There are benefits springing up all over where you may attend and help in the Christian relief effort for Haiti.
 You may find up to date information on our Christian news page. 
Six months after the earthquake, Haitian Ministries remains focused on
delivering relief aid directly to people in Port-au-Prince and surrounding
communities whose lives have been upended by the devastation.

Since mid-January through July, Haitian Ministries has given more than
$252,000 in emergency funds to it partners: 1) nine twinned parish
communities; 2) two orphanages in or just outside Port-au-Prince; 3) a
neighborhood meal program for 75 to 140 children in a city slum; 4) a meal
program for children on the island of La Gonave; 5) special medical missions
in and around Port-au-Prince; and 6) art therapy for children and teenagers
to help them deal with the trauma of the earthquake and its aftermath.

In a tent city.jpgAlso, five members of the ministry's Haitian staff have
received financial assistance for themselves and their families, and their
children have been enrolled in the ministry's scholarship program. The
Tierney-Tobin Memorial Scholarship program pays for the tuitions and books
needed for private school, whether it is primary or secondary, a technical
school, or a university. (Since the government provides very little public
education, more than 90 percent of Haiti's students attend private
institutions.)

Lanitte Belladente, the Norwich Mission House cook who underwent an
amputation to a leg injured in the collapse of the house, has received
additional financial and medical support. She is now being fitted for a
prosthesis by the Hanger Clinic, set up at Hospital Albert Schweitzer in
Deschapelles (in central Haiti) to treat amputees.

The $252,000 in emergency assistance does not mark the completion of relief
funds and does not include the considerable financial aid that most of the
nine parishes and the two orphanages have received directly from their
twinned partners in the United States through Haitian Ministries. The
twinning relationships have formed over the last 25 years through Haitian
Ministries.

For instance, the Diocese of Norwich of Connecticut, which itself is twinned
with the Archdiocese of Port-au-Prince, has given $25,000 to help the
archdiocese recover from the catastrophe that took lives-including that of
Archbishop Serge Miot-and destroyed many churches and rectories. Haitian
Ministries has given the archdiocese thus far an additional $26,000.

Haitian Ministries also shipped or took to the archdiocese more than 200
items used in the Catholic Church during the celebration of Mass, including
vestments and chalices. These were donated by people and churches after an
appeal throughout the Diocese of Norwich.

Although Haitian Ministries lost its Norwich Mission House on January 12th,
it has been renting a house in the same area of the city. Four staff members
and their families are living full- or part-time at the house, which serves
as the ministry's base for in-country operations. A parish in Milwaukee-Our
Lady of Lourdes-is twinned with the mission house and has also provided
significant emergency aid.

Medical mission teams have been housed at the temporary mission house, and
art therapists from the U.S., France and Canada who are participating in the
therapy initiative stay there. The therapists belong to CHART (Communities
Healing through ART), an association formed in 2005 to recruit art
therapists to give psycho-social treatment to children in South Asia
following the tsunami. The CHART initiative through Haitian Ministries is
the group's largest commitment and is envisioned to last at least a year,
with training for Haitians who could continue the work for years to come.

Over the last six months, Haitian Ministries has been working to keep track
of all the students in its Tierney-Tobin scholarship program. Seven of the
136 students who began the 2009-2010 academic year in the program were
killed in the earthquake. Many of the schools were destroyed or damaged.
Today, most of the surviving 129 students are back in class until the end of
the academic year in August. (The school calendar shifted because of the
disaster.)

All the students, who range from first-graders to medical school students,
are sponsored by donors in the United States and live (or lived before the
earthquake) in the Norwich Mission House neighborhood. They attend
high-performing private schools in the area, and their enrollment in the
scholarship program is predicated on financial need and academic merit.
Haitian Ministries will provide the family of each student a special $50
allotment this summer.

Also, for the coming school year, the ministry must replace thousands of
dollars worth of books lost in the earthquake. The ministry hopes to find
more donors willing to sponsor students in the Tierney-Tobin, because the
number of families in dire need has soared; many families with one child in
the program have requested admittance of their other children, because they
have lost the jobs they held before the earthquake.

