Another tragic story in the Katrina aftermath. I won't post this as news but hope it gets the attention it deserves so people have a chance to read
about it. For those of you who may wonder what the point is to know these things. Well the answer is pretty evident. The people who died, their
friends and family, those who survive and Americans everywhere should know what is really going on.
The dead have not been buried in many cases. It doesn't really matter what the reasons are because I'm sure there are some damned good ones, like
being trapped in an attic or floating around in the water. I understand the difficulties in rescuing and discovering everyone in a chaotic and
turbulant situation.
But this story - Vera's is sad - not only because of the immediate health reasons of having exposed bodies on the streets and the very real
possibility of diseases, but because Vera was a human being who didn't get a chance to die like one. We - all of us, deserve some respect and dignity
in life as well as death.
It is sad and tragic and believe me, I don't use that word lightly. Dead people are lying around in the sun, abandoned on the streets, dead in
bathrooms and freezers and attics; exposed corpses, pathetic and wretched in a country where we thought this couldn't happen.
Vera didn't die in the hurricane. She didn't die in the flood - she died in the aftermath and was left to rot.
How many more of these cases will we read about and discover before this is all over?
And most importantly, what does it teach us?
It is too late for the dead to start pointing fingers and appropriating blame. It is too late to listen to the naysayers and those with so much
foresight it makes your head spin. Many like her didn't escape and didn't die with the hurricane or the floods.
Yes she is dead and there is nothing anyone can do about it. FEMA or the soldiers or guards can't help. But we should care. We should really care
about the aftermath.
After all the blame has been appropriated - the looters and politicans forgotten. It is these corpses that will be remembered.
In a makeshift grave on the streets of New Orleans lies the body of Vera Smith. She was an ordinary woman who, like thousands of her neighbours, died
because she was poor. Abandoned to her fate as the waters rose around her, Vera's tragedy symbolises the great divide in America today
However Vera Smith may have lived her life, one thing was certain. In death, she had no dignity. Killed in the chaotic aftermath of Hurricane Katrina,
her body lay under a tarpaulin at the junction of Magazine Street and Jackson Avenue for five full days. Not her friends, her grieving husband, not
her neighbours could persuade the authorities to take her corpse away.
Finally, disgusted by the way she had been abandoned - and concerned, too, about the health implications of advancing decomposition - her friends
buried her in a makeshift grave. A local man fashioned a simple cross, and on top of the soil that was shovelled over her body he placed a white
plastic sheet and wrote "Here Lies Vera. God Help Us."
news.independent.co.uk...
[edit on 6-9-2005 by nikelbee]
Slight title fix.
[edit on 6-9-2005 by RANT]
[edit on 6-9-2005 by intrepid]