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DATE | 2015-01-20 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
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SUBJECT | Re: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] The Atlantic - How White Flight Ravaged the
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I read this while traveling, it is a long article with a lot of interesting information and amazingly enough, it is even somewhat balanced for the Atlantic.
On 01/16/2015 01:03 PM, einker wrote: > For generations, plantation owners strove to keep black laborers on the > farm and competing businesses out of town. Today, the towns faring best are > the ones whose white residents stayed to reckon with their own history. > ------------------------------ > > *By Alan Huffman * > > January 6, 2015 > > In the Mississippi Delta town of Tchula, there’s a fading columned mansion > that once belonged to Sara Virginia Jones, the daughter of a local > plantation dynasty. Its walls were lined with nearly 400 works by artists > as prominent as Paul Cezanne, Marc Chagall, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Salvador > Dali, and Andy Warhol. > > > Then, in the 1990s, the house changed hands. Today, it is filled with > framed photos of the current owner—Tchula’s controversial first black > mayor, Eddie Carthan, who was in office from 1977 to 1981—posing with U.S. > presidents Carter, Clinton, and Obama and the Nation of Islam’s Louis > Farrakhan. > > > The irony of this set change is not lost on Carthan, who, as he puts it, > went “from being a second-class citizen to staying in a house where the > slave-owners used to live.” Carthan grew up in a shack outside Tchula, on > property his family purchased in the 1930s as part of a New Deal project > . The land was located on a > former plantation, which the government bought and divided among several > black tenants. His community became a relatively safe haven for African > Americans and later formed an important staging ground during the > civil-rights era. > > > When Carthan was a young boy, he says he’d have risked punishment for > simply walking past the Jones mansion without a proper reason. “I look at > the house now, how beautiful it is and well-built it is. I was told slaves > built it,” Carthan said, sitting at his desk in the central hall, > surrounded by his political memorabilia. “And I think about how well they > lived back then, and how we lived back then. This house is huge. There are > five bedrooms. It has three full bathrooms. We didn’t have bathrooms at > all.” He pauses to let the contrast sink in. “It’s something to focus on,” > he says. > > > But as the mansion’s flaking paint makes clear, the transformation was > about a transfer of local power, not wealth. Families like the Joneses have > long since left Tchula, taking their business and money with them. The > remaining community is 97 percent black and achingly poor. > > > In the Delta flatlands and the hillier country to the east, the landscape > is dotted with towns and cities that figured prominently in the > civil-rights era. Like Tchula, many of those places are now languishing. > > Greenwood, 80 miles north of Tchula, was one of the main organizing bases > for voter registration during the 1964 Freedom Summer. For a while, the > town’s fortunes seemed to improve, especially after a large Viking Range > manufacturing facility opened there in 1990. But Viking was sold in 2012 > and the new owners laid off a large part of the local workforce. Today, the > town is two-thirds black and, in important ways, still deeply segregated. > Most of the white students go to private academies > > while black students attend public schools, and its residential areas are > divided between two extremes: the leafy boulevards of the affluent white > section and the historically poor, black Baptist Town, which is so little > changed that it stood in for a 1960s Jackson neighborhood in the movie *The > Help *. > > > Among the key towns of the civil-rights era, those with the largest black > majorities are frequently in the most economic trouble. > > > Nearby Clarksdale, where Martin Luther King held the first major meeting of > the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in 1958, dwindled in > population beginning in the 1970s. It underwent a brief renaissance in 1995 > after its former resident Morgan Freeman opened an upscale restaurant and > the Ground Zero Blues Club next to Clarksdale’s storied blues museum. But > the restaurant has since closed and entire blocks of the downtown area > currently stand abandoned. > > > As for Tchula, it’s currently listed as the fifth-poorest town in the > nation with a population of more than 1,000. Its last two industries—a > sawmill and an apparel factory—closed long ago, and more than 15 percent of > its residents are unemployed. Carthan said he has sought help from > foundations and state and federal agencies, but his proposals for economic > development projects have all been rejected. > > “Businesses don’t want to come to a town like Tchula,” observed Anthony > Mansoor, who owns a hardware store downtown. “That bothers me. The people > in this town worked so hard to get to where we are today, and in a