Archive for the ‘Haiti Relief 2010’ Category

Haiti Day 7 – Brazil Just Gave Us A Truckload of Food

us: we have to be to the airport for 10pm (it is currently 9:30 and takes 30 minutes to get there)
pastor: (he calls over a third party) Bob, did we get these guys to the airport on time yesterday?
bob: yes
pastor: then why are they asking?  we will get them on time today.

We missed our meeting, because he thought it was an hour earlier.

pastor: i’m feel bad about this morning, sorry for not getting you to your meeting
us: it’s ok, it happens, we should have been more clear
pastor: not more clear, more pushy

So today we missed going to the airport to the meetings that we were expecting to go to.  We wanted to get into the Water/Sanitation meeting and the Food Aid meeting.  So instead we stayed back and started calling and e-mailing people.  We got on the Shelter Box agenda for tonight, so we will know tomorrow if we will get the 30-50 boxes that we asked for.  We found out a bunch of information for humanitarian aid workers getting free flights around the island.  We finally got the internet working and stable.  Teams can call home, we can call contacts and internet is working fast enough.

Rachel is now confirmed to come, she will be leaving Sat or Sun.  We’ll be using our information to get her and the team with her free flights from Dominican into Port Au Prince.  I got to call home tonight and talk to Rachel, Joe and Ron and just catch up.  It was good to hear their voices.  The Canadian military is giving free flights home for humanitarian workers that are Canadian, so I will be coming home on the 11th via military plane into Montreal.  That is the current plan anyway, and then Rachel will stay an extra week and come home with Chris.

Then, after all that.  A man who came with the medical team is Brazilian, so he walked into their embassy, brought a letter from here, somehow got into a conversation with their head general or something like that.  Then he ends up bringing home a truckload (and I mean a big huge truck) of food and medicine from their military.  It was truly the coolest thing ever.  Apparently he has military connections and Brazil were having a hard time finding organizations to unload food too.  Not anymore.  Awesome.

Haiti Day 5-6: Finally Some Communication with the UN and Getting Things Rolling

us: so pastor, what is the plan for tomorrow
pastor: tomorrow? it’s today now. tomorrow will take care of itself.
it’s in the bible, i’m not going to add to that.

us: so should we spend all the money on tents?
pastor: well, you can, but then you will have dead people in the tents, we need food too, so half on tents and half on food.

pastor: i only go to homes where the pastor there says short prayers, i don’t understand why some have to do such long prayers for dinner, so when they do long prayers i teach them to do one word prayers, “Jesus” and do the rest in your heart so we can eat.

The pastor here has been making us laugh quite a bit.

The last two days have been remarkable. I really feel like I can serve in my gifts being here, or at least I absolutely love what I’m doing. So the last few days we have tried to look at the big picture; asking ourselves the questions, how is this going to keep going when we are gone? How do we tap into the World Food Program so we aren’t draining our funds on food when there is lots around right now for free? How do we find out what’s already being done so we aren’t working with the same people and overlapping? Where is everyone else and all these other aid companies who seem to be very quiet in on the ground? We found a website yesterday called logcluster, and made some phone calls, and realized that this was the central website for all the UN logistics for relief. Jackpot.  This should have been our first step all along, but at least now we have a very good idea of what exactly the sites are like that we are giving food too.

So we showed up at the airport this morning, that is currently being run by the American military and is occupied by the UN and NGOs. This place was absolutely amazing. Basically it is the hub for all operations happening all over Haiti, so if you have any questions, need any contacts, need any resources, this is where you go. So we walked in on a logistics meeting that was talking about transportation and getting aid to various places around the country. Everyone was extremely helpful, offering the use of their equipment and transportation to help the cause in anyway. The Canadian Forces were there and were saying the same things, however we needed their services we just had to ask. So how this would work is representatives from all the NGO’s (which there were hundreds at the airport) would show up to one of the 10 different meetings they had that day (shelter, food, water, security, medicine etc) then there would be a coordinator that would explain everything they know and then people would ask questions, give input and by the end of the meeting your organization should be fully briefed on the topics situation country wide and any questions you had answered. Wow.

We made a number of good contacts with different organizations that are hopefully going to play out including Global Aid Network (who happens to be one the organizations that sponsored our conference last yea for our conference) that is going to try to put is in contact with Convoy of Hope to help us transport our aid to the more remote areas. Shelter Box said they are looking for organizations like ours to partner with, which is excellent because most of the people we are working with are living with nothing but a tarp over their heads and a shelter box will give them a temporary shelter up to a year with a whole bunch of supplies. We also got us on a list for the World Food Program so we will become on the the NGO’s that distributes their food in their warehouses. We picked up maps and all the resources we need so we can successfully develop a plan to deploy everything that we have been working up to this point. And we ordered a hamburger and fries at the cafeteria.  Emmanuel International (who I am here with) has been hard at work raising money and sending different shipments of supplies/food as we need it, they have been excellent and extremely supportive.

Right now, Chris described it as setting up the domino’s so that when we flick one everything falls into place. The frustrating part is that we don’t actually have anything that we have been working towards, but we think we have figured out all the right steps to make it happen. So tomorrow we are going back to the logistics base to sit in on a food aid logistics meeting and a water/sanitation meeting, which hopefully starts to give us some answers of how we can make safe environments for our communities who are going without water and proper sanitation.

