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DIVERSITY EMPLOYERS MAGAZINE
Spring 2011 - Anniversary Commemorative Issue

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Just Brown:

The following is something I wrote while sitting in the car outside of my home during my first visit to New Orleans following hurricane Katrina. I don't remember the date but it was a few weeks after the hurricane. - Vincent Sylvain

All of my life I have associated the color black with death. Black cat, black widow spiders, black coffins . . . I was wrong.

Last week I visited my Katrina damaged neighborhood in New Orleans East. No trees, no birds, no children. Just Brown.

Now I know that the color of death is Brown. Brown. Just Brown.

My church, my red brick house, my red car, my green grass, my child's playground. Dust, sand, dried human waste; Brown. Just Brown.

A pack of wild dogs that used to be pets. Light brown, dark brown, red brown, I feared them. Just Brown

Then I saw a white dog. Well, he used to be white, but now covered with Katrina's brown dirt. Just Brown.

He looked hungry. As luck would have it, all I had was a brown pretzel. Just Brown.

I tried to feed him, but he feared me. So I left the brown food. Just Brown.

Morrison Road, Downman Road, Haynes Blvd., Crowder Blvd. The bank, the grocery, Kenilworth Mall, The Plaza, Six Flags. Just Brown.

The lakes, the sidewalks, the alleys. Lake Willow, Spring Lake, Joe Brown Park. Just Brown.

My sofa, my chair, my gray carpet. My child's dolls, my child's books, my child's picture, my child's favorite purple blanket; Brown. Just Brown.

On the way back I had a near fatal car accident. I closed my eyes. Guess what? Just Brown

Last week I visited my neighborhood in New Orleans East. No trees, no birds, no children. Just Brown.

Now I know color of death; Brown. Just Brown