Social Justice and Climate Justice Movements Merge in New Orleans 10 Years After Hurricane Katrina

Julie-Dermansky-022
on

Marguerite Doyle Johnston, a resident of New Orleansโ€™ Upper 9th Ward,ย did not take part in the multitude of events surrounding Hurricane Katrinaโ€™s 10th anniversary that celebrated the cityโ€™sย resilience. โ€œMy neighborhood was left out of the recovery, so I donโ€™t feel like celebrating,โ€ she toldย DeSmog.

Johnston would have preferred that the money spent on celebrating New Orleansโ€™ recovery be spent on restoring Club Desire, a landmark building in the Upper 9th Wardย neighborhood that she has been trying to save and convert into a communityย center.

In its heyday, many of the cityโ€™s most famous artists performed in Club Desire,ย including Fats Domino and Little Freddie King.ย Despite Johnstonโ€™s efforts to rescue the building,ย it is slated for demolition later thisย fall.ย 

VIDEO: Marguerite Doyle Johnston inside Club Desire reflecting on Katrinaย 10:

According to Johnston, money spent on Katrina 10, the month-long celebration sponsored by the Rockefeller Foundation and otherย corporate sponsors, is just another example of how the allocation of funds in post-Katrina New Orleans never made it to African American folks likeย her.

Corporate sponsorship was ever present. Katrina 10 hosted panel discussions, lectures, musical performances, second line parades, and visits from three presidents (Obama, Clinton,ย Bush).


T-shirt with a list of corporate sponsors at a Katrina 10 year Anniversary event.ย ยฉ2015 Julieย Dermansky

In her 2014 book, This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate, Naomi Klein, author of The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism (2007), was inspired by what happened in New Orleans.ย The book โ€œbegins in a very specific time and place. The time was exactly ten years ago. The place was New Orleans, in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. The road inย question was flooded and littered with bodies,โ€ she wrote on her website.

For the anniversary of Katrina, Klein released the chapter of The Shock Doctrine on New Orleans, post-Katrina,ย writing:ย 

โ€œRereading the chapter 10 years after the events transpired, I am struck most by this fact: the same military equipment and contractors used against New Orleansโ€™ Blackย residents have since been used to militarize police across the United States, contributing to the epidemic of murders of unarmed Black men and women. That is one way inย which the Disaster Capitalism Complex perpetuates itself and protects its lucrativeย market.โ€ย 

โ€œWe can sit and worry about climate change. Or, we can get up and do something about it,โ€ Klein wrote recently.ย โ€œOur only hope is the rise of mass movements with the combined goalsย of saving the environment and achieving socialย justice.โ€

Signs of the merging of social and environmental justice groups could be found in New Orleansย related to Katrina’s 10th anniversary at events held by Gulfย South Rising, a coalition of dozens of groups that deal with theย impact of climate change on the Gulf Coastย region.ย 

โ€œThe global climate crisis is rooted inย economic theories that promote mass consumption of limited resources, laws that maintain inequity, and social hierarchies and governance processesย that limit civicย participation,โ€ states Gulf South Risingโ€™s website.ย 

VIDEO: Pastor Kenneth Sharpton Glasgow at a Gulf South Rising event in Newย Orleans:ย 

โ€œYou canโ€™t talk about climate change without talking about social justice,โ€ย Pastor Kenneth Sharpton Glasgow, a human rights activist and brother of Rev. Al Sharpton,ย toldย DeSmog.

Glasgow took part in an event held by Gulf South Risingย that was focused on uniting local and regional youth. Discussions about the connection betweenย environmental racism, disenfranchisement, displacement, police violence,ย and the โ€school-to-prison pipelineโ€ were held in Armstrong Park underย outdoor tents. Activists shared ideas and held training sessions with the goal of buildingย a sustainable, healthy, and equitable future with justice forย all.ย 

Though he respects his brother Al Sharpton, Glasgow thinks a lot of the old-time civil rights activists like his brother are making a mistake by leaving climate change out of theย conversation.ย 

โ€œThe time to discuss climate change is now, even if it is uncomfortable,โ€ Glasgow insists. Leaving climate change out of the discussion on social justice is like talking about race,ย but not talking about โ€Blackโ€ and โ€œWhite,โ€ heย said.ย 

โ€œGulf South Risingโ€”their slogan [The Seas are Rising and So Are We] seemed perfect to me,โ€ Bill McKibben, founder of 350.org, told DeSmog. McKibben andย Sierra Club Executive Director Michael Brune, whose Gulf Coast chapters are part of Gulf South Rising,ย were in the Lower 9th Ward for the coalitionโ€™s second lineย parade.

Cheri Fortin, a grassroots activist who has been fighting for social and environmental justice since the BP oil spill disaster, woke up August 30 wondering if all the money spent by Gulf Coast Rising and Katrina 10 will change anything. She and other grassroots activists questioned if the money that poured in from bigger NGOs to Gulf Coast Rising also failed to make it into the hands of people who need itย most.

โ€œDid we challenge the politicians to step up and protect us? No. Are our life-protecting wetlands being better protected and restored? No. Is there a moratorium on oil and gas infrastructure being built in this climate disaster zone? No. Is housing more affordable and are still-displaced folks on their way home? No. Are we any more safe from or ready for the next one? Absolutely not. So what was it all for? Feel-good moments and chart paper will not save us,โ€ sheย said.