lot of > ways, things are better. But the town is broke. That’s the bottom line.” > > > The situation is impossible to ignore: Among the key towns of the > civil-rights era, those with the largest black majorities are frequently in > the most economic trouble. > > “The richest land this side of the valley Nile!” The plantation owner Big > Daddy Pollitt used those words to describe the Mississippi Delta in > Tennessee Williams’ play *Cat on a Hot Tin Roof*. The fertile soils > stretching from near Memphis to Vicksburg along the Mississippi River once > supported a lucrative cotton economy; before the Civil War, the city of > Natchez, farther south along the river, had more millionaires per capita > than any other city in the U.S. > > After emancipation, plantation owners relied upon sharecroppers to grow and > harvest their crops. To keep the system in place, white leaders studiously > kept out industries that might lure their laborers away from agriculture, > as historian James Cobb reported in his seminal book about the Delta, *The > Most Southern Place on Earth > * > . > > > Carthan saw that resistance firsthand. In Tchula, he said, “We couldn’t get > factories—the power structure would block it. They didn’t want folks > leaving the plantations.” > > State Senator David Jordan, who grew up in Greenwood, observes that > employment opportunities in the Delta have always been tightly interwoven > with politics and race. His family lived and worked as field laborers on > one of several plantations owned by the family of U.S. Representative Will > Whittington, and the school year ran from December to April to enable > children to help with the crops. As a teenager, Jordan worked at a > white-owned store, where his tasks included learning the types and brands > of various illegal liquors. (Mississippi remained a dry state for more than > 30 years after Prohibition was repealed.) Once, Jordan said, a customer > asked the store owner, “‘What you educatin’ that nigger for? I need him for > a tractor driver.’” > > > “We just accepted it,” said Jordan, who graduated from high school with > Morgan Freeman in the 1950s and went on to attend Mississippi Valley State > University. “Wasn’t anything we could do about it.” > > In those days, the Delta’s plantations were plowed by mules, cultivated by > workers with hoes, and harvested by hand. After farming became increasingly > mechanized in the 1960s, local workers had little to do, and no new jobs > were available to fill the void. Jordan said the loss of even the most > basic plantation labor helped the civil-rights movement gain traction in > the Delta. > > “Field hands were being replaced,” he said. “They were being paid $9 a day, > and they paid $20 a month in rent, but when the cotton picker came, there > was less work. People had no other trade. They got laid off, and the > landowners pushed the shanties down, and those people had nowhere to go. > There was a lot of dissatisfaction.” > > > Dissatisfaction was nothing new in the Mississippi Delta; this was, after > all, the birthplace of the Blues. But when the plantation jobs disappeared > and no new industries rose to take their place, the dissatisfaction turned > into desperation. Many blacks migrated to Northern cities like Chicago, but > Jordan refused to budge. “I said, ‘I’ll never leave Mississippi. I’m gonna > do something—I’m gonna get even some kind of way.’” Jordan eventually sued > the city of Greenwood, forcing it to adopt a more representative system of > government. After that, he was elected to the city council and then to the > state legislature. > > > Throughout Freedom Summer, these activists ran into fierce resistance from > white business leaders. Mansoor, who was born in Honduras of Lebanese > descent and arrived in Mississippi as an exchange student in the 1950s, > recalled that blacks who took part in the voter registration drives were > often fired from their jobs or denied credit at stores and banks. > > > Whites who opposed segregation were likewise targeted. Hazel Brannon Smith, > then the fiery publisher of *The Lexington Advertiser*, editorialized > against the segregationist white Citizens’ Council in 1964. In the process, > she said, her offices were “bombed, burned and boycotted,” and she was > later bankrupted by a rival Citizens Council-backed newspaper. > > > “My life had always been comfortable in Lexington,” Smith wrote in an > editorial > published in 1984, on the 20th anniversary of Freedom Summer. “My two > papers in Holmes County were paid for. I wore good clothes, and drove a > Cadillac convertible. I went to Europe on vacation for four months and had > more money in my bank account when I returned than I did when I left. But > the boycott and the hate campaign wore my business down. The Council-backed > newspaper depleted my advertising revenues, and I fell into deep debt.” > > > Mansoor’s business suffered after 1967, when one of his Tchula stores was > the setting for a showdown between the Ku Klux Klan and a black activist > named Edgar Love. According to Love’s account > > in the book *Thunder of Freedom: Black Leadership and the Transformation of > 1960s Mississippi*, Klan members cornered him on a dark street and pursued > him into the store. Love hid behind