This article explores the suffering and resilience of Black women who
were impacted by Hurricane Katrina in August of 2005. It also explores the
ways in which the pre-existing national discourse on poverty, race, and
gender set the stage for victim blaming and the neglect of poor Black
women and children after the storm. African American women in the Gulf
Coast region are some of the poorest in the nation. Women in general are
more vulnerable in times of natural disaster because they are the primary
caretakers of the young and the old. These factors and others meant that
poor Black women were among those most severely impacted by Hurricane
Katrina. They also had minimal resources to cope with the disaster and its
aftermath. However, instead of sympathy and support, some conservative
pundits have sought to link the suffering caused by Katrina to the lack of
patriarchal Black family structures, which they argue could have helped
individuals survive in the crisis. Contrary to these stereotypes, many
Black women have not only been resilient and self-reliant, but creative
and heroic in the face of crisis. It is their stories that offer hope for
the future of New Orleans and our nation.