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September 11, 2005
Detainment Camp on American Soil
From a friend who posted this at abovetopsecret.com
I just got back from a FEMA Detainment Camp
I'm extremely depressed to report that things seem to only be getting sadder concerning the people so devastatingly affected by Katrina last week.Two car loads of us headed over to Falls reek, a youth camp for Southern Baptist churches in Oklahoma that agreed to have its facilities used to house Louisiana refugees. I'm afraid the camp is not going to be used as the kind people of the churches who own the cabins believe it was going to be used.
Jesse Jackson was right when he said "refugees" was not the appropriate word for the poor souls dislocated due to Katrina. But he was wrong about why it is not appropriate. It's not appropriate because they are detainees, not refugees.
Falls Creek is like a small town that is closed down about 9 months out of the year. It is made up of cabins that range from small and humble to large and grandiose, according to how much money the church who owns the cabin has. Each cabin has full kitchen facilities, bathrooms and usually have two large bunkrooms - one for women and one for men. The occupancy of the cabins varies according to the church. This past week the Southern Baptist association of Oklahoma offered the facility as a place to house refugees from the Katrina disaster. Each church owning a cabin was then called to find out if they would make their cabin available. Churches across the state agreed.Scary.I started my journey by loading six large trash bags full of clothes in the back of my beetle buggy. I then went to the local Dollar General and purchased various hygiene products, snacks and even a set of dominoes and a deck of cards. I had my daughter take her own shopping cart and go and select her own items that she wanted to take. I told her to imagine herself without anything in the world and then select what she would need to live every day.
We then met up with my elderly parents who had gone to the Dollar Store themselves, and to the grocery store and had spent WAY too much of their limited social security on the venture. But that's okay. We ended up having to take both vehicles on the 150 mile round trip because they were both pretty full. My son showed up and wanted to go. He drove my parents while my daughter and I rode in my car.
To say we all left with excitement would be appropriate. My 78 year old mother is a "fixer". She loves to help people and she absolutely needs some one to dote over. That she was about to be able to help some people who had lost all in their lives had her feeling physically healthier than I've seen her in days. I was glad to get the chance to actively do something other than donate what little I can to some faceless charity hoping it would get to the people who needed it. I felt glad I could do some small something that might cut through the helplessness I've felt over this situation. Both of my kids were eager to assist.
The only odd thing that occurred prior to setting off happened while I was gassing up in our small town. My daughter was pumping the gas and a lady she knew pulled up to an adjacent pump. My daughter started telling her where we were going and that we were taking things to the refugees. The lady told my daughter that she had been told the Red Cross was not allowing any one to deliver supplies.
When I returned to the car from paying for the gas my daughter informed of this. I told her that the Red Cross would not be preventing the members of our church from entering our own cabin, so it really didn't matter. It was at that point we decided to stop back by the house and get my daughter's camera so that she could take pictures if required.
From the moment I heard about Falls Creek being scheduled to receive refugees I had two thoughts run through my mind:
1. What a beautiful place to be able to stay while trying to get your life back in order.
2. What a terrible location to be when you're trying to get your life back in order.The first thought is because Falls Creek is nestled in the Arbuckle Mountains of south central Oklahoma. One of the more beautiful regions of the state. It would be a peaceful and beautiful place to try to start mending emotionally, and begin to figure what you're going to do next.
The second thought comes because Falls Creek is very secluded and absolutely no where near a population center. The closest route from Falls Creek to a connecting road is three miles on a winding narrow road called "High Road" (It gets that name for two reasons - it's goes over the mountain instead of around it like "Low Road" does, and it's where the teenagers of the area go to party). The road has not a single home on it for over 3 miles. After battling that 3 miles over mountains, you'll find yourself about 5 miles from the nearest town, Davis, Oklahoma, population ca. 2000.
This is no place to start a new life.
A few pictures headed toward Falls Creek over High Road to give you a feel of the seclusion.
