Guest guest Posted July 28, 2006 Report Share Posted July 28, 2006 An eye for the storm Lexington Winchester Star - Lexington,MA,USA .... " The streets were littered with glass and wood, the houses were split in two and everything was covered in toxic mold. " . By Lydia Crafts/ Staff Writer Thursday, July 27, 2006 http://www2.townonline.com/winchester/localRegional/view.bg? articleid=544342 When WHS senior Miles witnessed the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, it was far worse than he had ever imagined it. The experience had such a strong affect on him that he decided to make a documentary to communicate the horror of the situation to people back home. To 's surprise, the attention his film, " With Our Eyes Wide Shut, " has received not only spawned local attention, but was recognized by a national audience as well. In June, it won the Youth Voices Award at the national Unitarian Universalist General Assembly in St. Louis. traveled to St. Louis for the screening of his documentary and also to give a brief speech on its background. The material for 's film arose out of his two trips to New Orleans over the past year. When he heard that his youth group from the Unitarian Church was going to volunteer with the cleanup of the hurricane, said he'd nearly forgotten the photographs he had seen of the destruction on television, but he always had enjoyed service trips. Once he arrived in New Orleans and witnessed the wreckage first hand, however, would never again forget the plight caused by Katrina. " There was such an atmosphere of abandonment and ruin, " he said. " The streets were littered with glass and wood, the houses were split in two and everything was covered in toxic mold. " Much of the work the group performed involved stripping the mold from the dry walls in houses. explained that before an assessment can be made over whether a house can be rebuilt, the mold has to be removed and the bare studs examined. One of the most emotional moments experienced in both trips occurred while he was stripping the mold. He said that whenever he worked in house, he'd find remnants of bottles, stuffed animals and bikes. In a particular house he worked on, found a photo in perfect condition amidst the rubble. It was of the four people who had once lived in the home, all approximately 60 years of age, sitting at a table and smiling at the camera. " It looked like a big party, " said. " And it struck me because happiness seemed so absent in the place where we were. I tucked the photo into the wall because I didn't want it to get thrown out with the rest of the trash. I tried to picture the family living in the house, but it felt like nobody could have ever lived there. I wondered where they were and if they were still alive, even. " said that all of the other members of the Youth Group had similar moments when they were overwhelmed by the seeming despondency of the situation. " Each of us were reduced to tears at one point, " he said. He expanded that some of the most powerful times for everyone occurred when meeting the people whose houses they had worked on. One man, whose home the youth group had focused for nearly the whole trip, came to see them on the last day. said that the man hugged every member of the group and thanked them. " It was a real affirmation that people were really touched. That we had made a difference in some way, " he said. [continue] Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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