the New Orleans Survivor
Council have decided to
take action. We have
realized the only way to
ensure our children
receive the education
they deserve to help
them develop into
literate, productive
members of our
community, to ensure
they have the basic
skills needed to become
anything they can dream;
is to open their minds
ourselves. It is in this
spirit that the New
Orleans Survivor Council
(NOSC) received a Book
Mobile.
Read the rest of this entry
»
Farewell Letter from
Curtis Muhammad
November 12, 2007
A Message from an
Organizer to the Left
and Progressive Forces
inside the USA - by
Curtis Muhammad
With this second
anniversary of Katrina
upon us, there are a few
words I wish to speak.
This letter is written
to the progressive, left
movement for justice in
the USA. In the last two
years, every left
organization has been in
New Orleans, but despite
that there is still no
sign of a mass movement.
There is still no sign
that most activists are
willing to put their
knowledge and resources
at the service of the
grass roots and take
their leadership from
the bottom. I have found
myself wondering, have
poor black people been
so vilified and
criminalized that they
are completely off the
radar even of the
so-called left? When
Katrina happened, I
hoped and expected that
this would be the
trigger to once again
set off a true mass
movement against racism
and for justice in the
US, led by those most
affected: poor, black
working people. When it
became abundantly clear
that this was not
happening, I found
myself at the crossroads
of hope and
hopelessness, and began
to wonder how to spend
the last years of my
life in the service of
my people.
The thing that I remind
myself when I’m
contemplating
hopelessness is the
beauty of humanity and
the fact that people
have always fought for
what was right even when
they knew they couldn’t
win. They tried because
they loved each other; I
think it’s because it’s
built into human beings
for people to look out
for each other. There is
a drive in humanity to
be just, to live in a
society that is just,
equal and respectful. I
believe that ultimately
people will achieve a
just society; I believe
humanity came out of a
just society and will
create it again.
Read the rest of this entry
»
Click here to view a
videotaped interview by
Amy Goodman on Democracy
Now
»
Greetings from the New
Orleans Survivor Council
and Residents of Public
Housing:
August 2, 2007
Residents of Public
Housing is an
organization of public
housing residents from
the various developments
throughout New Orleans.
We are assisting our
family, friends and
neighbors in public
housing with returning
home and with improving
the living conditions
and quality of life for
those of
us who have already
returned. We work
together with the rest
of our community who
are not public housing
residents through our
New Orleans Survivor
Council. The Council is
made up of people from
the poor and working
black community of New
Orleans and includes
low-income homeowners
(most of whom are from
the Lower Ninth Ward),
renters and public
housing residents from
wards and neighborhoods
throughout New Orleans,
and immigrants who have
been brought into our
community to as the new
slaves to replace the
old slaves. We have
also been assisting our
family, friends and
neighbors with
returning home,
rebuilding and
repairing our community
and our lives, and
taking charge of our
neighborhoods. Our
mission is to do for
ourselves what the
government won’t.
Click here to download
document -
284 KB
New Orleans
Survivor Council &
Residents of Public
Housing Katrina
Anniversary 2007 Form
Click here to download
document -
31 KB
NEW ORLEANS SURVIVOR
COUNCIL / CITIZENS OF
NEW ORLEANS COMMITTEE ON
RECONSTRUCTION AND
REBUILDING
Bad Neighbor Commission
Contact Information:
504-872-9591
July 30, 2007
NOTICE OF VIOLATION
Click here to download
document -
28 KB
Bring Our People Back
Home!
Residents of Public
Housing Plan Anniversary
Activities
July 27, 2007
Residents of Public
Housing (RPH) met
yesterday at Guste High
Rise Community Center.
Twenty-eight residents
came from several
public housing
neighborhoods,
including Iberville,
Guste, St. Bernard,
Lafitte, B.W. Cooper
and Desire. With the
second anniversary of
Katrina only a month
away, residents
discussed plans for the
anniversary.
“Bring Our People Home”
Block Party
On August 28, RPH will
sponsor a block party
outside the HANO/HUD
office on Touro Street,
starting at noon. At the
block party, we will be
presenting HANO and HUD
with a list of units the
community needs them to
reopen now.
Funeral Procession
and Memorial Service
On August 29, we are
having our funeral
procession and memorial
services for those from
the public housing
community who lost their
lives during the Katrina
tragedy. We will be
starting our
processional and
memorial services at the
St. Bernard Housing
Development at 10:00 AM,
and doing services at
St. Bernard, Lafitte,
B.W. Cooper and Guste,
and C.J. Peete. We are
looking for financial
support to provide buses
to enable residents who
are still outside New
Orleans to come home for
these events.
