Yes, we were all a flutter for a while over Hurricane Katrina, that storm of the century that ravaged this metropolitan swampland and much of the Gulf Coast. But then life — not to mention other hurricanes (namely Rita and Wilma) — got in the way of our short-lived concern.
January 1, 2006
We had church fellowship meals to organize and kids to take to basketball practice. We had Thanksgiving turkeys to roast and Christmas presents to buy.
And somewhere along
the way, we forgot about Fred Franke and our suffering brothers and sisters in
this city that some of us knew as the Big Sleazy.
OK, maybe you didn’t
forget. But I confess that I did.
Then I got a call
from Fred, an elder at the Carrollton
Avenue church, inviting me to come witness
firsthand the needs and devastation that remain.
My highly
professional journalistic assessment after three days here: Wow.
But before I elaborate,
let me back up a bit: I first became acquainted with Fred when he e-mailed me
the day the New Orleans
levees broke. He and his family had fled to a Florida hotel before Katrina hit, but even
from 250 miles away, Fred recognized the enormity of the disaster.
“We, like God’s
people of old, are in exile — away from our home,” he wrote in that first
e-mail. “Money has already run out for some of our number ... and is running
out for others as we speak. My family and I got out with two days of clothes,
essential papers, etc.”
We used Fred’s
comments in a short story on the Chronicle Web site that day, and he later told
me that more than 150 readers contacted him that week, offering money, food,
supplies and volunteer labor.
As it turned out, the
storm made Fred’s own home uninhabitable.
Even as his insurance
companies argued over what caused the damage — wind or water — Fred focused on
shepherding emotionally traumatized Carrollton
Avenue members scattered near and far.
Even as he, his wife,
Dee, and her parents, ages 85 and 86, were forced into a rental home an hour
and 45 minutes away, Fred worked 16-hour days gutting members’ flooded homes
and organizing church work crews from across the nation.
Even as he maxed out
his credit cards, Fred put his personal businesses on hold to devote himself
full time to directing Operation Nehemiah, a ministry of the Carrollton Avenue
church with a goal of “helping rebuild the walls of people’s lives and the
church in New Orleans.”
Why did he do it?
Because he felt, as he explained to me, that God gave him the strength and
endurance to serve in “such a time as this.” And because, as it becomes quickly
evident when you meet him, he loves this beleaguered city, warts and all.
Where others might
see a modern-day Sodom in ruins, Fred holds out
hope for “turning Babylon into Jerusalem.”
Which brings me back
to my visit.
While I had seen the
blue tarps covering hundreds of damaged roofs from the air, the view on the
ground revealed miles and miles of debris — miniature mountains of tree limbs,
mattresses, broken chairs, smashed toy robots and mildewed stuffed animals
piled high outside thousands of homes.
Equally striking were
the bright red X’s painted on each front door, showing the date inspected by
search teams and the number of bodies, if any, found inside.
But for me, the most
vivid images were the devastated homes of church members and the now-closed
churches — our churches — that could wither away without drastic action.
Mud caked on my shoes
as I tiptoed through Wayne
and Ann Arnold’s red brick house with the white columns. It’s now, of course, a
nightmarish mishmash of ruined furniture and personal belongings.
A few miles away, the
dust and residue made me sneeze in the smashed-in entry way of the Crowder Boulevard
church, where brown weeds stick to broken, tumbled-over pews with fading orange
cushions.
Fred’s reason for
inviting me was simple: He knew if I came, these images would stick with me
long after I returned home.
Now, he has a
request: He wants you to visit, too, and see how you can help.
I know, I know.
You’ve moved on. So had I.
***
In case you missed
the new, much-less-handsome mugshot, the new year brings a change to
the Chronicle.
Senior editor Scott
LaMascus graciously kept writing the Inside Story column during my first seven
months as managing editor. Now that I’ve settled into the job a bit, I’m ready
to tackle this challenge, too.
Fortunately for all
of us, Scott remains an integral member of our Editorial Council, contributing
his authoritative voice and vast knowledge of our fellowship to this
newspaper’s mission of informing, inspiring and uniting churches of Christ.
If you want to thank
Scott for the heart and soul that he poured into this space every month for more
than five years, he can be reached at scott.lamascus@christianchronicle.org
CHECK OUT BOBBY ROSS
JR.'s personal blog at www.bobbyrossjr.blogspot.com. E-mail him at bobby.ross@christianchronicle.org
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