Because most of the students now live in tents and attend schools that are
in ruins, Haitian Ministries hopes to provide a critically needed Student
Resource Center in the mission house neighborhood. The rented space-about
the size of two large classrooms-would offer a safe and clean location where
children and teenagers could study at desks, find basic reference materials,
and use computers. As the center develops, special classes would help in
computer literacy for all ages, and workshops would be geared to the needs
of students in different grades. A tutoring program, in which older students
would help younger ones, would be instituted.

In the early days after the earthquake, Haitian Ministries put out appeals
for the donation of tents, tarps, blankets, and art supplies. The responses
by individuals, student groups, civic groups, and other associations have
been greatly appreciated.

Haitian Ministries knows that Haiti's recovery from the earthquake will take
years of focus and dedication, solid planning and partnership, and hard
work. Relief funds beyond the $252,000 will be given in months ahead.

In the years to come, Haitian Ministries will stand firm by its guiding
principle of "helping Haitians help Haitians."

(For more details on funds already given to the parishes, orphanages, meal
programs, and other partners, please see the home page of our website:
www.haitianministries.org.)

Christian Aid is now arriving to the people of Haiti in all kinds of forms to help the island that has been hit by the worst disaster in its history.
The earthquake has killed over 200,000 Haitians and left over three million Haitian people Leaving them without food, housing, water, electricity, and medical care.
There are now countless Haitian orphans who lost their families in the Haitian earthquake looking for loving homes.
From all over the world monetary aid to food, clothing, water, and medical help is starting to get to the island of Haiti and its people.
 
Non-monetary aid to Haiti that is needed includes:  high protein foods that are non-perishable( peanut butter, protein bars, beans, canned meat, and baby formula.), Diapers and clothing, Medical supplies, and water.
 
Please visit these Christian sites to find out how you can help the Haitian people in their plight.
This is an awful disaster that has befallen the Haitian people.

Right now emergency aid is needed for the Haitian people.  In the near future the country of Haiti will need to be rebuilt.
They will need Earthquake proof housing, hospitals, schools, infrastructure, and Christian churches.

I believe god has given, us Christians, this opportunity to help others in need and to spread his word.

Let us embrace this responsibility with kindness and compassion.
 
Thank you and God bless you, the Haitian people, and their families.



Haitian Chriatian Disaster Relief Distribution Points in the United States

Kentucky:  NWHCM - 150 Laralan Ave. Suite E, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
                                  Contact;  (502) 695-7870 Monday - Friday 9a.m. to 4p.m.

Florida:  Tomoka Christian Church - 1151 West Granada Boulevard, Ormond Beach, Florida 32174
                           Contact:  Barb Kennedy (386) 677-6455 Monday - Friday 10a.m to p.m.
                                            Leah Putting (386) 214-1449 Monday - Friday 10a.m. to 6p.m.

Central Indiana:  Common Ground - 4550 N Illinois St. Indianapolis, Indiana 46208
                                                      Contact:  (317) 251-1494 Monday - Friday 9a.m. to 4 p.m.

Western Indiana:
  Hanging Rock Camp - 6988 S State Rd. 263, West Lebanon, Indiana 47991


If you have a Christian organization that has a way of getting supplies to Haiti please contact us as Jonathan@mybrosgotmyback.com or call me anytime on the weekends or between 6p.m. to 9p.m. Eastern time Monday -Friday.
(203) 812-8479
IN HAITI, THE DISPLACED ARE LEFT CLINGING TO THE EDGE

By DEBORAH SONTAG

New York Times – Sunday, July 11, 2010

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Hundreds of displaced families live perilously in a
single file of flimsy shanties planted along the median strip of a heavily
congested coastal road here called the Route des Rails.

Vehicles rumble by day and night, blaring horns, kicking up dust and
belching exhaust. Residents try to protect themselves by positioning tires
as bumpers in front of their shacks but cars still hit, injure and sometimes
kill them. Rarely does anybody stop to offer help, and Judith Guillaume, 23,
often wonders why.

“Don’t they have a heart, or a suggestion?” asked Ms. Guillaume, who covers
her children’s noses with her floral skirt when the diesel fumes get
especially strong. Haiti Jan-Feb 2010 photos 327

Six months after the earthquake that brought aid and attention here from
around the world, the median-strip camp blends into the often numbing
wretchedness of the post-disaster landscape. Only 28,000 of the 1.5 million
Haitians displaced by the earthquake have moved into new homes, and the
Port-au-Prince area remains a tableau of life in the ruins.