Please help us with
these events. Click the
“Donate” link on this
page so public housing
residents who are still
in exile can come home
to commemorate the
losses they suffered and
continue to suffer since
Katrina.
REPORTS FROM NEW ORLEANS
SURVIVOR COUNCIL
DELEGATIONS TO
VENEZUELA, INDIA AND
WASHINGTON, DC: CREATING
INTERNATIONAL ALLIANCES,
SEEKING RESTITUTION
When: Saturday, June
16, 2007, 11am-1pm
Where: Old
Pathway Baptist Church,
1908 Alabo St. (2 blocks
off N. Claiborne) Lower
Ninth Ward, New Orleans,
LA
Contact: Ishmael
Muhammad, 404-664-3009
Members of the New
Orleans Survivor
Council (NOSC) have
been seeking alliances
and support both
internationally and
nationally; their
reports on their
travels, observances,
and sources of support
will be presented at a
meeting on Saturday,
June 16th. Members from
each of the delegations
will be in attendance,
offering strategies for
garnering support and
translating it all into
opportunities for
survivors to return
home and rebuild their
homes, families, lives
and communities.
A delegation of 4 NOSC
participants went to
Venezuela (see full
information below) to
garner moral and
financial support from
the Communal Councils
(neighborhood people’s
organizations) and the
Venezuelan National
Assembly to help poor,
black New Orleaneans in
their attempts to
reclaim their city. Both
the Communal Councils
and National Assemblymen
promised ongoing support
to the survivors and
expressed outrage that
the money they had
previously sent to New
Orleans never reached
the poor, most affected
people in the disaster.
Immediately after
returning from
Venezuela, two of the
members of that
delegation, Bobbie
Hammond and Gloria
Williams, went to
Washington, DC to meet
with Senator Mary
Landrieu to press her to
support legislation that
would re-open public
housing in New Orleans
and allow them to return
to their units to which
they hold leases.
Landrieu has refused so
far, and, in response,
Hammond and Williams,
along with others, are
participating in a
sit-in in that senator’s
office right now.
Another delegation
traveled to India, where
they met with survivors
of their tsunami and
discussed each of their
experiences with
“disaster capitalism”
that benefits the
multinational
corporations and
contractors much more
than the victims. The
NOSC participants
explained to the people
of India how rejected
and attacked our people
have been by the
governments on all
levels—New Orleans,
Louisiana, and US
Federal.
Representatives of each
of the delegations will
be present at the
meeting for reports,
questions and answers,
and interviews.
Dear Friend:
We are writing to you to
seek your support and
bring you into our
dialogue. We are the
members, organizers,
participants and
supporters of the New
Orleans Survivor Council
and its organizing
committee, the People’s
Organizing Committee.
Collectively, we have
been practicing a
‘bottom-up’ grassroots
organizing and
decision-making approach
to empowering the poor
black survivors of the
Katrina tragedy. In the
wake of this horror, we
have been presented with
some amazing
opportunities for
transformation and for
testing out this
important ‘bottom-up’
approach. We have put
the needs and interests
of the people first in
everything we do. And,
even with almost no
financial resources, we
have been remarkably
successful. We have:
-
organized public
housing residents to
re-occupy their homes
organized former
renters to take over
blighted houses,
repair them and move
in their families
taught the building
trades to survivors so
they can rebuild their
homes and be qualified
for skilled employment
organized low-income
homeowners to rebuild
their homes, with the
help of hundreds of
volunteers
attempted to rebuild
schools, churches,
clinics, day care
centers -- and the
levee surrounding the
9th ward
organized an
anti-slavery movement
which has challenged
unscrupulous
contractors and built
unity between blacks
and immigrants
begun an international
solidarity movement,
having just visited
Venezuela and received
a visit from
Venezuelan officials
begun a leadership
training institute to
train poor blacks in
the skills needed to
run and manage their
own organizations and
to implement large
development projects
organized residents of
the concentration
camps where 175,000
poor black residents
are still living
trapped in trailers in
more than 20 locations
outside the city
Even with all these
accomplishments over the
last year and a half,
our organizations are
still the least funded
(to date, we have
received only $40,000 in
foundation grants) and
the least supported. We
are targeted because we
have made the poor our
priority; we are hated
because the poor people
themselves manage all
the funds we raise; we
are hated because the
poor have the power over
all our projects and
programs; we are hated
because we challenge the
powers and demand the
right of return for the
poor black community.
