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Acupuncturists Without Borders: Report From the Streets of New OrleansBy Barry Markson It has been a dream of Diana Fried, an acupuncturist who lives in New Mexico, to create an organization of acupuncturists that can go to areas of disaster, much like the Red Cross does, to provide acupuncture treatments in situations where it would be appropriate. Once people have food, water and shelter, it is of utmost importance to support the healing process from extraordinary trauma and its many manifestations throughout the body, mind and spirit.Diana felt compelled to make her dream a reality after the onslaught of Hurricane Katrina on the Gulf Coast. She and a group of other dedicated people began working tirelessly to create a legal not-for-profit organization that was named Acupuncturists Without Borders (AWB). When this core group started putting together the first team of acupuncturists to actually go to Louisiana, I volunteered to be part of it. So, on Oct. 11, 2005, I found myself on a plane on my way to New Orleans, where I met Diana, Sue Larkin from Cape Cod, and Dr. Sue Pollard from Albuquerque, NM. Through the AWB web site (www.acuwithoutborders.org), acupuncturists from across the U.S. were starting to sign up to volunteer, so our mission was to find venues where our professional services could be offered to evacuees and others who had experienced the trauma of the hurricanes, as well as to the relief workers who were working long hours to help and support the victims. Our treatments were free and available to all who needed them. Once we established venues, the way would be paved for the succeeding groups of AWB volunteers who would arrive after us.
The following is a recounting of some of my experiences treating the victims of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans. These experiences are told in the present tense, using an informal, diary format. October 16, 2005 - This is the hardest day. The Lower Ninth Ward is the community in New Orleans where the levee broke and was almost completely underwater. After the waters receded what was left was an ashen landscape of debris and shattered homes. It is devastated, silent, a ruin. Bodies are still being discovered in the wreckage. We set up a clinic at the Red Cross tent and offer treatments to the people gathering there. A woman sits down. She relaxes into the treatment and at the end, asks me, "Where in New Orleans are you from?" I tell her I am from western New York state. She is shocked and asks, "Why are you here in this place?" I say, "To try to help," and she starts crying. I start crying also. We are all silent in the car as we drive through the neighborhood streets that are passable. Later that evening I call my wife, and when I hear her voice, I start weeping. The grief and the loss of these people just wells up in my heart.
October 18 - Our improvised clinic is a row of chairs and a table on the sidewalk. A man sits down. When I ask him what he needs he says, "I haven't cried yet." We begin and the grief comes up. He weeps quietly throughout the treatment. Another man comes dancing down the middle of the street and stops at the clinic where the day before I had treated him. "This acupuncture makes me want to dance. It makes me happy. I couldn't sleep before. I saw so many horrible things in the flood. Dead bodies ... Now I have joy again ... The needles help keep my mind straight. You really fixed me up." I awkwardly reply something like, "Well, you know it's not me, I'm just an instrument," and he shoots back, "Well I don't care, I'm coming back tomorrow and I want you to instrument me." October 19 - A new team of volunteers has arrived. They hit the ground running, and the day they arrive we are all hard at work throughout the city. To be treating with a group of professionals from all over the country, from varied backgrounds and acupuncture traditions, is remarkable. Yesterday we had never met - today we are treating on the streets together. Although the NADA auricular points are our framework, additionally we all bring our own expertise into the treatment arena: TCM, Five-Element, detox work, Taoist balance method, etc. I am struck by the similarities rather than the differences. Rapport comes first, and I am moved by the compassion, tenderness and sensitivity of my colleagues. And people report feeling better, no matter what acupuncture style they were treated with! November 18 -- The work that AWB is doing continues with rotating teams of volunteer practitioners. In the five weeks that AWB has been in the New Orleans area, over 1,500 people have been treated in the venues listed below:
About Acupuncturists Without Borders Acupuncturists Without Borders (AWB) is a nonprofit group that urgently needs donations to continue the important work in New Orleans. Please visit the AWB web site at www.acuwithoutborders.org. Donations can be sent to 37 Kelly Lynn Dr., Sandia Park, NM 87047. To contact AWB, call Robin Beckman at (360) 876-4801.
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