Rebuild or Reconsider?

Tornadoes happen. Having grown up in Oklahoma, I remember many tornadoes passing near or through our town, but I was always confident that they were something that happened to other people. I thought that it was just a case of bad luck, the finger of God smudging a thin line of destruction across someone else’s lawn. It has to be someone, though, and how do you move on from such devastatingly bad luck?

The residents of Greensburg, KS are facing a serious choice, rebuild or relocate? The town was leveled, 95% reduced to rubble, nary a standing structure to be seen except the Co-Op and the courthouse. So where do you find the heart to say that things will be okay?

The remains of Greensburg, KS

The story of Greensburg is inspiring because it makes it clear that the hope for the town’s future doesn’t lie in FEMA or the Red Cross, but in the community’s residents. Mayor Lonnie McCollum is sleeping in a friend’s pickup truck, but he gives no Woe Is Me speeches, and he doesn’t slump his shoulders; he stands up and shares his vision of using this as an opportunity to rebuild a town that stronger and better than before. ”I don’t see this mess. I see what it’s going to be,” he said. ”Who wouldn’t want to live in a brand new town? Who wouldn’t want to have a business in a whole new town?”

In a time of gut-wrenching uncertainty, McCollum is doing just what a leader should do. He looks past the immediate catastrophe and sees a path forward. I think the community will rally behind him, I think that Greensburg will be okay.

Question for Discussion:
How is this different from the devastation of New Orleans caused by Hurricane Katrina and the community’s reaction to that catastrophe? Is it just the sizes of the towns that makes the difference, or is there something else going on here?


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