When lawyers and
researchers in New
Orleans need information
from poor people, when
they need real access to
poor survivors, they
turn to us, to the New
Orleans Survivor Council
(NOSC) and the People’s
Organizing Committee (POC).
When funders and social
planners wonder why so
little has been
accomplished on the
ground in New Orleans,
even with progressive
foundation dollars, we
feel it is because too
many of the groups
operating in New Orleans
really have no roots
here, no close and
repeated contact with
the poor black people of
New Orleans. They cannot
produce because they are
outsiders, outsiders by
geography, by class, by
race. We are the people
ourselves; we do not
need to figure out how
to “make contact” with
the people: we are the
people.
Certainly, we do not
expect much support from
the privileged, yet we
know that we cannot
continue to reap great
achievements and
continue building our
future without some
outside help. We look
back to the experience
of the Student
Non-Violent Coordinating
Committee, in which
“Friends of SNCC,”
mostly middle class,
often white, often
Northerners, raised
awareness, publicity and
funds to support the
work of SNCC organizers.
Through conversations
with our participants
and organizers we have
discovered that we are
ambivalent about this
kind of support today.
On the one hand we see
the potential for
transformative
organizing before our
very eyes here in New
Orleans. What is
happening here could
have a profound impact
on poor folks from New
Orleans and on other
movements for
progressive social
change. More resources
are needed for this. On
the other hand we do not
want to be overwhelmed
or overtaken by those
who may share some of
our ideals but may not
truly support a
bottom-up, grassroots,
democratic process that
keeps poor people in the
leadership.
We would like to be able
to support many
organizers to spread
this important work, to
reach out to the tens of
thousands of survivors
strewn across the
nation. We would like to
create a movement
powerful enough to fully
bring those survivors
home, rebuild homes,
create jobs, open
schools and clinics and
rebuild the levee in the
Lower Ninth Ward. We
also want to create an
international organizing
school that would share
organizing strategies
and methods across the
world, particularly in
the Americas, that would
strengthen our
collective capacities—a
kind of more updated and
international Highlander
School.
To do this we must
expand our capacity to
do our work. We ask you
to help us think this
through, to offer your
insights, your voice,
your contacts, and your
networks. We need you to
be a "Friend of the NOSC,"
to help us -- and ask
your friends to help us
-- to raise the ongoing
support that is
essential to keep our
work going. Your
generous financial
contribution lets us
know that you believe in
the power of the people
themselves to transform
the world. And your
concrete support makes
you an active part of
this ongoing
transformation.
We turn to you because
we see you as an ally:
you have the knowledge,
experience and
sympathies that could
support our efforts
forward. Please read the
enclosed statement that
was written through a
collective process in
our group. We see this
as a sample “op-ed”
piece that might be used
in an effort to gain
support from reluctant
foundations and others.
Since we insist upon
keeping the power,
including control of the
budget, in the hands of
the poor themselves, and
not with a board of
professional overseers,
we may appear
frightening or
challenging to some. We
believe that we are the
genuine article, the
real organizers of and
by the poor. While some
would find this
frightening, others may
find this an important
and necessary step
forward.
We ask you to
participate in our
dialogue, to meet with
us; we invite you to
visit us in New Orleans
and to help us chart our
course. We seek a
conversation to begin
with, and to see where
our dialogue leads us.
We look forward to this
work together.
In struggle,
The New Orleans Survivor
Council
PS We are glad to let
you know that we
recently cleaned out a
high school in the Lower
Ninth Ward and have
collected many boxes of
textbooks in
anticipation of its
reopening. Your generous
support helps make this
work possible.
Donations to IFCO/NOSC
are tax deductible.
Please make checks
payable to IFCO/NOSC
|
Send donations to:
|
New Orleans
Survivor Council
2226 Uruslines
Avenue
New Orleans, LA
70119
|
Genocide
We are in the middle of
genocide of black
people, people of
African descent. This is
not the sort of genocide
that we have been alert
to in the past, where
millions of people are
decimated over a
relatively short period
of time in a small
geographic and political
region. No. This
genocide is moving along
at a steady, relentless
pace, moving faster and
faster with many focal
points. But make no
mistake: there is a
“systematic program of
action intended to
destroy a whole racial
or national group”
(Webster’s New World
Dictionary). Hundreds of
millions of people of
African descent are
being killed before our
eyes.
Read the rest of this entry
»
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