Project Noah draws high-school students to help Katrina victims
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A UMNS photo by John Gordon George Ragsdale talks to the youth volunteers before they begin their work day restoring houses in Covington, La.
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George
Ragsdale, coordinator of Project Noah (New Orleans Area Hope) and
director of youth ministry for First United Methodist Church in Baton
Rouge, talks to the Noah volunteers before they begin their work day
restoring houses in Covington, La. About 1000 students from United
Methodist churches in 24 states will spend a week rebuilding homes
damaged by Hurricane Katrina in the Slidell and Covington areas near New
Orleans. A UMNS photo by John Gordon. Photo #06724. Accompanies UMNS
story #394. 6/27/06. |
June 27, 2006
By John Gordon*
SLIDELL, La. (UMNS)—High-school students from across the country are giving
up part of their summer vacations to help hurricane victims, while getting a
living history lesson and a dose of Cajun culture along the way.
About 1,000 students from United Methodist churches in 24 states have signed
up for Project Noah (New Orleans Area Hope). Each group will spend a week rebuilding
flooded and wind-battered homes in the Slidell and Covington areas near New
Orleans.
“I was overwhelmed with the response,” said
Project Noah director George Ragsdale, who heads the youth ministry at First
United Methodist Church
in Baton Rouge.
“These kids have given up baseball camps and baseball games and summer
camps and money out of their pocket to come down and make a difference and
to make an impact on the people who are still affected by Hurricane Katrina,” he
said.
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A UMNS photo by John Gordon Rosetta Beuchat-Zweig says she is grateful to Project Noah volunteers who are repairing her home.
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Rosetta
Beuchat-Zweig says she is grateful to Project Noah (New Orleans Area
Hope) volunteers who are repairing her home flooded by Hurricane
Katrina. About 1000 students from United Methodist churches in 24 states
will spend a week rebuilding homes damaged by Hurricane Katrina in the
Slidell and Covington areas near New Orleans. A UMNS photo by John
Gordon. Photo #06725. Accompanies UMNS story #394. 6/27/06. |
The groups get a taste of the area’s unique
culture with a makeshift Mardi Gras parade of floats made of hurricane debris.
They also tour some of New Orleans’ hardest-hit
areas, including the Lower Ninth Ward. Most are surprised by the extent of
the damage.
“I didn’t think it was going to be too bad,” said
Paul David Foster, 15, a Project Noah volunteer from First United Methodist
Church in
Hartwell, Ga.
“And then we went across that bridge and there was nothing there,” he
said. “So, it was mind-blowing.”
Foster was one of 19 youth from his church who signed up to help. One of their
projects was putting up sheetrock at the home of Rosetta Beauchat-Zweig, 84,
who is now living in a FEMA trailer after her home was flooded by three-and-a-half
feet of water.
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A UMNS photo by John Gordon Bobby Lewis, 15, of First United Methodist Church in Hartwell, Ga., hangs drywall in a home damaged by Hurricane Katrina.
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Bobby
Lewis, 15, of First United Methodist Church in Hartwell, Ga., hangs
drywall in a home damaged by Hurricane Katrina. Lewis is a Project Noah
(New Orleans Area Hope) volunteer. About 1000 students from United
Methodist churches in 24 states will spend a week rebuilding homes
damaged by Hurricane Katrina in the Slidell and Covington areas near New
Orleans. A UMNS photo by John Gordon. Photo #06726. Accompanies UMNS
story #394. 6/27/06. |
“I can’t say how much I appreciate what they’re doing,” said
Beauchat-Zweig. “These youngsters are doing work that I can’t possibly
even help them with.”
This is the second time Beauchat-Zweig has found herself starting over in
less than three years. Her house was destroyed earlier by a fire. She rebuilt,
and Katrina hit four months later.
“It’s just wonderful to see them doing this,” she
said.
The students do not complain, even as they sweat in the muggy south Louisiana
climate.
“During the day, it feels hot,” said Shana Toney, 16, also a member
of First United Methodist in Hartwell. “But after you’ve gotten
it all done and you’ve known that you made a difference and you’ve
seen how these people react to helping them, it’s a really good feeling.”
Johnny Williamson, 16, said the students are helping
coastal residents rise above the “wrath of Mother Nature.”
“If you have a bunch of people working together, you can overcome a
lot of things,” he said.
Besides learning construction skills, the students are also living a part
of history.
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A UMNS photo by John Gordon Project Noah volunteers view the damage in New Orleans' hard-hit Lower Ninth Ward.
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Project
Noah (New Orleans Area Hope) volunteers from First United Methodist
Church in Hartwell, GA view the damage in New Orleans' hard-hit Lower
Ninth Ward. About 1000 students from United Methodist churches in 24
states will spend a week rebuilding homes damaged by Hurricane Katrina
in the Slidell and Covington areas near New Orleans. A UMNS photo by
John Gordon. Photo #06727. Accompanies UMNS story #394. 6/27/06. |
“These students will be able to look back and say, ‘Look, I saw
that, I saw history. I was not (just) a reader of history. But I saw what happened
and I saw the devastation and I saw the plight of the people,’” said
Ragsdale.
Organizers first thought about 200 students might sign up for Project Noah,
which continues through July. Many of the damaged houses targeted by the volunteers
are mobile homes where elderly residents live.
The program is full and no longer taking registrations.
But Ragsdale said he hopes to extend it beyond this year—while also
encouraging students to pursue mission opportunities near their own homes.
“Hopefully, by going down through those areas so affected, they’ll
be able to look around them when they get back to their homes in California
or Washington or Florida and see the need and be able to respond,” he
said.
“I hope that as teenagers go back from here…that their lives will
be different, because I know that the people’s houses that they work
on lives will be different.”
*Gordon is a freelance producer and writer based in Marshall, Texas.
News media contact: Fran Coode Walsh, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5458 or
newsdesk@umcom.org.
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