The tableau does contain a spectrum of circumstances: precarious, neglected
encampments; planned tent cities with latrines, showers and clinics;
debris-strewn neighborhoods where residents have returned to both intact and
condemnable houses; and, here and there, gleaming new shelters or bulldozed
territory for a city of the future.

But the government of

iti/index.html?inline=nyt-geo> Haiti has been slow to make the difficult
decisions needed to move from a state of emergency into a period of
recovery. Weak before the disaster and further weakened by it, the
government has been overwhelmed by the logistical complexities of issues
like debris removal and the identification of safe relocation sites.

In some cases, the government has also been politically skittish about, say,
creating new slums or encouraging people to return to undamaged homes when
the ground beneath them could move again.

In others, it has taken charge but gotten bogged down. Since early May,
President

dex.html?inline=nyt-per> René Préval has personally focused, in granular
detail, on returning about 11,600 Haitians camped in front of the National
Palace to the Fort National neighborhood. But while Fort National is now a
beehive of cleanup activity, no transitional shelters have been erected
there yet.

In contrast, the Adventist Development and Relief Agency, working directly
with a hands-on mayor in the Carrefour municipality in metropolitan
Port-au-Prince, has already moved more than 500 families from its large tent
city into simple pine houses whose concrete foundations incorporate recycled
debris.

“Even though I lost my mom in the earthquake, I feel so content, so
comfortable and so lucky to have this place,” Ketly Louis, 33, said,
welcoming visitors into her new home on the site of the old home that
collapsed on her mother.

International organizations here, while empathetic because of the difficulty
of issues like land ownership, criticize the government for creating
obstacles of its own. Significant delays in clearing supplies through
customs, for instance, slow recovery efforts even as they earn the
government substantial fees for storage.

And with hurricane season under way and many tents and tarpaulins needing
replacement or reinforcement, some humanitarian groups complain about what
they see as the government’s failure to articulate a clear resettlement
strategy.

“Everywhere I go, people ask me, ‘When will we get out of this camp?’ ” said
Julie Schindall, a spokeswoman in Haiti for the international aid group
Oxfam. “And I have no answer. There needs to be communication on how all
this camp business is going to be resolved.”

Haitian and

nations/index.html?inline=nyt-org> United Nations officials urge patience in
the aftermath of what they call the largest urban disaster in modern
history. They point to accomplishments in providing emergency food, water
and shelter and averting starvation, exodus and violence.

“What hasn’t happened is worth noting,” said Nigel Fisher, deputy special
representative of the United Nations secretary general in Haiti. “We haven’t
had a major outbreak of disease. We haven’t had a major breakdown in
security.”

Also, they note, the Haitian government, while juggling the sometimes
conflicting pressures from international donors, is handicapped by the
destruction or damage of most of its ministries and the large numbers of
civil servants killed. “I defy any country on earth to be fully functional
at this stage after such a disaster,” said Imogen Wall, spokeswoman for the
United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

In Aceh, Indonesia, after the tsunami of 2004, which left the national
government intact, it took more than two years to get the displaced
population out of tents, Ms. Wall said.

Mr. Fisher said: “In terms of speed, it’s never fast enough. But this
matches what has happened around the world in comparable situations.”

Perilous Settlements

That is little comfort to the residents of the median strip on the Route des
Rails.

Since the earthquake, displaced people apparently with no alternatives have
planted tenuous roots in the most unsettling places — atop a municipal dump,
inside a graveyard, on the bank of a soccer field flooded with contaminated
water.

But the median-strip encampment demonstrates acutely both how miserable many
settlements are and how they have become hidden in plain sight. Every day,
thousands of drivers pass by the threadbare shanties on this coastal
thoroughfare.

Only a quarter of the more than 1,200 post-earthquake camps are managed
externally by aid organizations; the rest fend for themselves. In the Route
des Rails encampment, that means relying on Luma Ludger, the camp leader,
who keeps meticulous records in a handwritten ledger — and prays.

“God takes care of us,” Mr. Ludger said. He pointed across the highway. “And
we also have those latrines.”

