
The
‘New Orleans Stare’ - mental health
needs of Blacks acute after Katrina
By Kevin Weston, Pacific News Service
BATON
ROUGE, LA - The New Orleans Stare.
You can see it in the faces of Katrina survivors
here at the evacuation shelter at the River Center
in Baton Rouge.
A woman looks blankly at nothing
- rubbing her face and short graying afro with wrinkled
brown hands, sitting on a lonely chair outside the
complex. Old men sit on the curb smoking cigarettes
and talking quietly to one another. Young men try
to occupy themselves by talking with relief workers
and National Guardsmen with M-16s. The stare - the
facial manifestation of overwhelming loss - is in
all of the evacuees’ eyes.
About 2,000 people call the River
Center home. The vast majority is African American.
Though their immediate physical needs are being
met, the mental health issues black people are dealing
with are off the radar screen in the debate surrounding
the recovery of the Gulf Coast region.
Dr. Rasheda Perine, 32, a New
Orleans native, is an assistant professor of psychology
at Southern University in Baton Rouge and a practicing
clinical psychologist. Her immediate family and
a family friend are staying with her, all evacuees
from New Orleans. The East New Orleans neighborhood
where she grew up has been completely destroyed.
Baton Rouge has added 260,000
new residents in the last 14 days, making it the
fastestgrowing city in America. Most of the newcomers
are from New Orleans. Dr. Perine knows that seeking
help through therapy is an issue for black people.
“There is a lot of stigma
in the black community about therapy,” Perine
says. “You are supposed to deal with your
own problems. We are like super-people - we’re
not supposed to cry.” “When you go through
something very traumatic, you re-live it over and
over again,” Perine says.
“You have nightmares, a
lot of anxiety. You can’t function as you
normally would for months and sometimes years.”
Dr. Perine herself has the look. As she talks, the
tears are just beneath the surface of her face,
like river water behind a levee about to burst.
“I don’t think I have actually cried
about it yet,” she says, “I think it
is going to happen soon but I have to be strong
for my family.”
“I think racism is so much
a part of our culture that it is covert. I don’t
think that President Bush outright dislikes black
people, but it is so much a part of our culture
that when you see a black face you don’t feel
as much sympathy or empathy as you do a white face.
If there were cameras showing the white faces, the
evacuation would have been quicker.”
Lenard Rochon, 32, is from the
lower ninth ward in New Orleans. He got his rap
name, Venom, by “doing sneaky things and living
a sneaky life and learning the hard way, basically.”
He’s lived at the River City shelter with
24 members of his family since August 28, the day
before the storm.
“It’s stressful, it’s hard, because
I know I lost a lot of people down there in the
ninth ward,” says Rochon, who hasn’t
accessed any mental health services at the shelter.
He deals with the stress by writing rhymes. “I
don’t express my problems and my feelings
by telling them to people,” Rochon says.
“Most of the time I express
them by rappin’ and thinking. I talk to my
wife sometimes, but that’s about it.”
Rochon wrote the following rap in the shelter, and
as he busts it one of his young family members comes
over. The child, no more than 5, knows the chorus
and does the background vocals.
“So where you at, Mr. President
/ You know we need help leaving us up in a situation
by ourselves / Take a look all around you man see
there’s nothing left / Except for problems
in the streets no food up on the shelf / And the
water is contaminated you can see that man / But
they steady tellin’ lies I can’t believe
that man.” Rochon sings the chorus softly
with his young hype man. “So lord wont you
help me / I think I’m going crazy / Many of
my people died / But most of them they really loved
/ If you look up in my eyes / I tell you this is
for my people that find our passion see / They telling
all these lies but if you sending help / Then tell
your people come and rescue me / So won’t
you help me lawd.”
“The 9/11 people didn’t
have to wait,” Rochon says. The tsunami people
didn’t have to wait. The people in Florida
with the hurricanes didn’t have to wait. Why
I gotta wait?”
According to Dr. Perine, the
black poor in New Orleans, “Already had issues
of anger, feelings like life has no meaning, that
(they) could care less about things - then this
thing happens, and they feel like the nation does
not care while we are basically drowning or sitting
in the hot sun.”
Dr. Perine says that for blacks
in the South, the pastor or priest, not the therapist,
is where people go to talk. “One of the things
I tell people is, ‘Maybe God brought the therapist
here to help alongside your pastor.’And then
I ask, ‘Can you tell your pastor everything
without being judged? You are supposed to be able
to tell your therapist everything without judgment.
If you feel that way about your pastor, that’s
fine as long as you are talking to someone.’”
Stacie Condley Barthelemy, 29,
is a statuesquely beautiful dark brown woman with
a big smile and a quick tongue. She escaped from
New Orleans just before the storm. She has been
in and out of the shelter, where 12 of her immediate
and extended family reside. Katrina destroyed her
day-care business and her home.
“I have been leaning on
faith all the way, because you can’t depend
on these people to help you. You call FEMA, and
you can only get so much money per household. And
when you apply you still don’t get it. It
can take a toll on you.” Of the hundreds of
therapists in the Baton Rouge area, only a handful
- about 40, according to the Association of Black
Psychologists - are African American.
Dr. Perine has advice for her
white colleagues who may counsel some of the evacuees.
“Black people might want to get their feelings
of anger out that they got left behind. If you can
express empathy I think that is the most important
piece. You may see someone who talks about how they
feel racism had an impact. It would hurt that person
if a therapist tries to get away from that conversation.
“You have to be willing
to listen and not let your own biases get in the
way,” Perine says.