when we come back, malik rahim. stay with us. ♪ [music break] amy: this is democracy now!ocracynow.org, the war and peace report. i'm amy goodman. as we continue our coverage of the 10th anniversary of hurricane katrina. in a moment, we'll be joined by malik rahim, co-founder of the common ground collective, which helped bring thousands of people from all over the world to help rebuild new orleans after the storm. but first, i want to rebroadcast a part of malik's interview on democracy now!, just days after katrina hit in 2005. when we went down to new orleans and the neighborhood of algiers, malik took us around the corner to a community health center, a multi-service center, and he showed us how a courts still remained in the street unattended. let's go back to that day. >> a sickly, you can smell it from right here. -- basically, you can smell it from right here. they go by a look at it, but they are not going to do nothing to pick it up. amy: he walked us down the driveway next to the health center and lifted up a sheet of corrugated metal marked with an x, revealing