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Film Features Film/TV

Deadly Deja Vu

Even before its release, Steven Spielberg’s newest film, Munich, generated a storm of media interest. Many of the critics have called the film hollow, or worse yet, Hollywood. They have accused the film of being boring — it’s not — and Spielberg of pandering, by which they seem to mean not taking sides. Yet beneath it all, there seems to be a level of resentment generated by the mere fact that Spielberg, perhaps not the most politically astute of directors, would attempt to examine the complexities, moral and logistical, of what has probably become the single most important issue of our times: terrorism and its concomitant response.

The film begins at the 1972 Olympic games in Munich, when 11 members of the Israeli Olympic team were captured by the Palestinian group Black September. The resulting hostage crisis is handled skillfully by Spielberg as a barrage of media coverage, obscuring the human detail of the tragedy and replacing it with the everyday language of televised terror we have come to know so well.

From there, Munich moves on to its real subjects, the Israeli agents assigned to kill the 11 men believed to have been responsible for planning the Olympic kidnapping. Their leader, Avner, played by the surprisingly good Eric Bana, is the young son of an Army hero and a member of the Israeli intelligence agency Mossad. He is married, and his young wife, who soon moves to Brooklyn, is pregnant.

Spielberg delves into politics during this early phase of the movie, prominently featuring Israeli prime minister Golda Meir. “Every civilization finds it necessary to negotiate compromise with its own values,” she tells a reluctant Avner. At a time when the United States has torture chambers of its own spread around the world to deal with terror, this statement is powerful if a bit oblique. The discussions among the Israeli leadership about the necessity of protecting the Jewish state lays the groundwork for the real substance of the film, which examines how far political ideals can be translated and at what cost.

Which of course brings us to the counter-terrorists themselves. Perhaps one of the reasons I enjoyed the film so much is that it does not hesitate to revel in its ostensible shape as an A-Team-style action picture. The six members of the assassination squad break down as always into their useful skills. There is charismatic leader Avner, toy tinkerer turned bomb maker (Mathieu Kassovitz), fatherly watchdog (Ciarán Hinds), Hebrew Steve McQueen (Daniel Craig), document specialist (Hanns Zischler), and agency man (Geoffrey Rush).

The actions of the unit are adapted from George Jonas’ 1984 book Vengeance, an account of a Mossad hit squad provided by the unit’s leader, Avner. The team severs all official ties from the Israeli government, leaving them in a tactical and moral vacuum. As their work unfolds, the killings become essentially episodic; one hit leads to the next. The continuing tension is created by the group’s growing doubts about the efficacy of their work.

The Palestinian targets are never shown as ruthless killers. In fact, sometimes it feels as though Spielberg is straining to humanize them. The team never catches them engaged in some conspiratorial pow-wow or hunched over bomb preparations. Instead they meet their demise among scenes of domesticity that parallel the family Avner misses so dearly.

At times this can feel a bit hokey. For example, when the team shares an evening with a PLO group in a safe house, they listen to Al Green and trade sound bites on their respective rights to the Holy Land. For me, however, this quotidian drama between the agents was an effective way of inviting the viewer into the political morass that surrounds the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The Palestinian agent warns Avner, “We will never stop fighting,” and the generations that have followed him highlight this.

There are some bizarre sidetracks in the film, most notably the French family that becomes the team’s number-one source of information. Avner’s visit to their country mansion introduces him to their sage patriarch, who becomes something of a deadly father figure for him. These scenes felt like a bit of an indulgence, the sunny life of the armed gentry bearing more resemblance to The Godfather than anything in this film.

Spielberg does not have a clear-cut answer for what the team was able to accomplish. When one terrorist dies, another springs up in his place, and by the end of the film the group has failed utterly to terminate all their intended targets. But this mission fades into the background as Spielberg focuses instead on the gradual disintegration, both physical and moral, of the squad.

As the film draws to a close, Avner returns to the foreground. Increasingly paranoid and disillusioned with his mission, he travels to America to be with his family. It was here that I most respected Spielberg, who has become perhaps the most prominent Jewish-American filmmaker of our day. Munich does not use Israel as an allegorical template for America, but it forces us to see that the war on terror has been waged before. The Munich crisis forced Israel to confront many of the issues that have sprung up in America post-9/11, and this film forces us to examine ourselves in the light of itshh tactics and failures.

