Family Matters Most
By Nicol Jenkins
March 10, 2007
Source: Boca Raton News
Years
after Hurricane Katrina ripped through New Orleans causing death
and destruction and forcing thousands to flee, some Boca residents
are still living with the effects.
Some former New Orleans residents fled to Boca Raton and have chose
to stay. Others came for a while but decided to return to the place
they once called home.
One family has been divided geographically. Sondra Guidry decided
to make Boca her permanent home. Guidry and her 9-year-old daughter
Melina now live in an apartment in Boca Raton. Her 19 year-old son
Jamie moved back to New Orleans to help his grandma rebuild her
home.
“Everything still isn’t the way it was [in New Orleans],”
said Guidry.
There’s
not a day that goes by that Guidry doesn’t remember the storm
that changed her life. “I lost everything,” Guidry said.
“The house was a mess. Water came in and it smelled so bad.”
She added that the city wasn’t recognizable. “You’d
see huge billboards bent in half and a house a block down from where
it was before. Every house I saw had damage.” However, one
sentimental family piece wasn’t destroyed- an antique car
her son inherited from his uncle.
“We
couldn’t find a place for it so we took my vehicle and blocked
it,” she said. “My vehicle was trashed and the other
one was saved.” The vehicle now sits in a body shop.
Guidry
said she has settled into her new life. When she was living in Marrero,
Louisiana, her work was remodeling and design. Now she cleans local
houses and has become the personal assistant to Boca resident Charlotte
Danciu and her family, who took in Jamie for a few months while
she was in a hotel. Guidry said the family has continued to support
her.
“Her kids are my kids and they are like brothers and sisters
to me. They’re family,” she said.
Jamie
said he’ll also never forget that fateful day but in some
ways it’s changed his life for the better. “You have
a whole new outlook. It’s like what you see in the movies
when you go to a new place,” said Jamie, who attended Boca
Raton High School. “I’ve met a lot of friends.”
Jamie
said he would visit his mother and sister regularly. “Part
of me wants them to stay because it may be better for my sister
to grow up there.” Despite liking Boca life, Jamie said he
couldn’t be far from his home for too long. “New Orleans
is kind of a hard place to replace. I’ve lived there for 18
years,” he said. “It was my time to come back.”
That home is back to normal for Jamie. He recently celebrated Mardi
Gras on Bourbon Street with many others.
“Everything
is fine. There are some smaller areas that aren’t rebuild
but other than that if you didn’t live here you wouldn’t
know,” he said. Whether its in New Orleans or Boca Raton,
the Guidry family has grown accustomed to a new life. “My
little girl has friends here and the Danciu family is family to
me,” said Guidry.
“It’s
like night and day. New Orleans has the music, culture, jazz, and
is really historical. But I find that living in Boca is really relaxing.
The people are different. They’re more open and caring here
especially the Junior League of Boca Raton and the Danciu Family.”
However,
she frequently returns to New Orleans to visit Jamie and her mother.
“I miss my son and mom. I went back in June, some areas are
completely devastated, some abandoned, and some are livable again,”
she said. “But I never went to my house. I just couldn’t
do it.”
On
the other hand, hope is not lost. “I realize I could have
lost someone and I didn’t,” she said. “Family
is what matters most.”
The
Guidry family is looking for another home in Boca; contact Sondra
at sondralynn@hotmail.com
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