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Pacific Palisades woman celebrates 97th birthday months after losing longtime home in Palisades Fire
Pacific Palisades woman celebrates 97th birthday months after losing longtime home in Palisades Fire

Yahoo

time24-04-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Pacific Palisades woman celebrates 97th birthday months after losing longtime home in Palisades Fire

LOS ANGELES - Louvenia Jenkins would have liked to celebrate her 97th birthday at the home she has lived in for a good 60 years — the home she bought in the Pacific Palisades as a single African American woman, at a time when segregation kept non-whites away from such neighborhoods and banks didn't grant home loans to women. But her home was one of the thousands destroyed in January's Palisades Fire. The backstory Getting her home wasn't easy. Owners wouldn't accept her offers. But she joined the Fair Housing Council, which fought discriminatory housing prices. It was a member of the council who sold her the home. Now, she's working to start over. It isn't easy, but Jenkins is embracing it with the grace and strength that has been guiding her all her life. The retired teacher has been breaking barriers her entire life. She said she just didn't see them. SUGGESTED: Palisades Fire victims hold first community event since deadly blaze Why you should care Jenkins was a teacher and administrator for LAUSD, funding a scholarship for Black college students in her brother's name. She traveled the world, teaching in Japan and Malaysia; visiting the Louvre in Paris; and making her way from Coastal Ghana to the Swiss Alps. She managed to win over people wherever she traveled. Labeled a pillar of the community by Pacific Palisades neighbors, she would often be seen volunteering at the library to work with children on their reading. No wonder the community gathered to create a GoFundMe campaign when she lost her home and everything in it. Overwhelmed by the support, Jenkins says she may have lost a home, but not her community, which now includes a whole new group of friends at the retirement home she is presently staying at. "At the end" she quotes a poem from one of her Getty Museum volunteer journal articles: "I am responsible for being what I want to be in spite" of whatever may come her way. The Source Information in this story is from interviews with Louvenia Jenkins.

One of the first Black homeowners in Pacific Palisades lost home during wildfire but has hope for future
One of the first Black homeowners in Pacific Palisades lost home during wildfire but has hope for future

CBS News

time24-02-2025

  • General
  • CBS News

One of the first Black homeowners in Pacific Palisades lost home during wildfire but has hope for future

A Southern California woman who broke barriers as one of the first Black homeowners in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood was one of the many who lost everything in the recent wildfire. Now with the support of the community around her, she's holding onto hope for a better future. Although now she lives in a brand-new assisted living facility in Culver City, 96-year-old Louvenia Jenkins said she feels lost. "Each day I wake up and I'm like where am I," Jenkins said. It's because the Palisades Fire destroyed her home of almost 60 years in a neighborhood where the postman once told her, she's a first. "I said, 'Are there any other Black people who live in the Pacific Palisades?' and he said, 'No they're about six, but they're all passing. They are Black but you don't know they're Black.'" Jenkins moved from the Midwest to Santa Monica, just after World War II. It was all her clever but uneducated single mother Ruby could afford. "My mother was very sure that she wanted to see that I got my education," Jenkins said. A city map from 1939 showed Santa Monica divided into the least and most desirable residential zones. After Jenkins got her master's in education from the University of Southern California, she knew she could move up into the more desirable zones. "Somehow, I knew about the Palisades. I'm not sure why, but I knew it was someplace I wanted to live," Jenkins said. By the 60s, Jenkins was a well-respected Los Angeles Unified School District administrator. She admits, as a single, African American woman, her house-hunting journey in the Palisades wasn't easy. "There was one person who didn't get off the couch when I showed interest in the house," Jenkins said. She didn't give up. She recruited the help of the Fair Housing Council. "They'd go in advance and see how people felt about selling their homes. A person of my ilk would then go behind and make an offer," Jenkins said. Her offer was $45,000 and they accepted. In 1967, Jenkins became one of the first female Black homeowners in the Palisades. She and her mother filled their home with art from their international travels. Their furniture, valuables and tennis trophies are all gone in the fires. "It's lost in a way, but it's not lost," Jenkins said. Thanks to her long-time caregiver Josemaría Lima who always took photos of the 96-year-old's home, not everything is lost. Lima sends photos of Jenkins' home and memories to her relatives. On the day of the fire, traffic was so backed up, that Jenkins told Lima to stay home. But Lima went to get her anyway and it saved her life. The two are now printing the photos to decorate her new apartment. "I'm not defined by what I lost. I'm only defined by what I could rebuild," Jenkins said. "Hope is always alive. Hope is never dead."

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