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Ghosts and Towns
I left Iowa City on a Tuesday morning.
It was mid November, and the news forecast the first snowfall
of the season. When I arrived in Iowa City two months earlier,
I was running away from a storm; that Tuesday I was about to
do the same. If life isn’t a
straight line but a series of almost-full circles, the fall of
2005 could be described as a season of constant displacement, caused
sometimes by natural disasters, sometimes by emotional ones. Hurricane
Katrina was the first kind. Like many others, overnight I was homeless,
with little money in my pocket and many impossible-to-answer questions.
I went to Houston, leaving behind invaluable belongings —books,
journals— but thinking that the trip would last no more than
a couple of days. Almost immediately, reality proved me wrong.
One of the first effects of Katrina was a change in time perception:
the past became something remote, the future, an empty word. There
was nothing more than an eternal present. I began to drive
around the Houston area, and New Orleans was everywhere. It
wasn’t the happy, playful face of the city. On the contrary,
you could see New Orleans’s dark side, the one of poverty,
inequality and sadness. This was a result of evacuees arriving
at the shelters in Houston, those people who were doing nothing
but waiting for news.
One
day a close friend of mine told me that I had become a ghost. “You
represent everything New Orleans meant to me,” my friend
said, “and I need to move on, leaving you and the city
behind.” A few days later, the IWP at University of
Iowa generously accepted me as a participant for the 2005 program. I
left Houston on a Tuesday. The very next days, thousands evacuated
the city because of Hurricane Rita. The experience in Iowa was
very important for me. I was happy there; I made good friends,
met interesting people, and put physical and emotional distance
between the South and myself. I also wrote a lot. But I knew that
sooner or later I had to return home. Being a ghost, I could only
find peace in the place where my life ended.
Living in New Orleans
after Katrina was like traveling back in time. Few cars were in
the streets, just a handful of traffic lights were repaired. Stores
closed as early as five, and for months there was only one movie
theatre to go to. People celebrated everyday victories, little
things such as getting mail –even if it
was only overdue bills– or the reopening of a restaurant.
We all desperately wanted a sense of normalcy, even though it was
no longer was what it used to be. I started to walk the city
again. I had the feeling of being in a place at once familiar and
strange, not New Orleans really, but its remains. That new place
was full of absence. Friends were gone for good. Neighborhoods
I walked around in the past were now empty. At first glance many
houses appeared in good shape, but once you got closer the signs
of the disaster became evident. In the end, New Orleans had become
a big shell sitting on the banks of the Mississippi, the perfect
site for a ghost like me.
Like the city, all of us started over
almost from scratch. Now we are contending not only with the present
but with the past as well. People talk about a coming back. They
idealize the old New Orleans, as if that city had not been a mixture
of beauty and ugliness, violence and love. But the old, contradictory
and unique New Orleans is gone forever. We still have its ghost;
we can dream about it and share memories. Nevertheless, we have
to learn that a ghost is a transitional form of being on the way
towards the unknown. That is where I want to get, and become something
new.
post--and pre--Katrina photos by the author.
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Uriel Quesada sends
a postcard
from
New Orleans
Uriel Quesada Intro
Ghosts
and Towns
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