In March, Islamic Aid, a French organization, set up the latrines, which
require users to dash through traffic, especially trying for the many camp
residents who have diarrhea. The Red Cross also came by and handed out
hygiene kits.

“They told us it was very dangerous to be here, and asked what they could do
for us,” Mr. Ludger said. “I told them we need land. They said, ‘Wow, we
cannot help with that’ and gave us toothpaste.”

Gerta Mojene, a mother of four, asked a reporter how to find a safer place
to live. Asked where she might want to go, Ms. Mojene lowered her reddened
eyes and said, “Wherever you send me.”

Mr. Ludger said that the mayor had spoken of evicting the median-strip
squatters for their safety but had not proposed a substitute location. “Life
here is a game of chance, you know,” he said.

A couple dozen residents have been seriously injured by vehicles; they wear
casts and slings. At least three have been killed, among them, relatives
said, the father of a baby born on the median strip on the evening after the
earthquake.

The baby’s name is Katastrof Natirèl — Natural Disaster.

A Presidential Priority

By early spring, when many tent cities appeared to be getting entrenched,
President Préval decided to make the large one on the Champ de Mars his
personal priority. He wanted to demonstrate the logic of the government’s
plan to return displaced people to their original neighborhoods, in this
case Fort National. He wanted to show progress and be associated with
results.

But Mr. Préval created instead a showcase for the difficulties involved in
finding a quick alternative to the camps. Fort National, a densely layered
hilltop area badly hit by the quake, proved an especially difficult place to
clean up and repopulate first.

The president’s motivation for focusing on the Champ de Mars camp was at
least partly political. The raggedy tent city, with its piles of garbage,
puddles of standing water, swarms of mosquitoes, packs of thieves and an
increasingly restive population, sits in the front yard of the smashed
National Palace.

At the camp itself, where residents strip and bathe in the open, squatting
over small plastic tubs, many remain unaware that they have become the
president’s pet project. “Nobody tells us anything,” said Micheline Félix,
30. “It seems like they’re just waiting for us to wash away with the first
big rain.”

But since May, right next door, Mr. Préval has presided over regular, often
lengthy meetings of the

Champ de Mars-Fort National working group; they begin at 7 a.m. and finish
“when the president rises,” said Shaun Scales of the International
Organization for Migration.

According to Leslie Voltaire, Haiti’s special envoy to the United Nations,
the operating theory was that those with intact homes would be provided some
kind of incentive to move back; those with reparable homes would get
materials and assistance to fix them; and those with destroyed homes would
be given transitional shelters in Fort National or moved to a planned
settlement outside Port-au-Prince.

It soon became apparent, however, that Fort National was in very bad shape.
In an engineering survey, some 55 percent of its structures received a red
tag, meaning they were unsafe and destined for demolition. That is much
higher than the average of 24 percent red tags elsewhere.

At the same time, only 18 percent of the homes in Fort National were tagged
green, or immediately reinhabitable — compared with 47 percent in other
areas surveyed.

Further, rubble removal, a $500 million problem facing the recovery effort,
has proved especially difficult in Fort National. International experts say
it would take three to five years to remove all the debris from Haiti if
1,000 or more trucks worked daily; fewer than 300 trucks are hauling rubble
now. But those trucks cannot penetrate much of Fort National, which has only
one main road and lots of steep alleys. In some places, even wheelbarrows
cannot be used. Rubble has to be carried out pail by pail, which at least
provides jobs.

Tortue Larose, 27, who earns $5 a day cleaning up Fort National, stood at
the partly cleared summit of the neighborhood recently, pointing at a speck
of green plastic in the dirt: “See that green?” he said. “That’s where my
house was. That’s where I was born. That’s where I intend to die.”

Where to dump the rubble that fills Mr. Larose’s buckets presents another
problem. There is no debris plan for Fort National just as there is no
master plan for rubble removal, said Eric Overvest, the United Nations
Development Program’s country director. Normally, he said, a rubble plan is
developed within a month of a major disaster. Port-au-Prince, the capital,
did not have a pre-earthquake land use plan, complicating matters.

Still, in almost six months the government has identified only one rubble
site, the municipal dump called Truitier. More sites are needed — as are
decisions on whether rubble will be recycled and how.

