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August 30, 2017 10:41 am
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Hurricane Harvey the Peak of a Devastating Three-Year Flooding Trend for Houston’s Jews

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avatar by Jacob Kamaras / JNS.org

Flood damage from Hurricane Harvey at United Orthodox Synagogues (UOS) of Houston. Photo: Robert Levy via Facebook.

JNS.org – As a member of Houston’s Jewish community — and as someone writing about a devastating flood there for the third time since May 2015 — I’m at a loss for words.

Sitting in the comforts of my third-floor apartment, where I’m fortunate enough to view the unprecedented waters of Hurricane Harvey as a spectator, it feels trite to be putting on my “journalist’s hat,” while countless others are either suffering or contributing to relief efforts.

Yet, as I’ve concluded in these situations before, the written word is a crucial part of the healing process when a natural disaster strikes. If they didn’t understand the problem before, the national and international Jewish communities should understand the crisis for Jews in Houston as not only due to Hurricane Harvey, but as part of other major floods in recent years.

Just a 10-minute walk from where I live, dozens of families in my synagogue’s community live in flood-damaged homes. This is at least the third time that many of these residences have taken in water since the Memorial Day flood of 2015.

For homeowners in the flood-stricken, Jewish-heavy neighborhoods of Meyerland and Willow Meadows, Hurricane Harvey’s wrath has undone all the hard work of two previous rebuilding processes. My congregation itself, United Orthodox Synagogues (UOS), which suffered more than $1 million in damage in the 2015 deluge and was flooded again the following year, has been dealt its most crushing blow yet.

The 2015 flood damaged about 500 Jewish homes (among more than 2,500 homes overall), as well as three synagogues in the Houston area. The 2016 Tax Day flood brought similar devastation, but the community was better prepared for that event.

Despite all the preparations for Hurricane Harvey, damage has far exceeded previous disasters; while statistics aren’t immediately available, that is immaterial. The point is that Houston’s Jews, many of whom live in areas prone to flooding, have suffered their third catastrophic weather event in as many years. Unlike previous years, when flood waters receded on the same day as the storms, Hurricane Harvey’s waters have stayed put for days as the rain persists. The road to recovery cannot immediately begin, and is too daunting to even think about.

As has been the case for other floods in recent years, my synagogue community at UOS immediately sprang into action this time, conducting boat rescues for threatened individuals and families. Local volunteer leaders — whose depth of dedication is difficult to describe — have begun intense coordination for food, laundry and housing needs, in a process that has become all too familiar for them.

The Jewish community’s relief effort was inspiring in 2015 and 2016, and it’s heartwarming again. But as I asked after the 2016 flood, and need to ask again with even greater intensity: What now? What will homeowners do after suffering three major floods? How many Jews who have laid down roots here find themselves with no suitable options remaining?

I wrote last year that, “The Jewish future in a major city is at stake.” Since then, Houston’s Jews have battled to bring things back to where they were before the Memorial Day and Tax Day floods. In 2017, Hurricane Harvey brings far more questions than answers.

We typically — and justifiably — think of Jews in far-flung, crisis-prone places like the former Soviet Union as endangered. Jewish organizations, in turn, devote significant manpower and funds to addressing overseas crises. You wouldn’t typically think of Houston as a similar disaster zone. But I would ask anyone to assess the facts of the flooding from 2015-2017 in America’s fourth-largest city, and — at the very least — ask the same questions that local Jews are asking about their future.

Jacob Kamaras is a journalist and marketing professional living in Houston. He writes for JNS.org and other national publications.

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