Category Archives: Haiti

POD ~ Haitian Fishing Boats

Haiti Fishing Boats

Haiti Fishing Boats

Every coastal village in Haiti has a small fleet of fishing boats. The fishermen either sail or scull (row) to boats several miles off shore to their fishing grounds. Most fishing is done with nets, including cast nets, gill-nets, and seine nets. Traps woven from reeds or split bamboo are also used. Hook and line fishing techniques are used too but very little recreational fishing is done.

Fishermen

Fishermen

Also posted in Fish, Photo of the Day | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

POD ~ Sea Worthy?

Sea Worthy?

Sea Worthy?

Also posted in Boats, Photo of the Day | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Colors of Haiti

Colors of Haiti 1

Colors of Haiti (click to enlarge)

“Beyond mountains, are more mountains.”

“Little by little the bird builds its nest.”

Haitian Proverbs

An extract from the 1983 poemmeme le soleil est nu” by Haitian born Anthony Phelps reads:

There once was a Country

There once was a City

There once was a Country

whose children did not dream

Colors of Haiti 2

Colors of Haiti (click to enlarge)

There is a spirit and spirituality in Haiti like nowhere else. Haitians are resolute and tenacious and, in time, will move beyond the horrendous hardships they are currently facing. Haiti changes you. Below the flow of everyday life is a rhythm that knows how to celebrate being alive. A rhythm that gives memories to all of the senses.For me it is the sights. Haitians have a vibrancy for life that shows in the bold, tropical colors they surround themselves with. No matter how humble their abode it will be brightly painted and often the clothes they wear or the utensils they use in their daily lives are just as bright and cheerful.

Preparing the Colors of Haiti Gallery has been so much fun. Choosing from the hundreds of images I have of Haiti was a very enjoyable reminiscence.  The entire nation seems to be in bright and lively motion. The countryside is like a continuous market with an endless variety of all things imaginable for sale. The towns with their vividly painted modest dwellings, also where all things imaginable being for sale,  are a riot of color. Psychedelic comes to mind. Haiti changes you and I look forward to being changed again.

Colors of Haiti 3

Colors of Haiti (click to enlarge)

Also posted in Color, Les Cayes, Note Cards, Port-au-Prince | Leave a comment

Doing Good Well in Haiti

Zanmi Lasante, known as Partners in Health traces its origins back to 1985 when Paul Farmer, a medical student at Harvard, and Ophelia Dahl, a 19-year-old social activist helped a local priest launch a rudimentary clinic in the impoverished village of Cange in central Haiti. In 1987, Farmer, Dahl, and three others officially established Partners in Health at Harvard University to address the entwined epidemics of poverty and disease. Today, ZL ranks as one of the largest nongovernmental health care providers in Haiti – and the only provider of comprehensive primary care, regardless of ability to pay, for more than half a million impoverished people  living in the mountainous Central Plateau.

Haiti's Kids (click to enlarge)

That first modest clinic in Cange has grown into the flagship Zanmi Lasante Sociomedical Complex, featuring a 104-bed, full-service hospital with two operating rooms, adult and pediatric inpatient wards, an infectious disease center, an outpatient clinic, a women’s health clinic (Proje Sante Fanm), ophthalmology and general medicine clinics, a laboratory, a pharmaceutical warehouse, a Red Cross blood bank, radiographic services, and a dozen schools.

Parnters in Health earthquake response:

• PIH quickly established field hospitals in Port-au-Prince, helping set up 20 operating rooms, 12 of which were able to function around the clock.

• PIH established a comprehensive triage and relief transfer system to move patients back and forth from Port-au-Prince to PIH sites in the Central Plateau and Lower Artibonite Valley.

• PIH is evacuating patients in critical condition to hospitals in the United States and Dominican Republic as well as to the U.S.N.S. Comfort.

• PIH has sent 66 plane loads with more than 235 medical volunteers – orthopedic surgeons, anesthesiologists, surgical nurses and other medical professionals – and roughly 100,000 lbs of medical supplies to support the large network of PIH’s local health care providers already working in Haiti.

• The long-term ramifications in Haiti are going to be significant and far-reaching with a new, large group of vulnerable and displaced people. PIH has the experience and commitment to Stand With Haiti for many years to come.

Looking ahead, PIH’s efforts will be spent in three core areas:
1) supporting the public sector’s ability to provide health care;
2) mobilizing people at the grassroots level to participate in the health care system; and
3) addressing the mid- and long-term health, social, and economic ramifications of the resettlement of tens of thousands of people from Port-au-Prince to areas where PIH works.

Partners in Health has been working successfully in Haiti for over twenty years and is committed to being there long into the future. PIH is the perfect example of doing good well. Please consider making a contribution to Partners in Health.

Haiti's Kids (click to enlarge)

Also posted in Earthquake, Les Cayes, Partners in Health, Port-au-Prince | Leave a comment

Hope for Haiti?

Dignified Haitian Woman

Diginity (click to enlarge)

Genyen tout yon sosyete ki pou change.
(There is a whole society to be changed.)

– Haitian Proverb

Is there hope for Haiti? Some say the recent earthquake may be Haiti’s last, best chance. If the answer is yes,  it will take a massive amount of commitment, effort and aid from the developed world.

Haiti will need a trained, functioning government; something it has not been able to do. Remember, almost without exception, its leadership has been incompetent, corrupt, or repressive—or some combination of the three. The country, by some counts,  has endured 33 coups.

Beyond the immediate needs resulting from the earthquake disaster, the country needs a healthcare system and the population must have access to clean water. The infrastructure must be rebuilt including an electrical and telecommunications grid which has never existed. Reliable financial institutions and industrial investment will be required.

