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#1
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This was in the local newspaper where i live and wanted to share with ya'll:
Volunteers turn tragedy into help Oklahoma City, 9/11 survivors on team Monday, December 10, 2007 By Paul Rioux St. Bernard bureau Taking a break from floating drywall in a storm-damaged house in St. Bernard Parish, Priscilla Salyers said seeing the devastation wrought by Hurricane Katrina dredged up memories of being pulled from the rubble of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City. On April 19, 1995, Salyers was working in the U.S. Customs office on the fifth floor when she heard a deafening explosion. Then the floor gave way and Salyers tumbled to the basement, where she was pinned by the wreckage in a fetal position, unable to move except for her left arm. "I didn't realize the building had collapsed. I thought I'd had a seizure and was still sitting at my desk," she said. "I tried to reach for my computer but all I could feel was broken concrete and rebar." Salyers, 56, who suffered a punctured lung and broken ribs, was trapped for more than four hours before she was rescued. "When they carried me out on a stretcher, I could see the gaping hole in the building," she said. "I remember thinking, 'Oh, those poor people inside.' I was so disoriented that I didn't realize I was one of them." More than 12 years later, Salyers said she still hasn't fully come to grips with what happened. She has been wracked by bouts of depression and survivor's guilt because a co-worker who had been standing next to her was among the 168 people killed. The emotions were still too raw six years later when Salyers declined an invitation to join recovery efforts at the World Trade Center in Manhattan after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. But when she was recently asked to help rebuild homes in St. Bernard Parish, she jumped at the chance. "Being here brings some of the emotions from the bombing back to the surface, but it puts them in a more positive light because it feels good to help people who are trying to recover from their own disaster," Salyers said Thursday while working on a house in Violet. Repaying a debt She traveled to St. Bernard with about 50 other volunteers from the newly formed HEART 9/11, a nonprofit disaster relief group founded by first responders involved with rescue and recovery efforts after the terrorist attacks. With financial backing from Bear Stearns, a New York City investment bank, the group helped rebuild a half-dozen homes last week. Co-founder Bill Keegan, a retired lieutenant with the New York Port Authority Police Department who served as night commander at ground zero for eight months, said the group was formed in June to repay a debt of gratitude for the outpouring of support for New York City after 9/11. He said the organization's first mission, to St. Bernard Parish, has been therapeutic for the volunteers. "We're healing ourselves by helping others," he said. "It's like a billionaire philanthropist who says he never feels so selfish as when he's giving his money away." Chalmette resident John Stogner, whose house was worked on by the HEART 9/11 group, said he was inspired by the volunteers' refusal to see themselves as victims. "It helps knowing that they have been through something similar to Katrina and survived," he said. "Plus, they really know what they're doing. Their work on my house has been top-notch." Jasmine Victoria of Brooklyn said she volunteered in memory of her mother, Celeste Torres Victoria, who was arranging a conference at the World Trade Center and died when the north tower collapsed. "My mother was a very loving, happy person who would want me to be here," she said. Even so, Victoria, 26, felt a little anxious about being away from the Brooklyn seafood restaurant she opened several months ago. "Anybody know where I can get some good seafood gumbo?" she called out during a work break. "I'd like to serve some at my restaurant, but I want to know what it's supposed to taste like first." 'A privilege' to be here Volunteer Julius Lisner, who works for the chief medical examiner's office in New York City, helped sift through the World Trade Center wreckage to search for human remains in a temporary morgue near the collapsed towers. "It was extremely emotional and fulfilling to be able to give the victims' families some closure," he said. "Seeing the devastation here rehashes those memories, but you become stronger because you're doing something about it." Coming to storm-ravaged St. Bernard didn't just reopen emotional wounds for Lisner, who suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder. He said the dust from sanding drywall at a house in Violet aggravated a respiratory condition he developed after breathing the air at ground zero. "My health has suffered, but I have no regrets," said Lisner, who is 60. "This is America; we're supposed to help one another. It's really a privilege for me to be here." As the work week wrapped up, the volunteers expressed satisfaction at what they had accomplished tempered by the frustration of knowing how much work remains to be done. "The devastation doesn't end. It just doesn't end," said Paul Dessert, a retired detective from the Suffolk County Police Department in New York. Keegan said he had to overcome a similar sense of futility when confronted with the painstaking task of removing debris from "the pile" at ground zero. "It seemed almost too big to do. We had to find a way to break it down into a lot of little problems instead of one huge problem," he said. "I think that's how you have to approach the recovery from Hurricane Katrina." Besides, he said, there is a silver lining in the sheer size of the disaster: If and when Katrina's victims get back on their feet, they will become a vast pool of potential volunteers to help the next community in need. . . . . . . . Paul Rioux can be reached at prioux@timespicayune.com or (504) 826-3321. Thank you to everyone, chalmette
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So often we dwell on the things that seem impossible rather than on the things that are possible. So often we are depressed by what remains to be done and forget to be thankful for all that has been done.--Marian Wright Edelman |
#2
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((((((((((chalm))))))))))))
that is so true, the end, out of every disaster, comes a whole new group of ppl who undrestaand and help I know you will be one of them cause you are one of the bravest ppl i know muffy |
#3
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Great article. My doctor is from Sri Lanka and started an organization to help with that country's tsunami disaster several years ago. When I mentioned it to him on my last visit his eyes literally lit up. I know it does feel good to help others.
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"Never give a sword to a man who can't dance." ~Confucius |
#4
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(((((((((((((( chalm ))))))))))))
Lovely article, thanks for sharing with us! It's a beautiful thing when folks can take something ugly and negative that has happened in their lives and turn it around to a positive and inspiring situation. The healing that is gained by all involved is monumental. The human spirit is strong in each of us. We all need to find what it is that taps into our spirits and feeds our strengths! ![]() ![]() sabby |
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