a counter and drew his pistol, and when > the first Klansman entered, Love trained his gun on him. Other Klansmen > followed and began turning over counters and racks, “just demolishing the > store,” says Mansoor, who remembers telling his pregnant wife to run home. > “I called the sheriff—his name was Andrew Smith—and he said, ‘There’s > nothing I can do about it.’” The standoff ended when Love turned himself > over to a trusted white police officer who took him to jail in Lexington, > the county seat, “for protection,” Mansoor said. > > Love was later released, and Mansoor took some of the Klansmen to court for > demolishing his store. He lost the case and his defense of the activist led > to a boycott of his business. The bad feelings persisted for decades: > Twenty years later, when his store caught fire, arson was suspected though > never proven. “My wife wanted to move to California,” he recalled. “But I > said, ‘No way I’m going to let them drive me away.’” > > > In the early years of the civil-rights era, most of Tchula’s white > residents remained, including Sarah Virginia Jones, who was described in a > Memphis *Commercial Appeal *article as a member of “the leading family of > Tchula.” She operated Refuge plantation with her brother and lived out her > life in the mansion, even after her neighborhood became racially mixed. > Jones was known for her garden-club work, her civic and beautification > projects, the parties she hosted for high school seniors, and the artwork, > which covered every eye-level wall space in her home. (She acquired most of > it from a New Orleans art dealer, a Tchula native who regularly visited her > home to offer pieces for her review.) > > > Throughout the 1970s, the *Holmes County Herald* gave ample space to white > society news, down to minute details like the time Jones went shopping > in Memphis with a friend. There was > little mention of life on the black side of town. > > But if they lacked social clout, black residents were gaining political > power. After the passage of the Civil Rights Act, and the accompanying > voter-registration drives, blacks comprised the majority of the electorate > in many Mississippi towns and counties. In 1967, Robert Clark became the > state’s first black state representative since the Reconstruction era, and > over the decade that followed, black politicians were elected into more and > more local leadership positions. > > > When Carthan became mayor in 1977, one of his primary goals, he says, was > to “bring the other side up.” “Tchula was like most southern towns, with > the whites on one side and blacks on the other,” he recalls. “On the white > side, where I am now, there were sidewalks, manicured lawns and beautiful > homes like this one. But on the other side was dirt roads, shacks, and 75 > percent of the houses had no plumbing.” > > > Carthan and the board of aldermen set about getting federal grants to make > much-needed improvements: “Put in a sewer system, one of the first day-care > centers in the state, paved streets, built houses and a free clinic, > started a transportation system and a feeding program for the elderly.” > These changes were a boon to Tchula’s poorer residents, but they produced > few jobs. For the most part, black residents were left to grapple with an > economic system that had been designed specifically to keep them in > low-wage agricultural jobs. > > > White residents continued to control most of the town’s wealth and business > connections, and Carthan says they “didn’t take kindly” to his efforts: > “Tchula’s a plantation town, and they just rejected me.” > > Carthan’s detractors often say that the town’s troubles are directly linked > to his tenure as mayor, but he claims that white residents launched an > elaborate campaign against him. “I stayed in court the entire time I was in > office. They were accustomed to blacks who’d bow, say ‘yes-sir, boss,’ that > sort of thing.” > > > Throughout his tenure, the *Herald* frequently ran front-page stories about > his political and legal troubles, which were legion. He feuded with the > former mayor, who was white, and with the then-biracial board of aldermen. > In 1980, the aldermen tried to replace the black police chief Carthan had > appointed with a white one. There was an altercation at City Hall, and > Carthan was charged with assault. In April 1981, he was forced to leave > office. > > Two months after his resignation, Carthan was charged with allegedly hiring > two hit men to murder one of his political rivals, Alderman Roosevelt > Granderson. Though Granderson was black, Carthan—who defended > himself—argued that the charges were racially motivated, that he was being > framed by whites. Black farmers raised $115,000 for his bail and the actor > and playwright Ossie Davis traveled to 66 cities to proclaim his innocence. > > Carthan was acquitted of murder in 1982 but returned to jail on charges > stemming from the 1980 fight at City Hall. A 1986 NBC segment > about Carthan’s trials noted that he was seen > by his opponents as “a conniving troublemaker” and by his supporters as “a > folk hero.” The local district attorney, Frank Carlton, acknowledged on > camera that he had struck a deal with Granderson’s alleged murderers: After > serving two years in prison, the two men claimed that Carthan had hired > them to do the job. Carlton offered to drop the charges against them if > they would testify against Carthan in court. > > > “Whites felt threatened. People don’t want to come where there’s division > and conflict and animosity.” > > > By the time Carthan’s legal battles were over, Tchula’s white population > had dwindled away to almost nothing. “Whites felt threatened,” he says. And > new businesses didn’t want to fill the void: “People don’t want to come > where there’s division and conflict and animosity.” The growing sense of > desperation brought an increase in drug use and a corresponding uptick in > crime, which led even Mansoor and his wife to move to a Jackson suburb, > though he continues to commute an hour each way to operate his hardware > store. > > > Today, Carthan’s vision for Tchula has partially come to pass. The town of > about 2,000 residents is governed entirely by black elected officials, and > every house has running water. No one in Tchula gets fired from their jobs > or is denied credit for upsetting the status quo, as happened frequently > during the civil-rights era. The problem is, few people have jobs. Where > local workers once harvested cotton or drove tractors on white-owned > plantations, or toiled in the local sawmill or coat factory, there is today > no visible means of economic support. Dwindling government grants and long > commutes to jobs elsewhere are all that’s left. > > Carthan makes no secret of his disdain for whites who decamped for other > locales, as well as those who continue to avoid moving their businesses to > black-majority towns. But he also blames the current, majority-black > population. “Three or four generations of people raised on > welfare—everybody knows the problem,” he said. “Single-family homes, > drug-infested neighborhoods, the youth always on social media, exposed to > everything. Ear rings, nose rings, lip rings, baggy pants. I’d expect > they’d show some appreciation, but a lot of them don’t know their history. > That’s a challenge. It’s very difficult for the teachers to even teach > school. They’re rebellious. They have the freedom, the resources. They > don’t have the restraints we had in the ’60s.” He shakes his head. “What > goes around comes around. We’ve come a long ways, but we’ve got a long ways > to go.” > > > Neshoba County Deputy Sheriff Cecil Price watches protesters pass through > Philadelphia, Mississippi, on June 21, 1965, during a memorial for the > three civil-rights workers who had been murdered one year earlier. Price > was later charged with conspiracy to violate the workers’ civil rights and > served four years in prison. (AP) > > > Eighty miles to the southeast, the town of Philadelphia, Mississippi, > stands in stark contrast with Tchula. Philadelphia was the site of Freedom > Summer’s most brutal event: On June 21, 1964, three young civil rights > workers were killed by Klansmen after being apprehended by local > law-enforcement officials. James Earl Chaney, a black man from nearby > Meridian, was beaten and shot three times; two Jewish New Yorkers, Andrew > Goodman and Michael “Mickey” Schwerner, were shot through the heart. All > three bodies were discovered two months later, buried in an earthen dam. > > > But after decades of public notoriety and internal strife, Philadelphia has > become one of the most successful towns in the region. The economy is > diverse, drawing on a mix of farming, manufacturing, forestry, and service > industries, with the added boon of a nearby Choctaw Indian casino. The > county has also set up an enterprise incubator to provide office, > manufacturing, and warehouse space to startup businesses. > > James Young, the town’s black mayor, says this economic expansion was > possible only because white residents faced the shame of their past. > “People didn’t turn away,” Young said. “They didn’t move away.” > > The self-examination didn’t start immediately. “During that season when the > civil rights workers were missing, there was heavy tension in the air, a > lot of frustration and disbelief,” recalled Young, who was a child at the > time. “It sent shockwaves through the community that no one was safe. I > remember lying on the floor of our living room with my father and a gun.” > > > Philadelphia’s prominent white families were chagrined by the way their > city and county were being portrayed by the media. In particular, one > December 1964 article > , > written by *New York Times* reporter (and later executive editor) Joseph > Lelyveld, reported negatively on the city’s “business class” and its > reaction to the murders. > > > Former Mississippi Secretary of State Dick Molpus was 14 at the time, and > he remembers that his father invited the *Times*’s editor, a Philadelphia > native named Turner Catledge, to meet with the local businesses community. > Influential locals turned out from the hospital, the newspaper, the lumber > industry, and the glove factory. “The Klan and the Citizens Council were > essentially running the county,” Molpus recalled. “The question was, where > was the white leadership?” > > As in Tchula, whites who supported integration were being openly targeted. > “They threatened to burn