USA TODAY US Edition

Goodness flows from the flood

I was grateful to my soul, just as thousands of Harvey evacuees felt when help arrived

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This is the real America, a 42-year Texan writes

I’ve been a resident here for 42 years. A coule of decades ago, I was within 30 votes of being mayor of this town 30 miles southeast of Houston on the main highway to Galveston. I got to know Dickinson well when I did a door-to-door campaign in all the neighborho­ods. I lost the election, but I learned a greater truth: Thomas Jefferson was right. The American people are fundamenta­lly good, and the citizens are wiser than they are given credit for. Wisdom and goodness come from the people, he believed, not the government.

When Dickinson became the epicenter for Hurricane Harvey’s flooding, it was clear that the robust government response on all levels — federal, state, county, city — wasn’t enough. They needed the help of ordinary folks.

After the call went out for people to help in this terrible disaster, they immediatel­y did. Everyone just pitched in. Those that had boats like the Cajun Navy, fishermen and boaters of all kinds, appeared in staging areas and hauled people out of flooded neighborho­ods to safety at the direction of the Coast Guard and local first responders.

WHO WE ARE

I saw a young black man interviewe­d on why he was risking life and limb to help out. His sentiment was the same as I heard from many others: We’re Americans. This is what Americans do.

It didn’t matter if the people they were rescuing were African Americans, Hispanics, Caucasians, legals, illegals, Christians, Muslims, Jews, rich, poor. All that stuff was completely irrelevant. What was essential is that we had to get through this overwhelmi­ng disaster together. Along with the Salvation Army and the Red Cross, platoons of ordinary individual­s, businesses and churches spontaneou­sly pitched in with amazing alacrity and generosity.

For instance, Houston’s most colorful local business personalit­y, Gallery Furniture’s Jim “Mattress Mack” McIngvale, threw open his enormous warehouse stores to house and feed thousands of evacuees, and offered up his fleet of trucks to conduct rescues. The grocery chain H-E-B likewise delivered truckloads of food and water to the 10,000 evacuees at Houston’s George R. Brown Convention Center, and around the region.

On a personal level, our experience was similar. My husband and I are officially senior citizens, and not so able bodied. Happily, our house is higher than most in Dickinson, so we only got a few inches of water. But even we needed help. One generous neighbor, a former Coast Guard officer, fixed our old generator before the storm. After the flooding, the Galveston County DA Jack Roady and his family — old friends — offered us their help, knowing we couldn’t adequately deal with the aftermath ourselves. The Roady family came loaded with strong kids and ShopVacs and got our life in order within a few hours. They themselves had flooded cars they had to tend to, but they were tending to the needs of several elderly friends in the area first.

More than 100 friends and relatives offered us their homes, their help, their prayers and everything they had. The outpouring in my small corner of life was spontaneou­s and overwhelmi­ng. I was grateful to my soul, just as thousands of Houston’s evacuees felt when their rescuers and helpers arrived.

THE GREATER STORY

My experience was just a tiny microcosm of what was happening on an enormous scale throughout Texas. The whole traumatic week of Hurricane Harvey was not only a tale of horrific destructio­n but also a greater story of how heroic Americans innately are, and how divisions between us don’t really matter. Texans are especially gifted in this sort of heroism since we have our full share of natural disasters, as do heroes from Louisiana, Mississipp­i and other states who arrived almost instantly in Houston to help.

In fact, the one bright side of the disaster is that everyone across America saw genuine heroism and goodness on television, for a full week. Here’s how we act, here’s what we do.

The corollary to that is: Think of how great this nation would be if we tackled every challenge as we tackled Harvey — with generosity, heroism, common sense, humanity, bravery, compassion and an utter disregard for the artificial difference­s we’re told divide us. The simple and undeniable truth is that we’re all in this together. Politician­s and the news media alike ought to pause their relentless sniping, stop focusing on unimportan­t gossip and other irrelevanc­ies — and just act like Americans.

Our ordinary citizens just gave them a week-long object lesson in how to do that, for all to see: Roll up your sleeves.

Do some good.

Help.

Alcestis Cooky Oberg is on USA TODAY’s Board of Contributo­rs.

 ?? KELSEY WALLING, AP ?? Residents in Dickinson, Texas, wait for help on Sunday.
KELSEY WALLING, AP Residents in Dickinson, Texas, wait for help on Sunday.

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