It was more than a year after hurricane Katrina swept through the Gulf region in 2005 and the floodwaters receded from the Lower Ninth Ward when Brittany Aydelotte first joined the relief effort in New Orleans.
Thousands of residents had been displaced; many parts of the city still resembled a disaster area. Ms. Aydelotte, then a student at The College of New Jersey in Ewing, had organized a service trip for fellow students.
But what began as a desire to help a city in desperate need has become a long-term personal passion.
Aydelotte, now 25, is a senior program coordinator for the Bonner Center for Civic and Community Engagement at The College of New Jersey, a service and scholarship program that mobilizes students around community needs.
Prior to graduating and being hired by the center, Aydelotte was part of a team of students who dedicated 300 hours a year to promoting a spirit of service on campus.
On a frigid afternoon in January, Aydelotte was installing insulation in a New Orleans home with a group of students. It was her 10th trip to the city since early 2007 – she has spent almost all of the visits participating in rebuilding projects in every corner of the city.
She has also planned and conducted trips to the region for more than 200 students, and has grown to love and admire New Orleans and its residents.
A large part of her passion for helping came from Kentucky Street resident Laura Ward, the first homeowner in New Orleans that she helped, Aydelotte says.
She recalls an afternoon when Mrs. Ward made lunch for Aydelotte’s team of volunteers and shared the story of how she was separated from her son in the frantic evacuation that followed Katrina.
Ward also told the students how grateful she was for their support.
“It was really powerful how grateful she was,” Aydelotte recalls. “It definitely contributed to my drive to keep coming back.”
To this day, Ward remembers Aydelotte and the work she did on her house.
“She was really a blessing for me,” Ward says. “For some reason we all just clicked, and she just fell into our family.”
When many people think of New Orleans, they think of its challenges, such as crime, Ward says. Aydelotte “was just one who overlooked it,” she says. “She came because she realized that people needed help.”
Aydelotte has worked to share her love for the city with her students.
“I want them to make the same connections to the people and the city that I have made,” Aydelotte says.