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News The Fly-By

Fairground’s Future

At a meeting with members of the Mid-South Fairgrounds Redevelopment Committee, tensions erupted between citizens interested in preserving the site’s historic past and the city’s hope for its future.

Members of the committee met with citizens at Fairview Junior High School last week to discuss the possible scenarios that will be presented to both the city and county mayor in January.

Steve Auterman, one of the architects from Looney Ricks Kiss, the firm the redevelopment committee hired to examine the best use of the land, presented the six scenarios to approximately 50 citizens.

“Right now, we have over 600 acres of proposals for 140 acres of land,” said Auterman. The redevelopment plans must include the Children’s Museum of Memphis and the Liberty Bowl, both of which have long-term leases with the city.

Whatever scenario is selected, Looney Ricks Kiss has laid out a series of master principles that it hopes will guide redevelopment. Preserving the land as a regional public amenity is one of the core principles. Another is selecting a design that eliminates the perception that the site is unsafe.

After being presented with the scenarios in November, the committee deemed scenario number five as the “best use” of the available space.

“The basic layout for scenario number five is a festival green in the center of the site which restores the historic midway,” said Auterman. On both the north and south sides of the midway, the plan calls for multi-purpose areas, which could be used for the fair, flea markets, or festivals. Some of that multi-purpose area could also be organized recreation.

“The thought is that it shouldn’t be a single, devoted use but should perform many functions,” said Auterman. “The north edge of the property, along Central Avenue, should be lined with what we call mixed-used, which is either residential or office uses above street-level retail.”

Scenario number five is the only one that does not include Libertyland, the Mid-South Fair, or the Mid-South Coliseum. This rankled many citizens in attendance.

“I’ve lived in a number of cities over the years, and I stayed in Memphis because it is unique. A lot of what you are proposing is very cookie-cutter,” resident Amy LaVere said.

Robert Lipscomb, organizer of the redevelopment committee, responded in a later interview.

“You’ve got to find a balance between respecting the nostalgia and protecting the architectural integrity versus can citizens afford to pay for it and are they willing?” he said.

Lipscomb hopes that with proper redevelopment, the land will become a new center within the city.

“You have to think long-term, because that is a valuable piece of property. It really is the nexus between East Memphis and what’s going on downtown. Right now you’re not maximizing the value of the property.”

Ben Popper

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News The Fly-By

Q & A: Richard White,

Flying into Memphis International Airport has always been akin to entering a big warehouse. Which is fitting, perhaps, since it’s been the number-one cargo airport in the world since 1992. But, in an attempt to create a more Memphis experience, the airport recently underwent $25 million in improvements, including the addition of area-themed restaurants and shops. After a media tour that included both an Elvis and a panda impersonator, the Flyer spoke with Richard White, director of properties for the Shelby County Airport Authority, about the project and the possible dangers of combining international travel with Interstate BBQ. — by Ben Popper

Flyer: The entertainment was terrific. Will there be Elvis and pandas on a regular basis?

White: No, but there will be live entertainment in Rhythms [restaurant], in Sun Studio, and in the Blue Note Café when that opens. And on special occasions there will be live entertainment and pandas and all that stuff. We feel that the Mid-South/Memphis theme has a flavor that is unique to us. We want anyone who comes to the airport to feel our hospitality.

How long has this project been in the works?

We started the planning on this in 2000. When 9/11 occurred, we basically delayed the process for a year, both for reasons of security and because traffic, as at all airports, dropped off significantly.

A lot of airports try for a grand, sweeping style, whereas this feels very personal.

We surveyed all the passengers who frequent our airport to see what they wanted. In the old airport, when you used to get off the plane, there was no sense of where you were. We felt Memphis had a very attractive uniqueness about it, and we wanted to highlight that.

How did the airport pay for this?

All the money that was spent in here is being paid by the concessionaires. We use something called minimum annual recovery, which is a rate that it costs the airport to produce the piece of real estate, the capital component to construct it and to maintain it, plus the utility rate.

Is the focus supposed to be the central rotunda?