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All of sudden the landscape changed from picturesque mountainous rural America, to something foreign to me as we approached the rear gate of the camp. Two Oklahoma State Patrol vehicles and four Oklahoma Troopers guarded the gate. We started through and they stopped us."Can I help you, ma'am?"I informed him we're here to deliver supplies to *our church's name* cabin. He stood silent and stared at me. My daughter turned and snapped a picture of his vehicle - very conspicuously.
I smiled at him and he asked, "Do you know where that cabin is located?" I informed him I did. He looked at me a bit longer and then said, "Ok" and stepped away from the car. They stopped my parents' vehicle as well,
but I assume my son informed them he was with us. They let them pass.
We made our way through the narrow streets toward our church's cabin.
We noticed that the various church cabins had numbered placards on them that normally weren't there.
We arrived at our cabin and started toting the clothes in. We finally found a group of men upstairs in the dorms trying to do something alien to them - make beds. They had almost completed the room of bunk beds and told us we could go over to the ladies' dorm room and start on it. We lugged our sacks of clothes back down the stairs. Then we got the first negative message. "You can't bring any clothes in. FEMA has stated they will accept no more clothes. They've had 30 people sorting clothes for days. They don't want anymore." My mind couldn't help but go back over the news articles that have accused FEMA of refusing water in to Jefferson Parrish, or turning fuel away.
We lugged the bags of clothes back to the car. We then turned to bringing in our personal hygiene products. That's when we learned our cabin had been designated a "male only" cabin. Approximately 40 men, ranging from age 13 on up would be housed there. We started resacking the female products and sorted out everything that would be useful for men.We lugged the bags of female products back to the car. We asked if they knew of a cabin that had been designated for women. The "host" (the hosts are Oklahoma civilians who have been employeed??? by FEMA to reside at each cabin and have already gone through at least one "orientation" meeting conducted by FEMA at "BASE" which is some unknown but repetitively referred location within the camp) told us he believed McAlester cabin was dedicated to females. He then explained there were male, female and family cabins designated.
We then started lugging in our food products. The foods I had purchased were mainly snacks, but my mother - God bless her soul - had gone all out with fresh vegetables, fruits, canned goods, breakfast cereals, rice, and pancake fixings. That's when we got the next message: They will not be able to use the kitchen.Excuse me? I asked incredulously. FEMA will not allow any of the kitchen facilities in any of the cabins to be used by the occupants due to fire hazards. FEMA will deliver meals to the cabins. The refugees will be given two meals per day by FEMA. They will not be able to cook. In fact, the "host" goes on to explain, some churches had already enquired about whether they could come in on weekends and fix meals for the people staying in their cabin. FEMA won't allow it because there could be a situation where one cabin gets steaks and another gets hot dogs - and...it could cause a riot.
It gets worse.
He then precedes to tell us that some churches had already enquired into whether they could send a van or bus on Sundays to pick up any occupants of their cabins who might be interested in attending church. FEMA will not allow this. The occupants of the camp cannot leave the camp for any reason. If they leave the camp they may never return. They will be issued FEMA identification cards and "a sum of money" and they will remain within the camp for the next 5 months.
My son looks at me and mumbles "Welcome to Krakow." My mother then asked if the churches would be allowed to come to their cabin and conduct services if the occupants wanted to attend. The response was "No ma'am. You don't understand. Your church no longer owns this building. This building is now owned by FEMA and the Oklahoma Highway Patrol. They have it for the next 5 months." This scares my mother who asks "Do you mean they have leased it?" The man replies, "Yes, ma'am...lock, stock and barrel. They have taken over everything that pertains to this facility for the next 5 months."We then lug all food products requiring cooking back to the car. We start unloading our snacks. Mom appeared to have cornered the market in five counties on pop-tarts and apparently that was an acceptable snack so the guy started shoving them under the counter. He said these would be good to tied people over in between their two meals a day. But he tells my mother she must take all the breakfast cereal back. My mother protests that cereal requires no cooking. "There will be no milk, ma'am." My mother points to the huge industrial double-wide refrigerator the church had just purchased in the past year. "Ma'am, you don't understand...