my father’s lumber mill down if he didn’t fire a > list of employees they gave him who had gone to NAACP meetings,” said > Molpus. “But he hired three guys with deer rifles who were as bad as they > were to stand watch, and they didn’t burn him out.” > > > Catledge had met with President Lyndon Johnson the night before the meeting > in Philadelphia. Molpus remembers sitting on the floor next to the visiting > editor: “He was drinking scotch, and now and then he’d hold his glass down > and tinkle it around and I’d take it to my mother to make him another.” > > > Throughout the evening, the group’s grievances centered more on the town’s > negative portrayal than on the murders themselves. “The business guys were > furious,” Molpus said. “They wanted him to get rid of Lelyveld. We’d had > churches burned, homes burned, a guy got his skull broke, there were three > kidnapped, and the discussion in the business class was just about how the > press is making us look like hicks.” After listening to their complaints, > Catledge turned the discussion back to the larger issues. He told the local > leaders, “‘There’s a moment in your life to step up and demand this stop,’ > which offended everyone in there. Somebody said, ‘You’re from here, Turner, > but you’re not one of us anymore.’” > > > “We’d had churches burned, homes burned, a guy got his skull broke, and the > discussion in the business class was just about how the press is making us > look like hicks.” > > > Another moment of reckoning came in August 1965, when a local white woman > named Florence Mars was pulled over on her way home from a party. As Molpus > put it, Mars was “a very outspoken, courageous woman from a well-thought-of > family—a very gutsy woman” who supported Martin Luther King and the > protesters who marched with him through town. When she and her sister were > stopped on the road, Mars had reportedly had too much to drink. > > “The way things were done then, when someone like her was pulled over, > they’d let her go,” Molpus said. “But they threw her and her sister into > the drunk tank. And the community got together on a Sunday night and said, > ‘This has got to stop,’ and it did stop. It took something happening to one > of their own, from a prominent family.” > > > Even then, there was a lingering sense of denial about the civil rights > murders. “Preachers were saying of the civil rights workers, ‘They came > looking for trouble, and they found it.’ I heard that from the pulpit of > the First Baptist Church,” Molpus said. “The murderers were in control. > They were still in law enforcement. These were killers.” Even state > officials refused to prosecute. In 1967, seven men were convicted in > federal court and sent to prison, but the longest any served was six years. > > > Over time, Molpus said, the white community became more circumspect about > the crime and what it meant for the future of the city. When federal > court-ordered school integration came during the 1969–70 school year, > Philadelphia chose not to establish all-white private academies as other > nearby towns and cities had done. “I think the people had examined their > souls, really, and the decision was made to keep the schools integrated,” > Molpus said. Louisville, 30 miles down the road, was culturally and > economically similar to Philadelphia, but its white residents decided to > send their children to private academies, Molpus said. Today, Louisville is > economically depressed. > > > Molpus partly credits the crusading editor of the *Neshoba Democrat*, > Stanley Dearman, for helping change Philadelphia’s outlook. In the late > 1980s, he ran a series of articles that humanized Chaney, Goodman, and > Schwerner, the three men killed by Klansmen in 1964, for local residents. > “He went to New York City and sat down with Dr. Goodman. She told him about > her son sending her a postcard saying people were friendly in Philadelphia, > the day before he was killed.” > > > Then, in 1989, Molpus and Dearman decided to commemorate the 25th > anniversary of the murders by holding a memorial at Mt. Zion Church, which > had been used as a voter registration site during Freedom Summer. The > building had been torched by the Klan, and the three civil rights workers > had been returning from it at the time of their murder. The families of the > three murdered men attended the gathering in 1989, along with a crowd of > several hundred—including Molpus, who apologized for what happened on > behalf of the state. > > > In 2000, Philadelphia held a multi-racial leadership conference, where > Molpus was keynote speaker. “I said until we remove this shadow or at least > attempt redemption, nothing is going to happen. They wanted an industrial > park, to plant roses at the visitors center. I said we’re known for one > thing: as the place where these three kids were killed for doing a > patriotic duty.” > > > In 2004, Dearman invited Carolyn Goodman to speak to the Philadelphia > Coalition, an interracial group cofounded by the *Democrat*’s new editor, > Jim Prince, and the head of the Neshoba County NAACP, Leroy Clemons. > Mississippi Attorney General Jim Hood attended and listened to Goodman’s > moving personal account. The following year, he reopened the case and Edgar > Ray