Local News
07:21 PM CDT on Monday, September 19, 2005
BATON ROUGE, La. -- First came the rising floodwaters, and the pregnant
woman started praying.
Please, she said to herself, please don't let me give birth to my twins
in this hot, dark attic surrounded by water. Finally, using a crowbar
and hammer, friends pried open the roof and she made her way out by a
leaky boat.
Then came her dramatic delivery.
After a few days in the Superdome, an ambulance rushed the woman out of
the chaos toward a waiting helicopter. But before she arrived, Dwight
and Dwayne entered this world -- 9 pounds in all -- one month early. "It
was a miracle," their mother, Antoinette Hickerson, says with a
still-dazed smile.
Now comes the hard part.
Hickerson has to find a way to care for her premature twins even though
she and her partner, Dwight Ward, have no home, no money, no jobs.
They're now living in a special shelter for newborns at St. Patrick
Catholic Church, trying to figure out where to go next.
Hickerson is among hundreds of Hurricane Katrina survivors who were
rushed to this city -- often by helicopter or ambulance -- to deliver
their babies. They now face the enormous pressures of being new mothers
even as they struggle to piece their lives back together.
That's where folks here have come to the rescue: A network of hospitals,
churches and volunteers has embraced new and expectant mothers,
providing them with the daily necessities of life -- along with a sense
of hope.
Churches have converted parish halls and sanctuaries into temporary
homes and nurseries, often with private rooms. Clothes, baby food,
cribs, strollers, toys and blankets have been donated by the truckload.
Volunteers have chauffeured moms to doctors, tracked down missing family
members and wiped away tears.
"Every possible stress you have has got to be there," says Beth Manning,
director of social services at Woman's Hospital in Baton Rouge. "The
baby blues, being separated from your family, and also not knowing where
you're going to go or what's going to happen in the long run."
Workers at the hospital were thrust into the maelstrom even as Katrina
was battering New Orleans. Helicopters and ambulances began ferrying in
babies and expectant mothers, some in early labor.
"We had huge military helicopters coming in one after another," says
Susan Eaton, a social worker at Woman's Hospital, where about 300
Katrina evacuees have given birth. "It really did feel like we were in a
war zone."
It became immediately apparent that something had to be done for the
women once they could leave the hospital but had no place to go, no
money, and no family to pick them up.
"We didn't want to stick them with brand-newborn babies in shelters with
thousands of people," says Cheri Johnson, of Baton Rouge General Medical
Center-Bluebonnet. "There's no good access to running water. It's a
breeding ground for germs."
Social workers began making calls, and several churches responded
quickly.
University Presbyterian Church welcomed several women, including Angela
Davis, who was eager to have a private room with her baby son, Taji,
after leaving a giant city shelter she had stayed at with her
grandparents.
"You can't give a baby a bath with a thousand people running in and
out," she says.
A computer-savvy volunteer also helped a tearful Davis locate two other
sons -- 2 and 3 -- who lived with their father and appeared to be
missing right after the storm.
St. Luke's Episcopal Church transformed its parish hall into a dormitory
for new and expectant mothers and their families. One man arrived after
hitchhiking from New Orleans with his two children so he could join his
wife, mother of a new 1-pound, 4-ounce girl. The baby remained in the
hospital.
Church members also proved to be good detectives.
They helped one mother with a baby in intensive care track down her
10-year-old son, who had been taken to a shelter in Thibodaux, 50 miles
away. And they reunited a 17-year-old pregnant teen with her grandfather
in St. Louis.
"We're trying to show them we haven't abandoned them," says the Rev.
Ernest Saik. "They're a human voice and not just a number. We're hearing
their stories. We want to make sure we're tending to their needs."
Shannon Easley did that -- and so much more.
A secretary in the neonatal intensive care unit of Woman's Hospital, she
befriended Rosezina Jefferson, a new mother who had arrived from New
Orleans with an amazing tale of survival.
When Katrina struck, Jefferson was just days away from her delivery
date. But when her 5-year-old son, Ashton, started having an asthma
attack, she was determined to get medical help, even though floodwaters
were swallowing her neighborhood.
Though she was 40-weeks pregnant, the 400-pound woman inched her way
down the fire escape of the two-story building, plunged into the filthy
water wearing just a sleeveless dress and swam in search of help.
"I said, 'The Lord be with me. Whatever happens, happens.' ... I wasn't
thinking about being pregnant and what could happen in the water," she
says. "My main focus was Ashton."
Even when she could feel contractions, Jefferson managed to swim through
the water reeking of gas and swirling with branches and strange bugs.
"You get your strength from somewhere," she says. When the Coast Guard
plucked her out, she begged them to go back and get her son. But she
already was in labor and was rushed out by helicopter, eventually making
her way to Baton Rouge.
The next morning, she gave birth to a son, Keith. Within days, she found
out Ashton, and her fiance, also named Keith, had made it to Houston.
By then, Jefferson had become friends with Easley who called her
husband, Willis, and explained the family's predicament.
"Are you thinking what I'm thinking?" she asked him. He was.
The two piled in a truck and made the 10-hour roundtrip, picking up
Jefferson's son and fiance and surprising the new mother back at a
church shelter. "I thought if we just do this, it could be so cool,"
Easley says. "God still takes care of his people. ... He takes something
really bad and makes it into something really good."
Jefferson is now staying at the Judson Baptist Church -- the Easleys are
members there -- and has a room with a crib, a swing and everything her
baby could possibly need.
She's not sure where she'll eventually settle.
"I don't want to make sudden decisions with a 5-year-old," she says. "I
don't want to keep moving him. ... He asks, 'When are we going home?' I
tell him I can't give you an answer when I don't know."
It will take time and patience for Jefferson and other new mothers to
get back on their feet.
Still, some good has emerged from the hurricane, says Eaton.
"The bonding between mothers and babies is more intense and stronger
from the first moment," she says. "Everyone has the feeling we're going
to survive all this. ... Right now, everybody can appreciate life
better."
(Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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