Thank you for letting me understand
homelessness, living without power,
without television, without cool air in the heat.
Thank you for letting me understand
hunger, the pleasure of dry clean clothes and
the relief of place to sleep.
Thank you for letting me understand
the deep and overwhelming sadness
when forces, beyond our personal control,
take the loved, the familiar, the usual.
Thank you for my needfulness and
Thank you for my newfound empathy
for those were homeless before the storm
and homeless now, for those hungry
anywhere, for those in need everywhere.
Thank you for the opportunity you provided
to help my neighbor, to be my brother’s keeper,
to serve food, to patch roofs, to clear yards,
and to start mending that which was broken.
Thank you for the chance to change ourselves,
from a reprieve from the normal commercial day,
for teaching us to make do, to get by, to improvise,
for drowning our conceit, complacency, callousness
for silencing the noise , for stopping the clock,
and for the chance to act our best when the worst occurred.
Thank you for the people who reached in
pulled out the living, cradled the dead,
comforted the broken and torn apart,
wept for the splintered and uprooted.
Thank you for the people who didn’t wait
who came right away, who opened their homes,
who emptied their shelves, their closets,
who cleaned, fed , healed, held us,
who told us our spirit was amazing,
and who keep on coming.
Thank you for people who measure
their faith by their actions, and measure
their action by its consistency with their faith.
Thank you for all the people we have met,
who are new friends, new loved ones,
new brothers and sisters, new neighbors.
Thank you Katrina. Not for wind,
not for water, but for the appreciation
of the things no storm can shatter,
no water can wash away,
no wind can move.
---Written by R. and Mr. C
[ via St. Casserole ]
I was looking for touching prayers or poetry today on the anniversary of Katrina. I found it, thank you for your post. I have shared it with my friends and neighbors. We were affected by Katrina and are using this as healing.
Perkinston, MS
Posted by: Kristie | August 29, 2006 at 07:46 AM
Hey Everyone!
My name is Dan Barkley and I am a law student at the Seattle University School of Law. I also work as one of the Content Development Editors for the Seattle Journal for Social Justice. We are currently working on an issue devoted to the continuing effects of Hurricane Katrina on New Orleans and the Gulf Coast. Because we are an interdisciplinary journal devoted to the mission of furthering social justice issues, we often print poetry and other creative artwork, and it is in this regard I am contacting you. I'm hoping someone (like you, or someone you know) might 1) be interested in having your work featured, or 2) have any ideas of writers who would like their New Orleans and Katrina-related work to be featured in our journal.
We would need submissions by October 24, and I would be very appreciative of any leads you could send me.
Best,
Dan Barkley
Content Development Editor
Seattle Journal for Social Justice
Posted by: danbarkley | October 15, 2008 at 01:46 PM
Hey Everyone!
My name is Dan Barkley and I am a law student at the Seattle University School of Law. I also work as one of the Content Development Editors for the Seattle Journal for Social Justice. We are currently working on an issue devoted to the continuing effects of Hurricane Katrina on New Orleans and the Gulf Coast. Because we are an interdisciplinary journal devoted to the mission of furthering social justice issues, we often print poetry and other creative artwork, and it is in this regard I am contacting you. I'm hoping someone (like you, or someone you know) might 1) be interested in having your work featured, or 2) have any ideas of writers who would like their New Orleans and Katrina-related work to be featured in our journal.
We would need submissions by October 24, and I would be very appreciative of any leads you could send me.
Best,
Dan Barkley
Content Development Editor
Seattle Journal for Social Justice
Posted by: danbarkley | October 15, 2008 at 01:50 PM
today i have looked at the devestations and realised what it would be like to be in the middle of all this and i would not be very nice to experiance this and i do apologize for my spelling but to all the people that have been involved in such terror let the light protect you and lead you to saftey :) x
Posted by: alissia o'gormley | March 12, 2009 at 08:12 AM
this is the only way to solve these kind problems so keep going, and never give up.
Posted by: generic viagra | April 06, 2010 at 02:23 PM
this is the only way to solve these kind problems so keep going, and never give up.
Posted by: Round and Brown | July 14, 2010 at 07:36 AM
Oh, an entire year of A Finger in Every Pie. Congratulations on your blogaversary. Really, it feels like you've been blogging for years. I enjoy your beautiful writing and your scrumptious recipes.
Posted by: costa rica investments | July 29, 2010 at 11:51 AM
They don't really care about your health and use television to sell you sleeping pills that are addictive, dangerous and easily abused. This is the same FDA that lies and says that marijuana has no medical value!! In my experience marijuana.
A great article indeed and a very detailed, realistic and superb analysis, of this issue, very nice write up, Thanks.
Posted by: viagra online | August 20, 2010 at 01:54 PM
We just don't care. We are selfish people and pretty normal because we are above the power of capitalisms.
Posted by: pharmacy | September 06, 2011 at 10:47 AM