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  • 24
    Feb
    2011
    6:27pm, EST

    Ryan Moore / The Hattiesburg American via AP

    Unoccupied FEMA trailers burn, Thursday, Feb. 24, 2011 near Lumberton, Miss. Authorities say at least 162 unoccupied FEMA trailers were destroyed by a grass fire Thursday in south Mississippi's Pearl River County.

    Over a hundred FEMA trailers burn in grass fire in Mississippi

    By John Brecher

    The question of what to do with FEMA trailers left over from Hurricane Katrina is complicated by toxic materials found in them. Here's a story about the fire.

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: fire, mississippi, united-states, hurricane-katrina, fema-trailer
  • 27
    Aug
    2010
    1:44pm, EDT

    John Brecher / msnbc.com

    An oak tree that survived Hurricane Katrina in Waveland, Miss., is still there five years later, though the house beyond it has been rebuilt.

    Visual treasure hunt

    I went to Waveland, Mississippi a couple weeks ago to re-photograph Hurricane Katrina scenes for this video story, and took some 8x10 prints along to help line things up (like clues in a treasure hunt, the prize being views of interesting change). In this case, the print matched, and on a whim I shot this picture using ShakeItPhoto, an iPhone app that mimics a Polaroid camera. I hadn't thought to publish it until a fellow editor suggested we ask your opinion: is it worthwhile to publish cell phone pictures? Does it matter if they've been altered by an imaging app?

    2 comments

    Sure, why not? A camera is a camera, even if it's embedded in a cell phone. Especially since cameras in cell phones these days surpass the first professional digital cameras. As for alterations by apps, just make sure to mention it as has been done here. These days, when a magazine as venerable as …

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    Explore related topics: mississippi, hurricane-katrina, gulf-coast, bay-st-louis, us-news, waveland, rephotography
  • 25
    Aug
    2010
    9:22am, EDT

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    The Lower Ninth Ward of New Orleans with new houses built by Make it Right Foundation on Aug. 24, 2010 and following hurricane Katrina in 2005, below.

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    Robert Fontaine in 2010, and during the storm in 2005, below.

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    5 years after Katrina

    Returning to New Orleans again, five years on, is an exercise in the surreal, as some neighborhoods appear as if Katrina never occurred, while others remain essentially abandoned. One of the hardest-hit sections of the Lower Ninth Ward is now scattered with eco-friendly homes built by the Make it Right Foundation. Farther north, the landscape quickly metamorphoses into untamed vegetation as nature reclaims the land man has abandoned. To see fields of wild grass where dozens of families once lived is unnerving. But the city’s soul is intact. I spent Sunday afternoon marching through the streets of New Orleans with the Valley of the Silent Men Social Aid and Pleasure Club during its annual second-line parade. The classic brass music was hypnotic and the people bounded through the city in a gorgeous moveable street ballet. Second-line parades are one of the countless examples of the living history embedded in this city. The parades are basically jazz funerals without a body and represent a history of economic, social and political empowerment, community solidarity and cultural pride within the African-American communities of New Orleans. I'm optimistic about New Orleans, in spite of the recent oil spill, because of the astonishing resilience of the people. They have suffered wars, slavery, fires, riots, yellow fever, cholera, segregation, poverty and 27 major floods over the past 290 years. Their spirit, their dignity and their resolve will carry them through once again, as it always has.

    Back in 2005, I photographed a man known as ‘Cowboy’ as he waded through the Katrina floodwaters on Columbus Street with a house fire raging behind him. I was always curious about his story, because I didn’t get to speak with him. I returned to Columbus Street a number of times over the years and asked about him, and rumors always swirled when his name came up. Some said he burned the house down intentionally (he was renting a room there) and fled the city. Others said he was dead. Monday afternoon I began to photograph Columbus Street again. A resident asked what I was photographing and to my utter surprise he said nonchalantly, "You wanna meet Cowboy? He's sitting over there under that tree." I went over and sure enough, it was him.

    I told him I had photographed him on that day back in 2005 and he was slightly taken aback, but he said he thought he recognized me. He then began to tell me his story. His real name is Robert Fontaine. He stayed in the Columbus Street house during the flooding to care for some dogs that were left behind. He was using candles for light, due to the lack of electricity, but one of the dogs knocked over a candle, causing the fire. He said he nearly died trying to rescue the dogs as burning pieces of the house collapsed around him. For two years following the storm, he lived in a FEMA trailer in Baton Rouge. Fontaine has developed a brain tumor and has been given 3-6 months to live. He suspects it may have been caused by the fire or toxic floodwaters. He appeared to be about 20 pounds thinner. He said, "My whole life, my whole world crashed, for everyone, not just for me."

    Photo courtesy of Umbrage Editions

    Mario Tama's book, 'Coming Back: New Orleans Resurgent' will be published by Umbrage Editions, Sept. 1, 2010.

    95 comments

    Having traveled a bit in my long life it was a conversation with a Brit a short while ago that seems to sum us all up. He said: "You know is is a strange thing about you Yanks, you rush into countries all over the world giving them aid and assistance and ignore the deprivations of your own citize …

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    Explore related topics: katrina, new-orleans, hurricane-katrina, us-news, hurrican-katrina

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John Brecher

Mario Tama

Mario Tama has covered global events including September 11, the war in Afghanistan, the war in Iraq and the funeral of Pope John Paul II. His photographs from Hurricane Katrina were featured worldwide, in National Geographic, Newsweek, newspapers, and in other media. In 2008 he was nominated for an Emmy for his documentary work on Coney Island and won Cliff Edom's New America Award for his work in New Orleans. He has received multiple honors and …

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