It could cause a riot."He then points to the vegetables and fruit. "You'll have to take that back as well. It looks like you've got about 10 apples there. I'm about to bring in 40 men. What would we do then?" My mother, in her sweet, soft voice says, "Quarter them?"
"No ma'am. FEMA said no... It could cause a riot. You don't understand the type of people that are about to come here...."
I turn and walk out of the room...lugging all the healthy stuff back to the car. My son later tells me the man went on to say "We've already been told of teenage girls delivering fetuses on buses." My son steps toward him and says "That's because they've almost been starved to death, haven't had a decent place to get a good night's sleep, and their bodies can't keep a baby alive. I'm not sure that's any evidence some one should be using to show these are 'bad people'."We then went to the second dorm room and made up beds. When we got through and were headed outside the host says to me and my daughter, "How did you get in here?" I told him we came in through the back gate. He replies, "No, HOW did you get in here? No one who doesn't have credentials showing is supposed to be in here." (I had noticed all the "hosts" had two or three badges hanging around their necks.) I told him it might have had something to do with the fact my daughter was snapping pictures of the OHP presence at the gate. He then tells us, "Well, starting in the morning NO ONE comes in. So if you have further goods you want to donate you will have to take them to your local church. They will collect them until they have a full load and then bring them to the front gate."
Me and my two kids then walked over the hill to the camp's amphitheater.
First - just another OHP car...
The amphitheater is full of clothes (but I'm not sure I'm seeing enough for 5000 people for 5 months).
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But there was more...an Oklahoma Department of Safety truck and a military vehicle...
and a cell phone tower (which fretling didn't get a pic of...grrr). Falls Creek, because it sits in a "bowl" surrounded by mountains, is notorious for no cell phone coverage.
There were buses coming in the front gate at about a rate of 1 every 2 or 3 minutes. We could hear them below us as we walked back up the hill. We could also see their white tops through the trees. We figured these were busloads of refugees arriving, but we never saw these buses in the camps, nor were any refugees visible at the camp while we were there.
We then loaded back into our vehicles and headed toward the cabin we had been told was for women so that we could off-load our appropriate products. When we arrived there was no one in the cabin so we preceded to unload our vehicles and take the merchandise in to the cabin. A horde of "hosts" who had been hovering at a nearby cabin head toward us. "Can we help you?"
I explained to them what we were doing. "Uhh... you can't just leave donated goods in the cabins. FEMA has stated they want all supplies to go to their central warehouse. They said they have had far too many supplies come in and they need to handle them. You can't leave ANY clothes."
I just stared at them. One chubby-checker, after several moments of pregnant pause broken only by the sound of my 82 year old dad continuing to shuffle boxes out of the back of his car (GO DAD!), says "I'll call "BASE" and confirm what should happen here."
I continue to stare. He pounds out the number on his cell phone and when some one picks up he chickens out and just asks "I need to verify that cabin 11 is a female only facility." When he hangs up he says that it is and I respond, "Well, good, we'll get on with this then." It's at that point my son pulls me aside and says, "Every damned one of them have the same phone. That's what the comm tower is for at the amphitheater. Now we know how FEMA runs through billions, they've given every one of these people a Cingular phone when walkie-talkies would have worked just fine."
We off-load our goods into the McAlester cabin. Fretling takes pics of the buckets of toys that have been donated by citizens for the kiddos coming this way.
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And a dorm room:
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We then start out of the camp. I tell my daughter I want to go out the main gate this time. Here is what we saw on the way out:
Just another OHP car...
This cabin was apparently commandeered by a group of people in navy blue jumpsuits with insignias all over them. You can see them in the left side of this pic. But they were standing all over the place on both sides of the narrow street.
This is just one OHP car in a long line of them parked along the side of the street.
Three firetrucks parked along the river.