Her work and that of othersย in a growing grassroots-based movement is left undone, but she is glad the conversation that connects social justice andย environmentalย justice has, at least,ย begun.

Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein echoed Glasgow’s sentiments and some of Fortinโ€™s sentiments at the Rising Tide X Conference, an annual gathering established by local bloggers for all who wish to learn more and doย more to assist with New Orleansโ€™ย recovery.ย 

โ€œYou canโ€™t leave social justice out of the climate conversation in New Orleans or anywhere,โ€ Stein told DeSmog. โ€œWe must meet human needs at the same time we meetย ecological needs. To propose that people are somehow separate from the ecosystem we live in requires a major cognitive disconnect. Itโ€™sย like saying you can take care ofย your heart without taking care of yourย lungs.โ€

VIDEO: Jill Stein speaks about racial and environmental injustice in Newย Orleans:ย 

Beverly Kimble Davis, a New Orleans-based artist, set up her paintings in the lobby of the Andrew P. Sanchez & Copelin-Byrd Multi-Serviceย Center in the Lower 9th Ward,ย where one of the Katrina 10 events was held. Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi joined New Orleans Mayor Mitchย Landrieu and former Louisiana Senator Mary Landrieu at the gatheringย before laying a wreath at a memorial for those lost in the storm.ย 
ย 


Beverly Kimble Davis with her paintings at a Katrina 10 event. ยฉ2015 Julieย Dermansky


Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi of California with New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu at a โ€˜K10โ€™ event at the Andrew P. Sanchez & Copelin-Byrd Multi-Service Center. ยฉ2015 Julieย Dermansky

That morning, Davis was tempted not to come at all, but she wanted to make sure those hosting and attending the event would see her work. Her paintings deal with atrocitiesย following Katrina, including the murder and cover-up on the Danzigerย Bridge.ย 

โ€œI woke up feeling distraught and disturbed,โ€ Davis told DeSmog. โ€œThey continue to portrayย New Orleans as if everything is great, saying โ€˜we are backโ€™ whenย many are notย back.โ€

โ€œIt is one thing to say the levees are fixed, but you have to deal with the coastal erosion, you have to deal with weather changes,โ€ Davis said. But she is painfully awareย that climate change, for the most part, has been left out of the conversation in Newย Orleans.

This does not surprise her because โ€œthe system is set up so the oil and gas industryย can do things that are not goodย for us,โ€ she said.ย 
ย 


People leaving a second line parade walk by a โ€œKatrina Parkingโ€ sign near the Superdome.ย ยฉ2015 Julieย Dermansky

A blinking LED sign flashing โ€œKatrina Parkingโ€ near the Superdome was a reminder of how far the city has come over the last 10 years. People who took part in a second lineย parade walked by the sign after the parade ended in front of the Smoothie King Center where Katrina 10โ€™s finale event featuring Bill Clinton took place, seemingly oblivious to theย irony.ย 
ย 


Soledad Oโ€™Brien on stage at theย Smoothie King Center during the โ€˜Power of Communityโ€ Katrina 10 event.ย ยฉ2105 Julieย Dermanskyย 


Bill Clinton speaks during a free Katrina anniversary event atย Smoothie King Center, where the room was less than half full.ย ยฉ2105 Julieย Dermanskyย 

Meanwhile, Louisianaโ€™s coast continues to erode at the rate of approximately one football field-sized piece of land every 39 minutes. And each day Club Desire is oneย day closer to disappearing. Such facts make Johnstonโ€™s fight to restore the club and turn it into a community center โ€” and the voices that gathered in New Orleans to combatย social and environmental injustice โ€” more important thanย ever.ย 


Marguerite Doyle Johnston in Club Desire. ยฉ2015 Julieย Dermansky

Julie-Dermansky-022
Julie Dermansky is a multimedia reporter and artist based in New Orleans. She is an affiliate scholar at Rutgers Universityโ€™s Center for the Study of Genocide and Human Rights. Visit her website at www.jsdart.com.

Related Posts

on

Is the Gulf of Mexico the "single best opportunity" to store climate-warming gas โ€” or an existential threat to wildlife and people?

Is the Gulf of Mexico the "single best opportunity" to store climate-warming gas โ€” or an existential threat to wildlife and people?
on

DeSmog reflects on some of the major moments in U.S. LNG policy, the courts, and protest in a turbulent year for this fossil fuel.

DeSmog reflects on some of the major moments in U.S. LNG policy, the courts, and protest in a turbulent year for this fossil fuel.
Analysis
on

Our editors and reporters weigh in on a year of seismic political events, and what theyโ€™re paying close attention to in 2025.

Our editors and reporters weigh in on a year of seismic political events, and what theyโ€™re paying close attention to in 2025.
on

A new lawsuit alleges toxic, radioactive waste leaked into a PA familyโ€™s water well, uncovering a regulatory abyss for miles of fracking pipelines in the state.

A new lawsuit alleges toxic, radioactive waste leaked into a PA familyโ€™s water well, uncovering a regulatory abyss for miles of fracking pipelines in the state.