What they need is food and clean water and blankets and soap and toilet paper. My own first-hand experience with working with sudden influxes of refugees is not extensive, but it is extant (the Kosovars would be the most relevant example); and between that and my other work with refugees, I know who can deliver help and do it effectively: the Red Cross, followed by other experienced non-profit disaster relief agencies. If you want to do something to get material help to these people as quickly as possible, there are a couple of ways you can do so, even from Canada.
- The Canadian Red Cross will let you designate your donations directly for victims of Katrina.
- The Globe and Mail also has a list of a whole bunch of ways to help people.
- United Animal Nations is in Louisiana helping rescue animals. So is the Humane Society of the United States and North Shore Animal League America. The Houston SPCA is sheltering animal refugees from Katrina.
UPDATE
- I'd been waiting for confirmation that Noah's Wish was working in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, and received it today. They do nothing except animal rescue after disasters, and as an organization filling that gap, they are well worth supporting.
ronnie
Well said. I've just emailed you something I got in my inbox on this very topic too. It's been all over public radio here. What a mess.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Cousin. (My cousin has emigrated to the southern US to pursue her music career and is closer to the effects of Katrina than almost anyone else I know personally.) You must be seeing refugees start to turn up - I've read they're being bussed as far away as Salt Lake City, UT.
ReplyDeleteI'll be emailing you soon -
ronnie