20 years since the storm Katrina destroyed Louisiana and Mississippi

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New Orleans – For 20 years since the storm Katrina Shaya in Gatrina Khaya Gatulf Coast as a piece of 33.
The woman searched with stormy waste in Buris, La, followed by the land of Trinle Sustern Katrina in Aug. 29, 2005. The storm left the Mississippian-Louisiana border. (Sarah Alegra)
Katrina was weak before falling in Aug. 29, 2005, but still stabbed the boundary of Louisiana-Mississippi as a storm.
Memories from Louisiana
In Plaqueships Parish, seven-year-old English has lost almost everything in which the Buras is switched on floods.
Hurricane Katrina survivors share persistent matters
“My part feels like it’s only because of the feeling of thinking about everything removed from us,” English said. “It just sounds really green.”
English said he recalled the minute and watched his mother’s response to the news as Katrina’s eye focused on Buras, Louisiana.
“I think that when I saw something it was really wrong,” said, remembering her mother’s feelings. “This will not be something where we can pack our suits and go back home.”
Sixty miles in Northern, Superdomome New Orleans, Corbett Reddoc, the member of Louisiana National Guard from Buras, is expected to remove the storm, like a drill-like storm.
“You will come in, the storm will pass away, and everyone will go,” everyone reserved.
But when the Levites failed, thousands of people were trapped in as the goods decrease in deterioration.
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“Basically it was three days count … People did not know how to do it,” Reddoch said.
In Buras families, survival seemed unique. All-neighbors disappeared underwater, leaving citizens cut and divided.
“Not only did they pass the past as the parents who were watching their world cleaned,” English had to find out how they could do more than 10-year-old and 10, “
Today, the only part of a teenager is already the children of building – a_a-bear in the storm, a small monument to survive and stability.
“Sometimes it sounds like yes,” English said. “Sometimes it sounds like 100 years ago, because my health has changed so … very. And it’s hard to ask what it was.”
Thinking from Mississippi

The fallen drug rested at a damaged home in Gulfport, missing.
(Sarah Alegra)
In Mississippi, where Katrina Strirge’s storm is built a large part of the Gulf Coast, the communities also indicated what has changed and what has not changed.
“Everyone had lost,” said Leonard Papania, a former captain of Gulfport police. “In times like these, you don’t have a character, indicating that,” he said.
Today, Gulfport is marked by blue sky, palm trees and new look. But in the last two decades, this incident was unknown. Papania, then Lieutenant Young, remembers moving on the streets no longer recognize.

The drawn home appears in Gulfport, Miss., After Hurricane Katrina attacked the Gulf Coast coast. The neighbors are all exposed to storm surgery.
(Sarah Alegra)
Katrina: Lessons from Monster storm will not forget
“It was just mine, the place where I grew up, I stayed here for the rest of my life,” said Papania. “You didn’t come even when you were.”
The man of 4 lost his home.
Rupert lacy, which helped coordinate law enforcement law and urgent treatment during storms, missing you well.
“Invoke, I had the idea that I would see … I didn’t see that it would be steroids,” Lacy said.
It was not the first storm that he had seen. As a child in 1969, he lived on storm Camille, his place of communities.
“You have to understand the power of the water,” said Lacy. “Sounded buildings Camille did not survive Katrina.”
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Today, paramedics say that lessons from Trinah continues to supervise their response.
“We plan for possible failure of our programs,” Mat, urgent servant in Gulfport. “We have paper backups, we have other means of communication.”
Nevertheless, in Papania, memories are always close.
“I always don’t know the experiences I had in Catrina, but I didn’t want to do it again,” she said.