Katrina survivor plans reunion, but no one shows

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NEW ORLEANS (MCT) — The first time Paul Harris was in the Louisiana Superdome, he was living side-by-side with more than 20,000 people he has found impossible to forget.

Harris, a former San Diego County probation officer on vacation in the Big Easy when the storm hit on Aug. 29, 2005, has wondered what happened to the people with whom he spent the most intense days of his life. He’s been in e-mail contact with several and has flown to New Orleans a few times to watch the progress of the Superdome’s $320 million renovation.

On Sunday, Katrina’s fifth anniversary, Harris organized a reunion of Superdome survivors. He printed up flyers, advertised it on the local paper’s events calendar, flagged it on his own website. But no one came.

“When you think about it, why would somebody want to come back? I guess most people would want to forget,” Harris said.

The fact that no one came could have a less metaphysical explanation, suggests Steven Picou, a sociology professor at the University of South Alabama who has studied Katrina’s lingering effects: Among the thousands of impoverished, waylaid and desperate people at the Superdome, he said, most were evacuated from the city and may not have returned.

“I would wonder how many of those people are even still living. There were many, many elderly,” he said. “And many of the people that were there got bused out to New Orleans International Airport and were put on planes, not even knowing very accurately where they were going.”

In the Lower 9th Ward, one of the hardest-hit neighborhoods and one of the poorest, only 25 percent of former residents have returned.

“And I would also imagine that it was an incredibly traumatic six days in the Superdome, and I would think that to some degree, many people would avoid going back there as a coping mechanism,” he said. “Because to re-enter on the anniversary would bring a lot of traumatic memories flooding back.”

For Harris, the past five years have been little but memories. So ubiquitous were the scenes in his mind that he recently chronicled them in a book, “Diary From the Dome: Reflections on Fear and Privilege During Katrina.”

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