home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT2513>
- <title>
- Nov. 11, 1991: American Scene
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 11, 1991 Somebody's Watching
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- AMERICAN SCENE, Page 28
- Four Corners, Louisiana
- Raise High The Roof Beam
- </hdr><body>
- <p>With sweat equity and private financing, the women of an
- impoverished backwater are building their own future
- </p>
- <p>By Daniel S. Levy
- </p>
- <p> Josephine Roberson positions a chalk line along the top
- of a sheet of plywood as Nolan Derouen flicks the taut string
- and imprints a fuzzy red stripe across the board. They slice
- the wood to size, carry it into Betty Hines' living room and
- nail it to the ceiling. Hines works at the back of the room,
- straining from the rungs of a ladder as she attaches tiles to
- the plywood with the aid of one of Derouen's assistants. Heavy
- rains, excessive groundwater and years of neglect in southern
- Louisiana's sugarcane region have led to creeping decay in
- Hines' home. Now, instead of harsh sunshine peeking through
- rotting walls, daylight filters through brand-new window frames.
- </p>
- <p> Through a mixture of sweat equity and private financing,
- the women of Four Corners are replacing old wood with fresh
- clapboards, drying up stagnant pools and sealing busted pipes.
- The homes are livable again, and the community has found a new
- pride and hope for a better future. "It is a hard job, but
- together we can do a lot," says Roberson in a soft, raspy voice.
- "What gives us so much courage and strength is that we have so
- many people standing behind us helping us build our community."
- </p>
- <p> Roberson, 59, is one of a determined band of women in this
- small unincorporated hamlet 20 miles east of New Iberia. Most
- of the 150 houses have antiquated wiring and leaking roofs; few
- public services reach places like Four Corners. As the cane
- industry became mechanized, many people lost jobs that their
- families had held for generations. The average annual family
- income in this town of 400 is below $10,000.
- </p>
- <p> Life appeared grim until March 1989, when the directors of
- the Southern Mutual Help Association, a New Iberia-based
- organization that has been working for 22 years to improve the
- lives of sugarcane workers, met with 15 of Four Corners' women
- and offered to help them help themselves. The women founded the
- Four Corners Self Help Housing Committee and pledged to work
- together to rebuild their lives. The five-year project has not
- only shored up the homes but has also created a sense of
- accomplishment among the residents. "We held up a mirror to
- them, so that they could see themselves," says Lorna Bourg,
- Southern Mutual's assistant executive director. "They are
- reflecting their sense of self-worth."
- </p>
- <p> Since 1969, Southern Mutual has worked to improve the
- lives of those who toil in the fields. Back then, many
- farmworkers lived behind the "cane curtain" in self-contained
- plantations with names such as the Bottoms, Oxford and Dog
- Quarters, filled with rented shacks reminiscent of the tarnished
- side of the antebellum era. The field hands were paid with chits
- and exchanged the paper for goods at overpriced company stores.
- Since crops are seasonal, the field hands ran up large tabs,
- which were then deducted from their pay and resulted in a
- lifetime of indenture. Those who quit were ordered off the land.
- Virginia Sutton, 74, a graying yet dapper great-grandmother of
- 17 and co-chairwoman of the group, once labored in the sugarcane
- fields for 70 cents a day. "We used to work from can't to
- can't," she says, recalling the long days. "You go to work, it
- is so dark you can't see your hand, and when you finish, you
- still can't see your hand."
- </p>
- <p> Southern Mutual was the first to document the number of
- farmworkers in Louisiana. It fought for their legal rights and
- helped them obtain more than $1.25 million in back pay. It
- established the first farmworkers' medical and dental clinics,
- gathered oral histories of life on the plantation, founded an
- adult-literacy program, set up a scholarship fund for the
- children, documented the use of pesticides and is currently
- fighting against the spraying of certain chemicals. "Four
- Corners' new motto is `From can't to can,'" says Bourg. "From
- can't do to can do." Sutton now proudly shows off her
- refurbished home. "Southern Mutual opened up our understanding,
- so that we could know what we can do and can't do," says Sutton.
