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STORIES
Fighting the Water
Producer: Melissa Robbins
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to the story
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Virgil Dardar makes his living fishing oysters,
like his father and grandfather before him.
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"If we get a major hurricane, this place could be wiped out tomorrow.
It's not a question of if we get hurricanes. We know we get hurricanes.
It's just a question of when."
—Louisiana wetlands activist Kerry St. Pe, February 2005
In early 2005, I took a trip to the bayous of southern Louisiana to
report on how the United Houma Nation is confronting an environmental
and cultural crisis: the loss of their traditional lands to coastal erosion,
and the resulting threat to their viability as a people. A story that
felt urgent and compelling at the time has, since the devastation of
Hurricane Katrina, taken on an almost symbolic importance for me. The
voices, which seemed then to be pleading for an audience, have become
eerily prescient echoes in my head.
For 200 years, the isolation of the bayou has been a blessing for the
Houma, helping them to maintain strong ties to each other and to pursue
their traditional livelihoods as shrimpers and oystermen. But dams and
levees along the Mississippi River have deprived the delta of silt from
natural flooding, and the Barataria Terrebonne region, southwest of New
Orleans, is now the fastest eroding land mass on earth. The loss of wetlands
has left the coast increasingly vulnerable to hurricanes and flooding.
In recent decades, vast expanses of the Houma's traditional territory
have disappeared under water. And one by one, Houma families have been
forced from their homes.
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Along the road to Isle
a Jean Charles, the evidence of land loss
is striking.
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Houma leaders fear that this gradual dispersal will soon undermine
tribal identity. As Vice Principal Chief Michael Dardar, puts it: "Native
American existence is about a people and a place, a community and its
relationship to each other and its relationship to the land it belongs
to. So if you lose that, you're still individually Houma, but you lose
that sense of nationhood. And you lose what we've struggled to maintain
for 200 years."
Like dozens of other Native American tribes, the Houma are not recognized
by the federal government, which means they
don't have the protection of a permanent reservation.
Michael Dardar and other leaders have been looking
for ways to purchase a plot of land where the entire
community can relocate—where
tribal traditions can be kept alive for future generations.
But not everyone is on board. The proposal, like the
flooding, has divided the tribe. Many Houma can't bear
the idea of abandoning the lands they have occupied
for centuries, and have vowed to hold on for as long
as they can.
Note:
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A
house on the bayou in Louisiana's Jefferson
Parish struggles to remain standing as
its foundation turns to marsh.
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My reporting was completed well before Hurricane Katrina and Tropical
Storm Rita devastated much of coastal Louisiana in
August and September, 2005. The community of Isle a
Jean Charles, which is featured in my story—the
ancestral home of Curtis Hendon, Virgil Dardar and
Chris Brunet—was
spared the worst of the storms' damage. But many other
Houma, spread throughout the Gulf Coast region, suffered
terribly. A link to the United Houma Nation website
is below.
—Melissa Robbins
Link:
United Houma Nation official website
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