Operation Blessing International - Disaster Relief
| About Us | What We Do | Where We Work | Community | Corporate GIK | Contact | Home
PROGRAMS
Disaster Relief
  • Program Details
  • Hurricane Relief
  • Tsunami Relief
  • Disaster Kits
  • Disaster Saftey Tips
  • Highlights
  • News Archive
  • Helping Children
    Hunger Relief
    Life Skills
    Medical Services
    Water Wells & Cisterns

    GET INVOLVED
    Email Updates
    Volunteer
    Tell A Friend
    Donate Now
    Community

    SITE SEARCH
     
    provided by google


    Download this month's BLESSINGS

    News Home Disaster News Archive Press Releases Photo Gallery

    New Orleans: "We will box again"

    Before: Volunteers spent five months renovating the 1932 gym that was flooded by Hurricane Katrina.

    After: The gym is transformed into a multipurpose facility with a weight room, volleyball and basketball courts, locker rooms and more.


    The newly-renovated park now has three new soccer fields, a jungle gym and a bike path.


    As part of the grand opening festivities, OBI and City of Hope hosted a boxing exhibition match featuring local boxers.

    POSTED: June 15, 2007
    By Sarah Pate

    ST. BERNARD PARISH, La. - The message spray-painted in white letters across the doors of the gym was unwavering: "We will box again."

    It was the rallying cry left behind by a local boxing coach shortly after Katrina's waters flooded the 1932 gym, named the Edward A. Kattengell Center, with more than 5 feet of water.

    Now, after five months of intense renovations, the gym and adjoining community park is ready to celebrate its grand opening on June 16, with a ribbon-cutting ceremony followed by a community crawfish boil, games and a boxing exhibition match featuring local boxers.

    "The kids have been coming around here, saying 'It's coming back! It's coming back'!" said Randy Millet, pastor of Adullam Christian Fellowship and director of City of Hope, a nonprofit arm of the church that will maintain and operate the newly-renovated facility and park.

    "This place draws everybody like a magnet. It would have torn the heart out of a lot of people to have this place thrown out. To see it come back…everybody's excited about it," Millet said.

    Operation Blessing spent about $300,000 to renovate the gym, transforming it into a multi-purpose facility for residents of all ages in the St. Bernard community. The new facility boasts a weight room, volleyball and basketball courts, locker rooms, concession stand, new sports equipment and more.

    Outside, the park has been revamped with three new soccer fields, a jungle gym and a bike path.

    "Soccer is a big thing down here," Millet added.

    "We are very excited about the grand opening of the park," said Jody Herrington, director of U.S. disaster relief for Operation Blessing.

    "Residents – young and old alike – continue to pour into the gym with tears in their eyes saying, 'I remember when I used to play basketball and box here.' This is a catalyst of hope for the community, which represents that they are coming back!" Herrington added.

    Community rebuilding projects like this are part of Operation Blessing's large-scale Katrina recovery efforts, which include a free medical and dental clinic in New Orleans East that has provided free health care and medicine to more than 23,000 residents.

    Earlier this year, OBI also launched "Rat Busters," a program to suppress a growing rodent population throughout the city. "Rat Busters" now operates alongside OBI's Bug Busters, a mosquito control program that has been treating abandoned pools and stagnant water sources with larvae-eating Gambusia fish since April 2006.

    How You Can Help

    Be a part of OBI's ongoing disaster relief efforts by making an online donation to help those caught in the midst of disaster. For volunteer opportunities in New Orleans, click here.

    Who is Operation Blessing?
    An international humanitarian aid organization dedicated to alleviating human need and suffering by providing food, water, medicine and disaster relief to those in need.

    Contact Us By Phone
    1-800-730-2537

    Sign Up For
    Email Updates:


    TAKE ACTION
  • Get Involved
  • Get Prepared
  • Build A Disaster Kit
  • Donate Now


  •   RELATED LINKS
    bullet Presidential service awards honor volunteers
    bullet New Orleans residents still desperate for medical care
    bullet Rat Busters take on New Orleans
    bullet Volunteers help make medical event a success
    bullet Medical News Archive



    Who is Operation Blessing?
    An international humanitarian aid organization dedicated to alleviating human need and suffering by providing food, water, medicine and disaster relief to those in need.

    Contact Us By Phone
    1-800-730-2537

    Sign Up For
    Email Updates:


    TAKE ACTION
  • Get Involved
  • Get Prepared
  • Build A Disaster Kit
  • Donate Now







  • [ Send To A Friend] [ Print] [TOP ]

    Copyright © 1999-2008 by Operation Blessing International of this page and all contents. No part of this site may be used without prior written consent from OBI. All Rights Reserved. Questions or comments? Email us at operation.blessing@ob.org. If you want to graphically link to the Operation Blessing web site, click here to go to the download page.