Outraged, Versailles fought back. Residents protested at City Hall and crowded public hearings by the hundreds, making the Vietnamese community’s presence felt in New Orleans for the first time. Legal battles are waged at the state and federal level. Tired of being passed around, the community decided to go for broke, staging a protest at the landfill to shut it down. As elders and youth fought side by side — chanting in English and Vietnamese — Versailles finally found a political voice that could no longer be ignored. As neighborhood priest Father Vien Nguyen says in the film, “Now, no one would dare speak about rebuilding New Orleans without mentioning our community, because they know we are back. They know we are here.” By S. Leo Chiang.
INDEPENDENT LENS: A Village Called Versailles

Yoojin Janice Lee/ITVS
Airs Sunday, May 30, 2010 at 11 p.m. on KPBS TV
Video Excerpt: Independent Lens: A Village Called Versailles