That is the biggest piece of it. Eighty percent of our traffic goes through that area, but we have over 51 restaurants and retail spaces throughout the building. There are little touches as well, such as paintings by local artists and the hanging graphic panels that relate to Memphis.

We have to ask: How do you feel about boarding passengers who have just had a hearty helping of BBQ?

Why not? In Boston, you are going to get a cup of clam chowder. In El Paso, you will probably get a helping of Tex-Mex cuisine.

So, you’re not worried about any significant increases in cabin pressure?

No.

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We Recommend We Recommend

Play Date

Playhouse on the Square offers up family fun for the New Year’s with a performance of the children’s classic The Wizard of Oz. The event kicks off at 6 p.m. and will feature doors prizes, including Wizard of Oz CDs and books and a raffle for tickets to future Playhouse events. After the performance, there will be activities such as Pin the Heart on the Tin Man and an Enchanted Forest Apple Toss. Face-painting, balloon animals, and temporary tattoos should make for some colorful photo ops. There will also be food from Outback Steakhouse, Camy’s, Bayou Bar & Grill, and Silky Sullivan’s and soda for the kiddies and champagne for the grown folks. At 9:30 p.m., you can ring in an early New Year, drop the younglings off with a babysitter, and be back on the town in time for the real deal. It’s $35 for adults and $20 for children, with all proceeds going to benefit the Theatre for Youth program.

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We Recommend We Recommend

Mr. Big

Big George Brock has seen many a New Year come and go. The 73-year-old bluesman was recently nominated for a prestigious Blues Music Award, the genre’s equivalent of the Grammy. Brock grew up in the Mattson/Clarksdale, Mississippi, area and to celebrate his nomination he’s putting on a New Year’s Eve performance at the Delta Blues Room in downtown Clarksdale. Brock is know for his flashy suits and entertaining stage antics, but his energetic Delta-Went-North blues style isn’t just show. The Arkansas Leader says, “Brock is about as good a harmonica player as any of the blues greats, and he knew and played with most of them.”

Big George Brock at the Delta Blues Room, 220 Sunflower Avenue in Clarksdale, MS, (662-625-5992), Saturday, December 31st, $8 in advance, $10 at the door

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News The Fly-By

Waging a War

About 60 people gathered in Robert Church Park last Saturday afternoon to call on the City Council to pass the living-wage ordinance.

“Young and old/black and white together,” sang Rebekah Jordon, executive director of the Mid-South Interfaith Network for Economic Justice, before a diverse group of protesters.

Jordan, who served as choir director and marchleader for the gathered crowd, explained that the rally was organized to coincide with International Human Rights Day.

“A right to a living wage is included in the United Nation’s ‘Universal Declaration of Human Rights,'” she said.

The rally met in the park and then marched to the corner of Peabody Place and Third Street. At Third, protesters faced Peabody Place Entertainment and Retail Center and the Hampton Inn & Suites, two locations that event organizers see as emblematic of the city’s problematic approach to economic growth.

“Right now, we subsidize companies that pay poverty wages. We should be supporting companies that support our citizens,” said Jacob Flowers, director of the Mid-South Peace and Justice Center. Flowers was upset that tax freezes through the payment-in-lieu-of taxes (PILOT) program mean that neither the retail portion of Peabody Place nor Hampton Inn will pay full taxes until 2037, while the companies pay workers as little as $7 an hour.

Brad Watkins, chair of Democracy for Memphis and a member of the Living Wage Coalition, said that legislators recognize that the living wage is an important issue.

“Just recently, the executive committee of the Shelby County Democratic Party voted without a single nay in support of the living wage,” said Watkins. “It is the intention of a lot of people in the party to focus on this issue.”

Others at the protest focused on the moral issue at stake. Nabil Bayakly is a member of Muslim in Memphis, another organization that is part of the Living Wage Coalition. “It is an honor to make a living from your sweat. What these wages do is to enslave the individual and create a poverty class,” he said.

