A LETTER FROM MEMPHIS, by Kim Hayes
The words I spoke as Kim and I talked on the back of that U-haul were statements of my disbelief and utter disgust of the governments' treatment towards not only black Americans, but also to the poor and under privileged as well. My son, whom I spoke of in the movie, never joined the armed forces but, went on to college at the University of Memphis where he is now a sophomore.
All the hurt and aguish I felt for Kim and Scott, was magnified by my own struggle as a single, working mother , barely able give her own family their necessities. I too, who had been repeatedly let down by the government, felt their pain. The words that were said by our leaders at that time couldn't negate the years of frustration felt by all of poor America and now the victims of Katrina. The films delivers a slap in the face to the politicians of that time and still today who continue to throw the covers over their unthinkable mistakes. The Roberts' account of the tragedy they turn into triumph will uplift your spirits and give you hope in the midst of the many crisis's all of America now faces...
Allow "trouble the Water" to flood your disappointments with her message of truth.
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