Additionally, debris contains personal effects, and sometimes bodies; it
also has a potential monetary value if it is to be reused. “It’s not just
the rubble, it’s the question of rubble ownership,” Mr. Scales said. Most in
Fort National are renters but the rubble technically belongs to the property
owners. And sorting out who owns what land, and getting their permission to
excavate has proved difficult, Mr. Scales said.

“It isn’t a case of going straight onto land with an excavator,” he said.

For those few whose homes in Fort National are intact, the government has to
determine what kind of relocation package to offer. Will they subsidize
tenants or landlords? Will they help pay back rent or negotiate some
forgiveness? What help will be given those whose homes are reparable and how
can repairs be aligned with a building code that has yet to be released? If
a one-room transitional shelter is erected where a multifamily dwelling
stood, who gets it?

Each issue has generated protracted debate. One international disaster
expert, who requested anonymity because he did not want to offend Haitian
officials, offered what he called “a microexample” of why bigger questions
take a long time to resolve. It involved a flier instructing people on how
to secure their tents during the hurricane season.

The government emergency management agency first asked that the phrase
“hurricane-proof” be deleted, he said, worried about guaranteeing
protection, and then that any reference to strong winds be removed. Finally,
only rain could be mentioned and even then the flier did not get approved
before hurricane season began.

“It’s as if they imagined themselves to be in a brick and mortar world of
real liability,” the disaster expert said. “I think it’s more than lack of
capacity by the government. They’re looking at the political landscape,
weighing each word like

index.html?inline=nyt-per> David Axelrod with a focus group.”

Still, many hope that the Champ de Mars process at least lays the groundwork
for a speedier resolution of similar problems elsewhere.

And some residents of Fort National, tired of waiting for the government to
act, have already moved back, even into dwellings that have been condemned
or would be unsafe in a storm.

Negriel Dumas built a roughhewn shack for his family on the barren hilltop.
“It’s better to be here with the smell of the dead bodies than to be down at
that camp where it stinks of pee,” he said.

Aggressive Advocates

In late April, Rachelle Derosmy’s family of four moved into one of the first
transitional shelters to be completed in the Port-au-Prince area. It is a
simple pine house, painted grey, with two windows, a concrete foundation and
an inclined metal roof fastened with hurricane straps.

“Rain used to fall like a monsoon into our tent,” Ms. Derosmy, 24, said,
standing in her 150-square-foot home, which is still bare. “We feel so much
better now, more secure. We hope in the future to have beds, too.”

Ms. Derosmy’s new home is in Carrefour, where most of the 1,300 transitional
shelters in metropolitan Port-au-Prince have been built. That is partly
because Carrefour’s mayor has taken an active role in resolving land issues
and partly because the Adventist Development and Relief Agency, long based
there, has aggressively negotiated with local officials and landlords. It
also settled more quickly than some other aid groups on a shelter design.

Transitional shelters are simple wood or steel-frame structures that offer
more space, privacy and protection than tents or tarps. They are meant to
last three to five years, tiding over a displaced population while permanent
homes are repaired or built. But some disaster experts are ambivalent about
them, as is the Haitian president, according to a senior government
official. President Préval worries that transitional shelters might never be
replaced, the official said, adding, “He thinks he will be attacked for
creating new bidonvilles,” or slums.

International experts estimate that Haiti will need 125,000 transitional
shelters; so far, just over 5,500 shelters have been completed, mostly in
the countryside where land issues are simpler.

In Carrefour, the Adventist agency has set up a well-oiled production
workshop, where imported wood is cut and assembled into kits then
constructed and painted on site by local workers. Anton De Vries, a South
African engineer who runs the shelter operation, which is co-sponsored by
the

for_international_development/index.html?inline=nyt-org> United States
Agency for International Development, said he was determined to provide a
home for every family in the Adventist-run tent city.

Tall and cheery, Mr. De Vries recently bumped into a local landlord, Henry
Frantz St. Surin, on a construction site and displayed some of the
hale-and-hearty diplomatic skill that has served him well here. “Thank you
for your contribution,” he said in a booming voice. “You are one of the few
people who allow others to use their land. I’m sure God will bless you.”

Mr. De Vries also crossed paths with one of his new shelter recipients.
“Yoo-hoo!” Ms. Louis cried out to him. She ushered him inside, showing off
her décor, a mélange of cloth flowers and stuffed animals, and explained why
she preferred her new house to her old one: “If another earthquake happens,
this one is not going to kill me.”