- "They came with good ideas about what we could do to help
- ourselves."
- </p>
- <p> The organization came to Four Corners with years of rehab
- experience in other communities. Yet when its members arrived,
- the initial response of the local women was wariness. Says Mary
- Matthews, 55, Four Corners' other co-chairwoman: "At first, I
- didn't think it would work, but we then put our heads together
- and did it. Soon others heard about us and joined us. Now we
- don't want to quit. We want to finish."
- </p>
- <p> Southern Mutual arranged for carpenters, plumbers and
- electricians to work alongside the women and teach them the
- necessary skills. "We won't get a carpenter or a plumber out
- here unless he shows the committee members as much as they can
- and want to learn," says Bourg. Much of the credit for the
- project's success belongs to the professionals, men like
- Derouen, 57, who have given more than just their time. Derouen,
- who just helped complete 11 houses and is ready to begin work
- on an additional 15, encourages the women, supplies materials
- at a discount and once even presented Southern Mutual with a
- laughable $12.50 bill for roof repairs and materials.
- </p>
- <p> Initial work in Four Corners consisted of emergency
- repairs: some homes were in such poor shape there was no hope
- of restoration, so new ones were trucked in from nearby
- communities. Subsequent chores included rewiring, plumbing or
- simply applying a fresh coat of paint, which is generally done
- by Four Corners' star painter, Thelma Collins. The women raise
- money through bake sales, barbecue dinners, fish fries and a TV
- raffle that netted $1,345. All money is deposited in an account
- at Iberia Savings Bank, which, along with Southern Mutual and
- in conjunction with the Federal Affordable Housing Program, has
- set aside up to $250,000 to make 1% loans to the residents. "The
- people live in our community, and we have a responsibility to
- provide them with decent housing," says Larrey Mouton, president
- of Iberia Savings. "We want to teach them about financial
- affairs, so that they can pull themselves out of this cycle of
- poverty."
- </p>
- <p> By year's end, the women hope to complete an additional
- six homes. They are forming a community-development corporation
- to rebuild the whole village, not just the housing, and have
- started to spread the do-it-yourself project to neighboring
- communities, like Sorrel. The work is not going unnoticed:
- Louisiana Governor Buddy Roemer declared Oct. 24 Four Corners
- Community Day to celebrate the spirit of self-help.
- </p>
- <p> Most days the nondescript, rain-soaked community is filled
- with the sounds of crowing blackbirds, howling dogs and
- squealing pigs, along with the pounding of hammers and the
- whining of electric saws. Women and a few men can be seen
- carrying beams, and newly dug ditches quickly fill with golden
- ragworts, fire-ant hills and crayfish chimneys. Groups of women
- gather lumber from demolished houses, stretch the long boards
- across sawhorses and pry out old nails. After the wood is
- cleaned, it is sorted and stored in a shed for later use or
- sale.
- </p>
- <p> Priscilla Loston, 35, the group's feisty treasurer, is one
- of the nail pullers. She recently received a new home, a former
- country barroom that was transplanted to Four Corners to
- replace her tumbledown shack. She did much of the makeover,
- dividing the interior into separate rooms and installing
- paneling and electrical boxes. "This is Four Corners Self Help,
- not sit on your butt and get help," says Loston, as she yanks
- out a stubborn nail.
- </p>
- <p> At the regular Monday evening planning session, 30 women
- meet at the local Catholic church and loosely follow Robert's
- Rules of Order. The minutes are read. Loston announces how much
- is in the bank and what donations have been sent in. The women
- discuss the work and announce upcoming projects. A few members
- ask to borrow $500 to $1,000 for paint or supplies. New members
- sign a pledge to help repair every house in the community, and
- the lax and lazy are goaded to work harder. When all is done,
- the women hold hands as Roberson leads them in an impassioned
- prayer thanking God for his help. They then wish each other good
- night and head out into the dark, back to their refurbished
- homes to prepare for another day of work, another day of change.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-