The protesters waved signs and handed out flyers to passing cars for about 15 minutes before a security officer from Peabody Place crossed the street and told the protesters to move on. As the protest broke up, many continued to sing: “I ain’t gonna be poor no more/ Down by the riverside/ Gonna fight for a living wage/ Down by the riverside …”

Representatives of Belz Enterprises, developer of Peabody Place and the Hampton Inn, could not be reached for comment. — Ben Popper

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Film Features Film/TV

Moshe Bellanga confronts sacred and secular in Ushpizin. Ushpizin

As the hysterical turmoil in Moshe Bellanga’s life reaches a fever pitch, he offers up a prayer that lays open the complexities of this film with wonderful simplicity: “Thank you, Lord,” he intones, “for helping to keep separate the sacred and the secular.” By this point in Ushpizin, a picture made by members of an Ultra Orthodox community in collaboration with secular filmmakers, Moshe’s prayer is loaded with a wry irony. This comes from the film’s ability to depict the holy and the profane with great humanity and humor, even as it sets them in opposition.

The film tells the tale of Moshe and Malli, an Orthodox husband and wife who are strapped for cash before the approaching holiday of Succoth. Moshe doesn’t have the money to get together the temporary dwelling that must be built for the holiday to commemorate the time of Exodus. The arrival of sudden funds is viewed by the couple as a miracle, while the arrival of unexpected guests — two escaped convicts and friends of Moshe from his younger, wilder days — is interpreted by the couple as a test, timed to coincide with the holiday, which traditionally stresses hospitality to guests (the Hebrew word for “guests” providing the film’s title).

The film captures both the madness and the joy of living one’s life by what many would consider to be fanatical religious standards. As Moshe is forced to confront his criminal past, the difficulties of conceiving a child with his wife, and the validity of his new Orthodox lifestyle, we see all the characters — criminals and housewives, bankers and rabbis — dealing with the frailty of belief in a modern world. The only complaint I have about this film is the ending, which felt a bit too short and sweet, but I would say that was only in comparison to the body of the film, which was as interesting, funny, and human as anything I’ve seen this year.

Ushpizin opens Friday, December 16th, at Ridgeway Four.

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News The Fly-By

Q & A: Gregory Duckett,

Local voters will never have to worry about hanging chads ever again. Not that they really did before.

Shelby County expects to spend $4 million for new voting equipment early next year. The county is considering bids from two companies: Diebold, which already sold the county some machines for early voting, and Electronic Systems & Software. The Flyer spoke with election commission chair Gregory Duckett about the necessity of the new machines, as well as the complications that could develop with the new system.

By Ben Popper

Flyer: Why is Shelby County buying new voting machines?

Duckett: Basically, there are three fundamental responses to that question. Under the federal Help America Vote Act [HAVA], we are required to update election equipment to ensure compliance with their standards. Our system, as it stands today, does not meet the handicapped accessibility standards. The second issue, which we have been in ongoing dialogue with the state about, is whether our machines qualify as digital recording equipment as outlined by HAVA. To digress, HAVA was principally enacted to eliminate lever and punch-card voting machines. The initial ruling we received is that our equipment, albeit 20 years old, is viewed as a first-generation electronic system, and as such, we would not be entitled to 100 percent of the federal funding.

So the county actually ends up at a disadvantage because of its early investment in electronic voting machines?

Correct. Now the third issue is, with our current electronic system, if we have a contested election in every race on the August 2006 ballot, the system will simply not be able to accommodate all of those races. These big races occur on an eight-year cycle.

What is VVPAT, and what does it mean for voters?

VVPAT is “voter verifiable paper audit trail,” which is not currently required at the state level. Several other states have required it. There are several issues that pertain to auditing. One is the ability to have an internal audit that the election commission can use to verify the results of the election. VVPAT is a step further, because it provides for each individual voter a record of how they voted, so if there is a challenge, those individual receipts can be audited to determine the outcome of the election. Also any unique challenges to a voter could be audited.

So it’s about the level of transparency between the voter and the system?

True, but the philosophical issue associated with VVPAT is to what extent, at the end of the day, can a given voter be identified by a VVPAT system. One of our protections under the current system, the electronic system, is that they are randomly stored. That means I can’t go back and say, “Ben was the fifth person in line. This is the fifth ballot.”

While VVPAT provides protection against potential disenfranchisement, it also reduces

voter privacy?

Exactly, and you don’t want people using that to intimidate voters.

Are you worried about voters learning to use these new machines?