Talk about a surreal moment...troops (unknown if Regular or National Guard) have taken up residency in the Durant First Baptist Church cabin very near the main gate of the camp.
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Two things to point out in the pictures above...we passed a row of about 6 or 8 ambulances parked in the street just in front of the troop cabin, and the large tent on the top of the hill...we have no idea what that is for.
Main gate completely blocked by OHP vehicles as we approach:
More OHP vehicles parked at the rear gate as we pass by:
Now I'm starting to understand why it doesn't matter that this location is not conducive to starting a new life.
Posted by Lyn Wall at September 11, 2005 09:52 AM | Permalink
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Comments
OMG, Lyn! This can't be happening in my country. I'm speechless...
Amy
Posted by: Amy Branham at September 11, 2005 08:48 PM
The time is now for all those fear mongers in Washington to go. These are American citizens for heaven sakes that lived in peace in New Orleans, worked for minimum wage, raised their familes, went to church and payed TAXES. This along with every other complete faliure is more reason then ever to impeach the lot of them all the way down. They have to go. NOW!!!!
Posted by: Mary Anderson at September 12, 2005 07:16 AM
This is so typical! They know nothing about the people who are to stay in the facility, but they assume the worst, and to protect the 'good' people from the one or two preditors who might be around, they treat them all as preditors who need to be confined. What a punishment for being in the wrong place at the wrong time!
Posted by: Marcia at September 12, 2005 09:06 AM
Have none of you every planned anything serious before? Fire hazards are reasonable things to be concerned about. And you don't think tempers will flair in 5 months of being out of our homes? They have to plan for the worst. This isn't a backyard bbq where someone can drive home when they've had enough. And 10 apples for 5000 evacuees? Come on.
Posted by: David at September 12, 2005 09:26 AM
The fear that is so easily brewed in the hearts of compassionate locals is frightening. So quickly the "organization" answers with limits and controls, acting in a directive way instead of a facilitative way. And it appears FEMA was priming their employees for a struggle of control (order, sanity, etc... these crazy desperate folk are gonna be outta control!!) These desperate souls left adrift looking for compassion and love and care are being processed. Where is this great humanity America boasts... is it with the people but stalled by gov't? Can compassion not overcome a misguided system? If it cannot we have more to do than any of us know.
Posted by: Andrew at September 12, 2005 09:57 AM
I can understand FEMA wanting to control what donated goods go where, because rioting can be a problem even among the most civilized and ethical people when they are placed under such a strain. I remember hearing about panic and rioting in New Orleans when evacuees were trying to get to the evacuation buses after the storm. But when members of the churches who own Falls Creek have obviously been showing up repeatedly at this camp, doing their best to help, you would think FEMA would make an effort not to waste such generosity. They could have notified the participating churches of their policies and suggested what types of donations would be useful. Two meals a day is ridiculous when there are people willing to donate food--FEMA could have put out some information on what foods were needed. And the clothing shown in those pictures was certainly not enough for 5000 refugees. What bothers me most is that the refugees aren't allowed to leave the camp for any reason. They are still American citizens, are they not?
Posted by: Elsie at September 12, 2005 11:57 AM
this is completley barbaric and unreasonable people are out there starving and they refuse to accept food? your son was right when he made a remark about krakow, this infuriates me
Posted by: courtney at September 12, 2005 12:33 PM
let's call the government on it tell your story to a reliable t.v. station like CNN get the pictures and the story to the world let them know this is going on The are probly bring blacks in to those cabins and the are going to treat them un human please find out how many are white and black because this should get out to both communitys whether they are white are black
the black community can see this happing because we have know faith in the government please get this out on CNN because I feel they will listen and air this information
Posted by: Tina at September 12, 2005 02:29 PM
This is simply another case of the government substituting control for organization.
