OCCUPY CONEY ISLAND
Anna
Lederman, a Russian-speaking nurse working with Occupy Sandy, walked up
fourteen flights of a pitch-black stairwell in the Surfside Gardens
housing complex in Coney Island on Monday and knocked on an apartment
door, the only light coming from her small headlamp. An elderly woman
wearing a babushka, walking slowly with a cane, told Lederman in Russian
that she was all alone. She had her medications, but could not get down
the stairs, and needed food. “This,” she said, “is like the second
blockade of Leningrad.”
Many New Yorkers affected by the storm
have complained about the uneven response from the city, FEMA, and Red
Cross. Veterans of the Occupy movement, with experience in New Orleans
at the Common Ground Clinic after Katrina, and in Zuccotti Park last
year, have stepped in to fill the gap.
“That’s one of the reasons
we mobilized here first,” said Becca Piser, a street medic trained as a
first-responder. “No one’s telling us where to go or not to go.” The
Occupy crew in Coney Island also included some of Lederman's fellow
nurses from Columbia University, who had been working in shelters and on
the Occupy mission to Far Rockaway; a Russian and Spanish translator,
who had answered the call on Facebook; Shawn Westfahl, one of the first
medics at the Occupy encampment in Zuccotti Park; and Roger Benham and
Jeff “Fidget” (his Occupy name), who worked together doing disaster
relief in New Orleans and in Haiti after the earthquake.
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