Students spend spring break helping hurricane survivors
March 27, 2006
By Kathy L. Gilbert*
NEW ORLEANS (UMNS) — At Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Franklin’s house, about
16 students from Virginia Tech University are tearing out walls, knocking down
ceilings and pulling up carpet.
The Franklins’ son, E. Dwight Franklin, couldn’t
be happier.
“My parents lived here for almost 30 years,” he says. On the outside
edges of the Lower Ninth Ward in New Orleans, the Franklins’ home was
one of many left mired in mud and mold six months after Hurricane Katrina blew
through the Gulf Coast.
Several of the volunteer groups coming through the state in March are college
and high school students on their spring breaks.
Now that the students are working on the house,
Franklin says he is beginning to see some hope. “A month or so ago, I didn’t
see any hope. It is such a blessing to have them here.”
The Franklin family is spread out from Lake Charles,
La., to Texas, he says. “My
mom has been back, but my dad hasn’t seen the house yet.” He says
in addition to his parents’ house, his own house was flooded as well
as his grandparents’ house.
Ivy Gorman, team leader for the Virginia Tech students, stopped long enough
to catch her breath after dumping another wheelbarrow load of debris on the
pile outside the house.
“We are cleaning up the mess, pulling up carpet, taking out the kitchen
sink, the toilets,” she says. When asked why she would give up a chance
to be relaxing on a beach somewhere for this backbreaking work, she says simply, “People
need help.”
Franklin watches the students haul out load after
load. “Just look at
all this stuff,” he says. “My mom was a stuff person.”
Help is ?a blessing’
In another part of town, more students from Virginia Tech are helping Rita
Taylor clear out her house.
“I love it,” she says of the help. “I didn’t
have enough money to pay someone to come in and do this, it is a blessing.”
Taylor says this was her first home and the storm
took its toll on her. “I
lost everything,” she says. “I am going to clean it out and lock
it up and wait and see what happens during the next hurricane season.”
Joshua Plitt, a senior mechanical engineering
student, explains why he came on this trip: “The Bible directs us to
help the poor and oppressed.”
After a pause, he adds, “I am doing it to
glorify God.”
*Gilbert is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in Nashville,
Tenn.
News media contact: Kathy L. Gilbert, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or
newsdesk@umcom.org.