He fled Katrina, then built a 1,000-voice choir in Ohio

A local community choir that has united thousands of strangers through arts, education and volunteerism likely wouldn’t exist if Hurricane Katrina hadn’t struck 20 years ago.

Driving the news: Harmony Project founder David Brown was living in New Orleans’ French Quarter at the time.

  • After being displaced, he eventually laid roots in Columbus, which he knew from attending Capital University.

The big picture: New Orleans lost half its population overnight during Katrina, and since then, many researchers and journalists have tried to pinpoint where the displaced people ended up.

  • Axios Local reporters across the U.S. are highlighting some of their stories ahead of the storm’s anniversary on Aug. 29.

Zoom in: Brown, a Louisiana native who had most recently directed choirs in New York City, realized a lifelong dream by moving to New Orleans in 2005.

  • Just three months later, the levees broke and destroyed that dream.
  • He escaped north when flooding began, letting two Minnesota tourists jump into his car along the way. He lost nearly everything.

Flashback: Brown took refuge at his sister’s place, and eventually started volunteering at a convention center that housed survivors in Ruston, Louisiana.

  • As he processed the trauma, inspiration struck.
  • “I saw people who I knew didn’t agree on things, from different backgrounds … all there side-by-side. It didn’t matter, because they were working together,” Brown recalled.

Between the lines: He later moved to Columbus and started the community choir in Columbus in 2009, per a friend’s recommendation, because it’s a melting pot of all walks of life.

  • After experiencing 9/11 while in New York and Katrina’s devastation, the Midwest also felt like a safe place to settle — with no hurricanes, he tells Axios.

How it works: The harmony doesn’t end when Harmony Project singers walk off the stage.

  • Participants come together through service projects, including bringing the arts into area schools and prisons. Most have no professional musical training.
  • It was once a grassroots group organized via flyers, but has grown into a nonprofit of over 1,000 singers that recently filled the Schottenstein Center and inspired a CBS special with John Legend.

What’s next: Brown and his sons visit New Orleans every year, and he says he’d love to bring a Harmony Project to the city someday.

The bottom line: “I think the more we can listen to each other’s stories,” he says, “maybe the more those stories can chip away at the veneers we create to protect us.”…

Story continues

TRENDING NOW

LATEST LOCAL NEWS