Trigger warning for racist language and discussions of racial violence.
After the storm had passed, while New Orleans was still in a state of crisis, residents of a predominantly white neighborhood that had escaped flooding, Algiers Point, took it upon themselves to violently patrol their streets.
“It was great!” says one man interviewed below. “It was like pheasant season in South Dakota. If it moved, you shot it!” According to one witness testimony, they were looking for “anything coming up this street darker than a paper bag…” At least 11 black men were shot.
Here is a short interview with two of the men of Algiers Point, from the documentary Welcome to New Orleans:
This next video, sent in by reader Martha O., includes some of the footage above, but focuses much more on the experiences of several African American men who lived in the neighborhood and were shot or threatened by their White neighbors.
The men talk about the panic and terror they felt during these incidents. Toward the end, Donnell Herrington watches footage of the White residents bragging about their exploits. It’s brutal to watch this man listening to the militia members talk about shooting African Americans casually and with obvious enthusiasm and pride.
The video is part of an in-depth story about the Algiers Point shootings featured in The Nation in 2008. And as Martha explained, it’s a harrowing example of how swiftly organized violent racism can emerge when external constraints are even briefly weakened.
Originally posted in 2012. Watch the full documentary here.
Gwen Sharp is an associate professor of sociology at Nevada State College. You can follow her on Twitter at @gwensharpnv.
Comments 22
Theodore — August 30, 2012
The legacy of the KKK lives on among these people. It is not a surprise since the KKK really was the manifestation of White fear at the fact that Blacks were "unleashed". The same is occurring here. When the "law" can no longer serve as the middle man between white fear and Black people, these kinds of actions occur.
Mae Spires — August 30, 2012
Besides the fact that these people weren't even looting, what really strikes me most about this is that it was all in the name of protecting *property*. Hurting, maiming, and potentially killing human beings to protect *things* that are in imaginary jeopardy. This is just another item on the list of reasons I grieve for the human race.
I'm not going to try to take racism out of the equation. It's real. It's harmful. It still exists. And I believe it allowed this to happen. I think that the hatred involved here is certainly a motivating factor for their acts. Nevertheless, I think that what it really comes down to is power.
History proves to us that neither cruelty nor depravity, even on a wide scale, is limited by race (or any other signifier, for that matter). There are members of humanity everywhere and of every signifier who are disposed to these kinds of acts. And, taking nothing but that disposition into account, they may or may not act in accordance. Yet, give them power (as through the structures of racism, for example), and it is very likely that they will act according to that disposition. Power is extremely dangerous, and the vast majority of us shouldn't be trusted with it.
Racist institutions and structures give certain people too much power. And if they're inclined toward depravity, that power gives them the ability to act.
Shannon Hubbell — August 30, 2012
As someone who was raised in Algiers Point and still has family there, let me assure you that we're not all bigoted monsters. These people make me feel ashamed to be a human being much less an Algerine.
PinkWithIndignation — August 30, 2012
That is so sad. Just more proof the term post-racial is meaningless.
Heimdall — September 3, 2012
Along with this single incident where are the hundreds of deaths at the hands of other coloreds? More coloreds kill coloreds in this county every year than solders have died in service since 9/11, but racist white people are the problem. Seems legit..
God bless Texas where it is perfectly legal to shoot to kill anyone stealing your property. If Jesus hadn't been a thief he would have lived longer.
Tabaga — August 25, 2015
The banality of evil - at a barbecue.
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