With any transition, there is the inherent concern of confusion on the part of the public, so a facet of this process will be intensive education and outreach. That is one of the reasons we want to get this system in by the May primaries, so we can have a test within a smaller election setting. We will also host community-awareness sessions. A decision needs to be made by the middle of January if we are going to have the system in place for the May primary.

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News The Fly-By

School System Shuffle

After leaving Memphis City Schools in 2003, former associate superintendent of business operations Roland McElrath took a job at the Memphis Housing Authority. More recently, he was appointed finance director for the city of Memphis.

During that same period, MCS has been searching for McElrath’s permanent replacement, and that troubles some members of the school board.

“There are critical positions which the board has expressed concern to the superintendent about, positions we would like to have filled by now,” says school board president Wanda Halbert.

Seven divisions — finance, procurement, internal auditing, transportation, nutrition services, communications, and operations — are currently without permanent directors.

“There are key positions that are vacant, but we either have them filled with interim staff or are in the process of recruiting,” says Michael Goar, associate superintendent for the district and the head of human resources.

“The main position that has been vacant for quite some time is the CFO, and there is great concern about that. We want to see the position filled,” says Halbert.

After McElrath resigned, procurement director Ed Bumpus was named the interim head of business operations until his retirement in December 2004.

Suzanne Kelly, the superintendent’s chief of staff, says the administration has conducted a lengthy search for a CFO.

“We have narrowed it down to two candidates. I’m hoping and I think [Superintendent Carol] Johnson is hoping she will have an offer prior to winter break.”

Other jobs that are unfilled, argues Goar, have simply been merged with other positions. For example, Goar currently heads both human resources and operations, taking over the latter from Lavon Alston, who retired in June. Along with her chief of staff duties, Kelly also serves as head of communications.

MCS has interim staff managing the procurement, internal auditing, finance, and nutrition services departments.

“I don’t think this is indicative of a problem,” says Goar. “I think we are well under way to finding a right candidate for these positions. And I think we have very capable people working on an interim basis.”

Halbert does not agree.

“I want to see the positions filled [on a permanent basis] so there can be more solid accountability,” she says.

Goar argues that MCS is simply making their administration more efficient. Neither Goar nor Kelly received any salary increase with their additional responsibilities. “This is a way for us to streamline our administration,” Goar says.

The system recently filled a vacancy in transportation, hiring Ronald Thornton. Less than a month later, Thornton decided to leave MCS and return to his position at Laidlaw.

“He had a better deal,” says Goar. “Obviously, sometimes in the public sector, we cannot match the private sector.”

School board member Sara Lewis had a different take on the situation. “I was just told this week that our salary schedules aren’t competitive. I’m glad to know that because then it almost becomes the board’s responsibility. How do we get out there and get competitive?”

Goar argues that the real story is the emphasis the district and superintendent have placed on filling academic positions.

“One of the things you should look at is the job human resources has been doing with teacher vacancies,” he says. “Two years ago, when I came on, we had 70 vacancies at the start of the school year. This year we had zero vacancies as of July 1st.” — Ben Popper

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News News Feature

Tale of Two Cities

I recently spent 24 hours in New Orleans. My trip to the city was spur of the moment. A friend who was volunteering in New Orleans invited my two housemates and me to come down. What we found was a city where a semblance of normalcy lives side by side with the persistent reality of disaster.

We arrived in New Orleans around 8 p.m. From the safety of elevated Interstate 10, the skyline of the central business district glowed brightly. Then we pulled off the highway onto North Clayborn, headed for downtown.

“Oh my God,” gasped one of my housemates. On one side of us stood a row of dark houses, their windows and doors boarded tight, their contents — tables, beds, chairs, refrigerators — spilled in unruly piles on the abandoned sidewalk. The houses were all marked with government graffiti, numbers and acronyms in orange spray-paint. On the other side, beneath the overpass, a graveyard of ruined and abandoned cars stretched along the road.

We turned onto Esplanade and drove toward the French Quarter. Almost as suddenly as it had appeared, evidence of the disaster began to disappear. It became starkly clear how the levee system had protected some parts of the city and failed others. As we entered the center of the city’s tourist district, the lights were on and groups of people were on the sidewalks.