Mr. De Vries said his biggest frustration had been bartering with customs
authorities. “We work in very close partnership with the Haitian
government,” he said with a tight smile. He said that he did not understand
why the government did not fast-track emergency supplies and housing
materials through its port. He has managed to free 21 shipping containers,
enough to complete just over 500 shelters. But another 21 containers have
been “held hostage” by the customs agency for more than three weeks now — at
a storage fee of almost $16,000 so far.

The port problem has pushed Mr. De Vries to buy local wood. Concerned about
deforestation, he did not want to. But he is determined to keep building.

For two months after the quake, Haiti’s architects and planners worked in
Pétionville to prepare the post-disaster needs assessment and action plan
required to obtain international financial support for the reconstruction of
Haiti.

Their dreams were grand. They envisioned Haiti 2030 as a self-reliant,
democratically stable, decentralized and reforested land with decent housing
and education for all, a national highway network, a hearty fruit and tuber
industry, animal husbandry, industrial zones and tourism.

“The government is doing good things in thinking to the future,” said Mario
C. Flores, director of disaster response field operations for

_for_humanity/index.html?inline=nyt-org> Habitat for Humanity. “I only wish
that all those aspirational plans would become operational.”

At a conference in New York on March 31, donors promised Haiti $5.3 billion
over the next 18 months. Two weeks later, although questions about giving up
control to foreigners arose, the Parliament approved the creation of an
interim reconstruction commission to be led by former President

ndex.html?inline=nyt-per> Bill Clinton, the United Nations special envoy to
Haiti, and Jean-Max Bellerive, Haiti’s prime minister. It took another
couple of months to pick its 26 Haitian and international members, and the
search for an executive director is still under way.

The reconstruction commission met for the first and only time so far in
mid-June.

After that meeting, a Haitian journalist asked why there had been so much
talk and so little progress. Mr. Bellerive mentioned road-building and other
projects in the countryside and said, “There is a lot being done actually
but some of it may not be visible if you confine yourself to the
Port-au-Prince area,” where the bulk of the destruction occurred.

Earlier in the spring, Mr. Bellerive and Mr. Voltaire, who is an architect
and urban planner, had visited Mr. Clinton at his home in Chappaqua, N.Y. At
one point, Mr. Clinton kept getting distracted by incoming e-mail messages.
According to Mr. Voltaire, Mr. Clinton said, “If I receive one more
suggestion for the ideal house for Haiti, I will explode.” And Mr. Bellerive
said, “You, too?”

After that, the government hired a London firm to solicit and sift through
proposals for “the best, safest and most sustainable housing designs of the
future. “In October, several dozen model homes will be built and displayed
at a housing expo in Oranger, Haiti. People will be selected to live in the
prototypes and to evaluate them, Mr. Voltaire said.

Eventually, permanent housing will be built, he said, at one of a few sites
that the government is seizing through eminent domain and hoping to turn
into new population centers.

One of those sites is Corail-Cesselesse, about 10 miles north of
Port-au-Prince, where the first planned tent city was installed in April on
a chalky gravel plane. Hastily created for displaced people who seemed most
at risk from flooding or landslides in another camp, it is now home to about
5,000 who live in an orderly grid of white tents far from their bustling
urban neighborhood.

Some aid groups criticize the location. “That site does not represent clear
strategic thinking on the part of the government,” said Ms. Schindall of
Oxfam. “It’s like the Sudan. There’s not a tree in sight. And people feel
marooned. They are having major issues finding income-generating activities
and soon they are going to have trouble feeding themselves. It’s
inevitable.”

But several residents interviewed seemed willing to tolerate the camp’s
remoteness because living there puts them in line for the transitional
shelters that are supposed to be erected there, and then for the permanent
houses that may follow.

Jean Mérite Pierre, a mason, asked visitors to accompany him to the barren
land.

“Look at all this space,” he said, sweeping his arms over an empty lot. “All
those people who died lived in houses that collapsed like dominoes. So even
if we are uprooted, life could be better here. We were renters, almost all
of us. Here, maybe we can own a house someday. That’s what they say. You
have to believe them.”


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