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The Lower 9th Ward Village


Welcome
The Lower 9th Ward Village is a community-driven, community-led, nonprofit 501(c)3 organization and neighborhood center based in the Lower 9th Ward in New Orleans, Louisiana. The main goal of the Village is to bring together the entire Lower 9th Ward and to empower community members to be self-sufficient and to sustain an equitable quality of life. The Village focuses on connecting the elderly and youth, with services and providing care and guidance from the community as a whole. It takes a village…

Village Spotlight

McLendon with Miss Henrietta, the “poster child” of the “Where’s Your Neighbor?” program

From the “Architecture for Humanity” Website:
The Lower Ninth Ward Village was the vision of Ward “Mack” McClendon. After looking to distract himself from the destruction of Hurricane Katrina in his Lower Ninth Ward neighborhood, McClendon looked into leasing or buying an old building a few blocks away from his old home to work on old cars. But when the former telephone technician walked into the building at 1001 Charbonnet Street, he envisioned more than just a garage.

He began to envision a community center with a gymnasium, job training programs (recording studio, culinary area, computer labs) for youths, free meals for the homeless and more. McClendon put renovating his home on hold. He bought the building in August 2007 and started working with community groups and volunteers to open the Lower 9th Ward Village Community Center.

Through the center, McClendon hopes to “bring the community back, make it whole.” McClendon healed after the storm by listening to other people’s stories, including tales of losing loved ones during Katrina. He realized that his problems – red tape with insurance and the Road Home program – were small compared with those of others he knew.

Mack wants to build a full-size basketball court with stands in the building to give children an after-school activity to keep them off the streets and to be able to encourage adults to act as coaches and mentors to the children. He also wants to use the basketball court as part of a summer program.

http://www.lower9thwardvillage.org/new/

 


 

Join us for the Mississippi River 9th Ward Film and Arts Festival, October 6-9, 2011!

On Friday September 16 at the New Orleans African American Museum, we will offer a Festival Sneak Preview, featuring Mississippi Damned (2009) with Director Tina Mabry.  Admission is free, seating is limited.  Reserve a place at: noafest@neworleansafrikanfilmfest.org or 504-942-8542.

October 6, the Festival opens at the Galvez Restaurant & Atrium with a Gala honoring Harold Battiste, Jr, recipient of the second Toni Cade Bambara Award for Cultural Leadership.  Come hear Jesse McBride Presents the Next Generation and a Battiste composition arranged by Dr. Jean Montes for Molto, a funky chamber orchestra! And for a little lagniappe: "Prelude by the River" at 6pm.

October 7-9, we will screen films on youth, women, the violence they endure and often overcome: Draw Yourself! (France, 2010); Shirley Adams: Portrait of a Mother (South Africa, 2009); Africa United (UK, 2010); Murder on a Sunday Morning (France/U.S., 2001); Central Station (Brazil, 1999); Black Venus (France/Tunisia, 2010), with live music by Charmaine Neville, Fredy Omar con su banda, and the Caesar Brothers Funk Box preceding evening screenings.  And we will host two roundtables: “Black Men and the Justice System” and “Race and Power in New Orleans in Global Perspective.”

Gala Tickets are $75 each or $135 for two.  Tickets available online or by check.

Festival screenings are $5 each.  A Festival Pass for all screenings may be purchased for $20, online or by check.

Make checks payable to NOAFEST, 2670 George Nick Connor Dr., NOLA 70119.