About This Special Feature
by Stewart Ikeda

Thirty-five years ago in New Orleans, THE BLACK COLLEGIAN Magazine was
launched with the conviction that earning a higher education was among the most
important, transformative and uplifting opportunities in a young person's life
-- and the most challenging. This was certainly true in 1970 for the young
African Americans this magazine set out to aid in their pursuit of academic,
career and personal fulfillment. And this remains in evidence today, in this
Second Semester issue's special section.
Presented again in collaboration with Black College Wire, "After
Katrina" revisits some of the collegians and institutions featured in last
semester's supplement, "Hurricane Katrina: Views from America's HBCUs". It
explores the decisions and efforts they've made to start afresh, whether in or
outside of New Orleans, through resolve or because of limited options.
Having so recently faced down an act of God (or two, in some cases) and
man-wrought failure of massive proportion, an unanticipated majority of students
have nonetheless returned to our city to finish what they started. And it sure
won't be easy. Those who came back in January face intensive, accelerated
semesters in alien environs, combined with the loss of faculty, support staff,
campus resources, friends and activities. For many, resuming studies after
Katrina has meant racing to catch up while dealing with distractions and
anxieties, disappointments and bureaucratic hassles. Some will miss grad school
deadlines, others delay or forego various summer employment or internship
opportunities. There remain legitimate safety concerns (E.R. visits for asthma
flare-ups and mold-related problems were reported), not to mention less apparent
psychological stresses whose consequences may only be known over time. They are
living in cramped conditions, under curfew, in a city that remains largely
empty, in disarray, offering few off-hours activities.
The city has pinned many of its fragile hopes for revitalization on the
returning educational institutions. While the schools featured here face over a
billion dollars in reconstruction costs, local government needs them as partners
to develop diverse "brain industries" for a new economy less reliant on
tourism. Area businesses are enticing returning students with high wages to
fill jobs, which some will juggle along with schoolwork and compulsory volunteer
work in the city's rebuilding. Black students and schools must play a key role
in New Orleans' intellectual, labor, market, and cultural salvation – a burden
heavier, perhaps, than many realize.
And despite these challenges – or as a result – the collegians in this
section pages offer remarkably little complaint. However, as "After Katrina"
clearly shows, no one should mistake the returnees' can-do spirit for a return
to "normal," much less an assurance that "all is well". And no one should
condemn those students who chose for any number of reasons -- some discussed
here -- to pursue their goals elsewhere.
No, winning a college degree is not easy even under the best of circumstances
– nor should it be. The crucible that reveals the core elements of a young
adult's spirit and character, it's supposed to test and challenge you.
But there's pressure, and then there's pressure. These young people
determined to resume their educations "After Katrina" do so under extraordinary
circumstances, well beyond what many parents and other concerned older adults
would find palatable. Parents or alumni, employers or graduate recruiters,
officials or philanthropists, we should remember this and support them.
As our staff prepares this second issue in continuing exile, we too have
found great hope in the students and educators on these pages and in extended
features at
http://Blackcollegian.com/katrina. As we look forward to our next 35 years,
they serve as a powerful reminder of the resilience of the Black collegian that
should be an inspiration to us all.
Stewart David Ikeda, on behalf of the Editors and Staff of THE
BLACK COLLEGIAN and IMDiversity Inc.