don't worry about it blam, you're just having a run in with SAPP. Don't let them bother you. They have nothing better to do.
32 posted on 09/18/2005 9:32:05 PM PDT by Malichi (!)
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