Posted by: Michael Chappell at September 13, 2005 10:12 AM
This is horrible. After all those people had to endure already. They must be still in shock after the hurricane, so many people loosing their houses and so many died, and I hope the survivors will be able to cope with that somehow, despite that unwelcoming environment. But I heard that many Americans believe that the government would have reacted earlier and would have sent more troops and helpers there if the majority of the victims had been white. If that's true, and racism is involved, it's really a shame. Maybe there wouldn't be camps like that if such a disaster had happened in Texas or New England, but it's really painful to think about that. I just hope those people will be "free" to go soon and that they'll have a place to go then.
It must be one of the worst things that can happen to you if you lose your home.
But just one thing, apart from my true sympathy for those people....I wish there would be the occasional upset outcry in the States on the atrocities of the US Army in Iraq and other places...speaking of camps, I mean. Compared to the innocent Iraqis who were are still are tortured and murdered in countless US prisons all over the world, I would think the Katrina victims live under rather acceptable conditions.
Jeany
Posted by: Jeany at September 13, 2005 07:44 PM
Sorry, too many typos in my former message. What I wanted to say with my last statement was:
Compared to the innocent Iraqis, including children, who were and still are tortured and murdered in Abu Ghraib and other US prisons, and the poor inmates of countless US jails and prison camps all over the world (who cares for the Geneva Convention if you're a member of the US Army?), I would think the Katrina victims live under rather acceptable conditions.
Jeany
Posted by: Jeany at September 13, 2005 08:01 PM
Just came across this website and I was absolutley sickened. One, I am from Oklahoma and past lessons of disaster has proven we are not a State of HORRIBLE treatment of those who have suffered in situations as this. Black, Red, Yellow or White our hearts are as big as Texas. I am outraged to think that FEMA can come in and take over everything without a heart for these people. These are human lives that were destroyed. They are destroying them further by making them feel like they are in "Krakow" more so like the confinment camps that held the Asian people during WW2. Do they not realise that they are making them, if anything, more resentful and angry. FEMA's concern for a "riot" will come back to bite them. There was no riot in Texas, was there? Sheesh. These people have not made a national threat on our country or any 50 states that I have heard. The people who have suffered so much are going to have to live in a prison type situation. OMG where is the compasion. Believe me, this post will be passed on to the news media in Oklahoma. This inhumane treatment has to stop and FEMA doesn't speak for us.
signed,
Beyond the words of MIFFED!
Posted by: Shyann at September 15, 2005 10:23 AM
About the Oklahoma Baptist encampment story: Why do I keep seeing in every paragraph an elephant that all of our commentators seem to be ignoring?
Obviously, something is going on in the Oklahoma boonies that our fascist government is hiding. Shouldn't Oklahoma Baptists be beating on the government's--on FEMA's--door to demand to know just what their big, fancy and little, humble cabins are really being used for? Since the Bushies claim they can hold anybody for anything as long as they want to, it behooves us to find out who they're going to hold and for what. We can't leave everything to CNN, which is busy doing yeoman service as the nation's conscience in the matter of Katrina. If we're thinking that the FEMA Goon Squad is going to all of that trouble just to put up African-American residents of New Orleans, remember the bridge from NO into Gretna.The Gretna cops just lined up on the bridge, got out their trusty shotguns and fired a few over the heads of people gullible enough to believe that they'd be safe if they could get into Gretna where there were supposed to be buses.
Maybe we ought to look into what Homeland Security has been doing with all of that money Congress has given them. Maybe they've been buying a whole lot of Blue Shirts (Brown Shirts has already been done) and training the boys to handle Enemies of the People.
Please don't accuse me of having too much imagination. It's my contention that a lot of what separates Dems from Repugs is that Those People--Barbara Bush and Louisiana Congressman Baker, for example--don't have any imagination. They can't imagine how it must feel to be up to your belly button and past in that muck--both real and metaphorical-- with no one to pull you out of it and no one to just give you a drink of water.
Even the Romans, not famous for their compassion either, gave Jesus something to drink--even if it was bad wine--when he said,"I thirst."
Posted by: Muriel Stubbs at September 16, 2005 01:21 AM
















