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Thursday, Dec. 19
The Indiana Daily Student

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Second anniversary of Katrina brings celebrations, anger

APTOPIX Katrina Anniversary

As bells rang out, honoring the second anniversary of Hurricane Katrina’s landfall in New Orleans, residents paused from their grim rebuilding efforts Wednesday to remember the dead and all their neighbors who are still unable to return.\nKatrina was a powerful Category 3 hurricane when it hit the Gulf Coast the morning of Aug. 29, 2005, broke through levees in New Orleans and flooded 80 percent of the city.\nBy the time the last of the water dried up weeks later, more than 1,600 people across Louisiana and Mississippi were dead, and a shocked nation was looking at miles of wrecked homes, mud and debris from the worst natural disaster in its history.\n“We ring the bells for a city that is in recovery, that is struggling, that is performing miracles on a daily basis,” New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin said at a groundbreaking ceremony for a memorial that will be the final resting place for more than two dozen still unidentified victims.\nAfter he spoke, a large bell tolled a dozen times and a crowd rang hand-held bells for more than a minute to remember the victims.\n“The saddest thing I’ve seen here is that there are 30 human beings who will be buried here one day that nobody ever called about,” said David Kopra, a volunteer from Olympia, Wash., holding back tears. “It says something to my heart. This city needs so much care.”\nPresident Bush led a moment of silence at a recovering school in the Lower Ninth Ward – a predominantly black, low-income area that was all but obliterated by the storm.\n“Better days are ahead,” Bush said as he sought to assure residents that his administration had not forgotten the region and would make good on the promises of aid.\n“We’re still paying attention. We understand,” the President said.\nProtesters, remembering the government’s slow response in the storm’s immediate aftermath, planned to march from the Lower Ninth Ward to Congo Square to spread their message that the government has also failed to help people return.\n“People are angry, and they want to send a message to politicians that they want them to do more and do it faster,” said the Rev. Marshall Truehill, a Baptist pastor and community activist. “Nobody’s going to be partying.”\nThe anniversary was a reminder of the desperation that filled New Orleans’ flooding neighborhoods in the days after Katrina hit. Images of dead bodies, people in the flood zones calling from their roofs and waiting days for help and of the thousands of evacuees packed into the grimy and damaged Superdome, are still fresh in many minds.

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