In the French Quarter we met our host, Sophie Tintori, a 19-year-old sophomore from Brown University who is taking a semester off to volunteer with the relief effort. Tintori explained the meaning of the graffiti we kept seeing on the buildings. “It’s divided into four quadrants,” she said. “The date the crew came to check the building; the status of the building; and the initials of the crew that checked it. The number on the bottom is the number of dead bodies they found inside.”

In the Circle Bar on Saint Charles Avenue, a band played to a packed room. You would never have known that anything had changed if it were not for the presence of a half-dozen construction workers, their dusty clothes and loose denim shirts distinguishing them from the hipster crowd. Stepping out into the night air, I was startled by the passing of a camouflaged Humvee, national guardsmen leaning out the open sides of the vehicle, patrolling before the 2 a.m. curfew.

The next day, Sophie took me to the Community Kitchen in Washington Park. On our ride over from Sophie’s house on Magazine Street we passed dozens of “Help Wanted” signs posted in reopened businesses struggling to find staff.

Located between Dauphine and Royal in the Quarter, the kitchen is a sprawling enclave of tents and tables. It was organized by the nonprofit group Barefoot Doctors, along with members of the Rainbow Family, a volunteer organization based out of Waveland, Mississippi. There were also volunteers from the group Food Not Bombs. The kitchen opened October 10th and has been serving almost 700 hot meals a day since, as well as offering medical care and, most important, a place for returning New Orleanians to gather.

“A lot of what we are doing is providing a community for people whose neighborhoods are literally destroyed,” said Maria Hernandez, a Food Not Bombs volunteer who has been in the city since the storm.

Many of the volunteers are upset at what they see as the hypocrisy of the city’s response to them. “Some police will come by and harass us, but then other cops will bring us people who need food or medical help,” said Ross Harmon, one of the Food Not Bombs members who helped get the Community Kitchen running. “The city seems interested in rebuilding from an economic, not community, foundation,” he added.

At a time when many neighborhoods are still without power, gas, or running water, the attitude of city government toward the grass-roots organizations has caused some ire among volunteers. “The bureaucracy in this city was so slow to respond. They asked for our help, and now they are saying things are back to normal and they don’t need us,” Dee Ann Dominick, director of Barefoot Doctors, said. “Residents here would laugh at the suggestion that things are back to normal.”

Dominick’s point soon became evident. I decided to take a bike ride out to Common Ground, another grass-roots organization where Tintori volunteers, in order to get a look at the Ninth Ward, one of the neighborhoods hit hardest by the hurricane. It was a residential neighborhood, primarily black and working-class, well off the beaten tourist paths.

The devastation in the Ninth Ward goes well beyond what I had seen elsewhere in the city. Roofs are torn off of houses. Many homes have shifted from their foundations or collapsed. The Common Ground distribution center is a former day-care center located at Louisa and North Robertson.

“The few people who were returning to their homes here were finding it futile and turning around and leaving,” said Brandon Darby, the Ninth Ward coordinator for Common Ground. “This part of the city has received no utilities, no medical services, and no sanitation. We were actually taking trash from here and dumping it in white upper-class neighborhoods just so that it would get collected.”

Darby says they have helped return more than 40 homes in the area to livable conditions. Common Ground also has an on-site nurse and a legal clinic for citizens facing unlawful eviction — a growing problem as local rents skyrocket.

Half an hour later I spoke with two women on Clovet Street, a few blocks from Common Ground. “Memphis … that’s where we’re coming from too,” exclaimed Cheryl Jacobs, after I introduced myself. Jacobs, who works for the Navy, has been transferred to Millington. She had returned to see what she could salvage from her home.

“We just aren’t getting the kind of help we need out here,” she said, pointing at nearby power lines lying in a collapsed tangle from a sagging pole. “I want to see people come back here, to see this neighborhood regrow.” Jacobs claims her neighborhood had one of the highest rates of home ownership in the city. “I just don’t think the city is paying enough attention to us,” she said. “They only seem to care about the French Quarter and the central business district. I want to come home.”

As we headed back to Common Ground, I spotted a young couple on bikes, rolling through the empty streets, both fashionably dressed, with messenger bags and new Nikes. They were snapping photos of the devastated area. They seemed to sum up the city’s problems.

New Orleans may be open again for tourists, but for many of its citizens, there is no place they can call home.