Killen, the 80-year-old Baptist preacher who had orchestrated the > murders, was convicted of three counts of manslaughter and sentenced to 60 > years in prison. > > > In 2009, when the majority-white electorate voted in Young as > Philadelphia’s first black mayor, national news outlets reported > > that the town had finally risen above its history. Young was invited to the > White House for Christmas that year, and then to a meeting with Vice > President Joe Biden. And in 2010, he received a civil rights award from > CORE, the Congress On Racial Equality, which was one of the organizers of > Freedom Summer. Because he was only a child during Freedom Summer, Young > asked the group why he was given the award. “They said to think of Goodman, > Chaney and Schwerner: ‘You’re the manifestation of their effort.’” > > Today, unemployment in Philadelphia is lower than in most Mississippi > cities (5.8 percent as of December 2013, compared to 7.3 percent statewide) > and its per capita income is higher. Its schools are strong, despite the > fact that Philadelphia is as geographically isolated as Tchula, located > about 50 miles from the nearest interstate highway. Along with its other > industries, the town is benefitting from a new influx of tourism. “The > chamber of commerce now does civil rights tours,” Young said. “They’ve got > a little brochure. We’ve had people come from London, South America, > Australia.” > > > Still, Philadelphia is exceptional among Mississippi’s former civil-rights > battlegrounds. The state as a whole has more black elected officials than > any other, but the ongoing segregation and economic decline in so many > places is evidence of persistent, deep-seated problems. > > > “Businesses are not going to go to a place where there are not strong > public schools,” Molpus said. “That says the community is ill. If the poor > are in public schools and the affluent go to private, that community is > ill. The public schools in virtually every town in the Delta were abandoned > by the whites. That will take decades to fix—it’s a historical legacy. The > poverty cycle hasn’t been broken.” > > When Eddie Carthan bought the Jones mansion in the late 1990s, the house > had been sitting vacant for years and its legendary artwork had been moved > to the Mississippi Museum of Art. He also bought the formerly white church > across the street, whose congregation, he says, refused to speak to him > when he showed up, unbidden, one Sunday after his election as mayor. Now > he’s the pastor of that church, which is all black. > > On a recent afternoon, as Carthan ruminated about the future of Tchula at > his desk, his wife, Shirley, tutored a group of young girls at the > mansion’s long dining room table. The girls were members of the church > Carthan pastors; only two of the congregation’s adult members have jobs. > “They’re the poorest of the poor,” Carthan said. > > > Carthan also owns a century-old, formerly white-owned hardware store that > anchors the downtown. Business is typically slow there, and most of his > wares are covered in dust. There is more activity in Mansoor’s store, > though much of it centers on the free doughnuts he provides each day to the > city’s seniors. Though he now lives an hour away, Mansoor said he refuses > to give up on Tchula. “For the most part, it’s better in Mississippi than a > lot of places,” he said. “People know each other. They try to get along. > People change.” > > > As evidence of the latter, Mansoor recalled an episode involving one of the > Klansmen who demolished his store. After he died, Mansoor said, “his mother > reached out to me and I took care of her for years. I’d go by and see about > her, pick up her groceries. She’d cook me the best biscuits and sausage, > and when she died she left me an old Ford car and a .38-calibre pistol. It > was amazing. She wanted to be friends to make up for what they did.” > > But such changes of heart have done little to improve Tchula’s economic > fortunes. The majority of white residents fled town without making amends > or doing anything to reverse the decades of economic oppression. For that > reason, Tchula, unlike Philadelphia, must rely heavily on outside > assistance. > > > Near Mansoor’s store on a recent morning, unemployed men lingered under > shade trees behind the modest town hall, where Zula Patterson, the current > mayor, was preparing to attend the ribbon cutting for two federally > subsidized low-income houses. According to Patterson, such grants are few > and far between. Asked what the town needs most, she replied, “What do we > need? We need everything. But now we need police cars foremost. Our streets > need to be redone. We need to try to find somebody to open some businesses. > Nobody is really coming in until we get our infrastructure improved.” > > > Meanwhile, the subsidized houses represent the first new construction in a > long time. They might not seem like much, but as Patterson said, “We’re > trying to make things better. We’re doing what we can.” > > *Alan Huffman is a freelance writer and the author of five books, most > recently Here I Am: The Story of Tim Hetherington, War Photographer > . > * > > > Regards, > > Evan M. Inker >
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