Perhaps the greatest need is education. Education for everyone, especially girls.  Birth rates and infant mortality will go down. Education will raise prospects for economic prosperity and peace. Further, a microfinance program aimed at women is proven to improve standards of living.

Also posted in Earthquake, Les Cayes, Port-au-Prince | Leave a comment

What’s with Haiti

The recent devastating earthquake in Haiti has generated talk about Haiti being a “failed state’ and whether it can survive as a nation. In order to understand how Haiti got to where it is as a nation before the earthquake , and why it was unable to respond to this recent tragedy,  one must have some understanding of the country’s history.

Haitian Children

Haitian Children (click to enlarge)

As one sees, in 1804, Haiti became the first black republic in the world to declare its independence. A nation born of a slave revolt set a dangerous precedent in the minds of most other nations and very few acknowledged Haiti’s sovereignty. This, coupled with much infighting,  never allowed Haiti’s economy to find a firm footing and the country has lagged in development ever since.

The United States has almost continuously involved itself  in Haiti’s affairs. Its policy has rotated from trade embargoes to threats of invasion to outright occupation to tolerating some of the most brutal dictatorships in history to counter its paranoia  over the growth of socialism in Cuba.

Haiti seems to attract natural disasters and because of its non-functioning government the people suffer far more than necessary. Since the 1990′s, when tens of thousands of so-called boat people fled to southern Florida in makeshift craft,the situation has improved somewhat thanks to an infusion of international aid and some semblance of security provided by U.N. peacekeepers.

Haiti Boats

Haiti Boats (click to enlarge)

Also posted in Earthquake, Les Cayes, Port-au-Prince | Leave a comment

Haiti: Update 2

Jean Claude

Slowly, the extent of the catastrophe in Haiti generally, and Port-au-Prince specifically, is becoming more evident. The news is usually grim but occasionally it is good, indeed. Such is the case with my friend Jean Claude who was our interpreter on our first trip to Haiti. He lives in Carrefour near the quake’s epicenter. I sent an email to him the other day and got an almost instant reply:

Thank you my friend for your prayers.
I am alive.God rescued me from the death.and save me. A roof fell on me I was pulled out from the debris by a friend names montas.
For now I am homeless,but the family is ok.
I will talk to you again when I find another opportunity.
Jean Claude

Donette Lataillade, the manager of the Guest House in Port-au-Prince where we would stay while coming and going from Haiti, through an email said “Thank you so much for your prayers and concerns. We are all well by the grace of God.”

Marco & Ruth (click to enlarge)

Rev Marco Depestre, Jr. is the pastor we have worked with in Les Cayes. While he is responsible for the Les Cayes district  he lives with his family in Port-au-Prince. Those who have been to Les Cayes can appreciate his concern about the toilet facilities, especially at the church.

Holy Trinity Episcopal Church (click to enlarge)

Our 2009 Christmas card was an image of a beautiful mural above the alter in the sanctuary of Holy Trinity Episcopal Church in the heart of Port-au-Prince. Sadly, the church built in the 1920′s now is rubble, the beautiful murals lost forever.


Grace Children’s Hospital is close to the church and the Presidential Palace. It is badly damaged and the children are being kept in a courtyard. The hospital treats children for TB and malnutrition and serves as a clinic for the general population as well as HIV/AIDS patients. One can only imagine what it must be like there now.

Presidential Palace (click to enlarge)

Everyone has probably seen pictures of the collapsed Presidential Palace. This is what it looked like before the earthquake.



Also posted in Children, Earthquake, Les Cayes, Murals, Port-au-Prince | 1 Comment

Haiti Update

Doyle and Carolyn Ellis, who most of you know, from Vincennes, IN received an email from Rev Marco Depestre in Haiti. A letter from Rev Gesner PAUL<, the President of the Methodist Church in Haiti and some photos of the earthquake damage in Port-au-Prince were included.

Methodist Chapel (click to enlarge)

Methodist Chapel (click to enlarge)

It is my understanding this small chapel in the hills overlooking Port-au-Prince, where we had worshiped, has been destroyed.

Also reported is that the Guest House that we would stay in when arriving and departing Haiti is relatively undamaged. Since they have a generator they apparently are able to function quite well. Some or the other buildings in that compound are damaged, however.

Also posted in Earthquake | Leave a comment

Haiti

Carrefour, Haiti (click to enlarge)

As the world knows, Haiti was devastated by a major earthquake this week, the epicenter of which was located in Carrefour, part of the urban sprawl of Port-au-Prince, the densely populated capital and home to a third of the population of the poorest nation in the western hemisphere.

Driving through Carrefour (click to enlarge)

We have been to Haiti twice in recent years, and when the time is right, look forward to returning. Haiti changes you. The people of Haiti have a spirit, resiliency, and tenacity unlike any where else. But right now Haiti needs help. They need the obvious like food and water, emergency medical assistance, clothing and shelter. Haiti also needs help with taking care of its dead in a dignified manner. Longer term, this is probably the last best chance for the global community to help Haiti rebuild both physically and politically.

We would pass through Carrefour on our six hour, 120 mile drive to Les Cayes,  where we worked on constructing a medical center. Once back in Port Au Prince we would spend our final evening in Haiti having dinner at the Hotel Montana, a grand hotel overlooking the city.

Hotel Montana (click to enlarge)

The hotel, a favorite gathering place for NGO and UN staffers, completely collapsed in the earthquake and hundreds of lives were lost.

Part Au Prince from Hotel Montana (click to enlarge)

Related Posts with Thumbnails
Also posted in Earthquake | 1 Comment