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September 2, 2008
A Village Called Versailles

I've been meaning to write about this upcoming film called "New Orleans: A Village Called Versailles," a PBS FRONTLINE/World documentary by S. Leo Chiang. A 15-minute rough cut is now online.

I really look forward to seeing the film, which tells the story of a tight-knit Vietnamese American community in New Orleans East known as Versailles. The community of thousands of Vietnamese families, mostly Catholic, have largely resettled and rebuilt after Hurricane Katrina. Though Dateline did an inspiring and emotional story on Versailles last year, it largely painted the folks of Versailles as a model minority community. And as I've complained about before, the Asian American experience was missing from "When the Levees Broke" -- as great and important a film as it is -- so I'm glad this film is being made.

"Village" continues the story after returning to Versailles. Soon after resettling, the Vietnamese American community realized that the city planned on dumping toxic waste into a landfill right next to their homes. What ensued is an ongoing battle with the city. The rough cut shows some inspiring images of hundreds of Vietnamese Americans, young and old, storming city hall meetings. They succeeded in closing down the landfill, though it seems like the city still has not cleaned what was already dumped (background: after Katrina, there were some 22 million tons of trash, according to the film). Basically, it seems like the large community of Vietnamese Americans was largely invisible to the local government. They thought they could just dump waste right next where they lived and no one would say anything -- but that's not what happened.

What is inspiring is that the community united and stepped up. They found their voice. Though largely told as a story of a model minority community, hopefully "Versailles" will paint a fuller picture.

On a sidenote, I interviewed Father Vien Nguyen on the phone soon after Katrina hit, as he was gathering Vietnamese American families to resettle in Versailles. He is (as you can see in the film), a charismatic leader. In the same article, I interviewed Mimi Nguyen, who is also featured in the film. She lived in Oakland, CA at the time, but after volunteering as a translator and advocate during and right after Katrina, she moved there and now is an aide to a city councilmember in New Orleans. 

Posted by momo at September 2, 2008 11:03 AM


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