Seriously, what a day. Being there at the UN base was a mind blowing experience. Nations from all over the world, Chile, Canada, States, India, Italy, Peru, Paraguay and tons more were all there working together to help keep Haiti as safe as possible and meet their needs. We live in a time where countries actually work together to help other countries, it’s a beautiful thing. I realize there is corruption and greed all intertwined into the system, but there is still much good happening and it really does bring hope. The camp was full of people who cared and were doing their best to respect the Haitians and meet their immediate needs. It was great.

Helpful Links on Haiti Aid

Humanitarian aid is something that has been going on for a long time.  Everyone seems to be involved with it for some reason or another.  Many people are involved in it for selfish reasons, and many have pure motives but will stick hurt things and others still may actually be helping.  The situation in Haiti is very unique because of the lack of infrastructure here to accommodate the type of aid that is available.  Chris and I are running into walls left and right simply trying to get our hands on some of the craploads of food that we know is here and some trucks to get it to the right people.  So we’ve been doing some reading and researching, here are some of the links and helpful resources I have found so far in helping better explain what is happening.

Aid Worker Daily Friendfeed – list of links and articles

Fight Hunger Twitter Feed

This article was excellent and perfectly explains all the problems we are running into The unique challenges of #Haiti’s emergency logistics.  Her understanding of the whole process is great, here is how she starts.

Haiti is the poorest country in the Western hemisphere and ranks 148th of 179 countries on the United Nations Development Programme Human Development Index. Prior to the disaster, out of approximately 8.5 million Haitians, one million was already dependent on foreign aid.

and

The speed and scale of the US’s response to the disaster in terms of funds, goods and military support is unprecedented. This is both a blessing and a curse. It is a blessing as the US military will have the means to reestablish a safe and secure environment for humanitarian organizations to operate in and bridge the command and resource gap left behind by the Haitian government. It is a curse as with its huge resources it will dominate the relief effort, overshadowing others, and monopolize the use of the limited logistics assets as exemplified by the current ‘exclusive’ use of the Haitian airspace.

Dan linked to this article a few days ago, which speaks into a lot of the politics about while USA and other countries are getting so involved.

I don’t have much time on the internet here, mostly limited to my status updates occasionally, so if you have read anything else or have access to information that might be helpful for us, send it over, I’m sure there is lots I’m missing.

Haiti Day 4-5

Chris is blogging occasionally here if you want to read some from his perspective, he’s much more eloquent than I.

Nurse: “How is Johnny.” Pastor #1: “Johnny is dead.” Pastor #2: “God is good.”  I don’t write that  to be crass.  We were sitting there at dinner with some new guests and they had just found out that one of their friends  that they knew from the first time were here had died in the earth quake.  We were all talking about the earthquake, and then Pastor Lopez responded with a story of his own and finished his statement with “God is good.”  Horror, unfortunate circumstances, death….yet God is still good.  I am baffled, yet it gives me hope.  How else do you handle such a great tragedy?  Haitians choose to put their faith in God, I am personally having a harder time doing this; and it’s not even me who is suffering.

Today started off like yesterday but ended much better.  There is a tent city outside of the pastors house that we are living with, where there are quite a few hundred people living because it is unsafe to go into their homes or their homes are no longer there.  So a number of bags were put together.  As soon as the community got word there was food, they rushed to the gate and tried to start pushing their way through.  It is a very sad thing to do to have to hold a gate back, trying not to hurt anyone, while they storm the gate, only allowing 5 in at a time, knowing that we are going to run out of food before they run out of hunger.

This was the most unorganized distribution of the two, because we were at the pastors house where a lot of people were making decisions.  People had different ideas of what door they were going to come in and out of, how we were going to order them and how we were going to register them.  Eventually it was done and over with, with a good hundred or so people that had to go without.  The only positive thing that this session gave us was good insight on how to do the distribution from here on in.

The key for us is separating the people from the actual food.  The more space between everyone, we think, the more opportunity we have to organize people before they can see the food.  The second thing we did is hand pick a bunch of volunteers ahead of time, put their food aside and get them to run the show.  So we explained the process to the volunteers ahead of time so they knew what to expect.  This worked much better than us knowing what to do and explaining it to everyone on the go through a translator.  The other part that worked great today was that we lined everyone up in a church building 50 yards away from the building that held the food.  Everyone sat in the pews and we got five people at a time to move to the front, gave them cards and then sent them to get their food.  It was a hundred times better than anything we did before and we were able to get food to around 1000 people this afternoon alone using this system and collecting the necessary information to record.  It was extra special today because the site this afternoon was located at an orphanage, so I have some cute photos I’ll have to upload when I get home of some of the children there.

There is a team of 16 medical professionals coming tomorrow for 4 days.  We found out that if we can get a truck, then we can probably get free food from the airport or the UN.  So we also found out that we might be able to get a truck.  Tomorrow is a day for church, rest and to get ready for Monday.  Monday I think is going to be the start of a much bigger picture for us in what we can do while we were here.  The first few days we looked into the eyes of the Haitians who were hungry and in need.  The next little while will be doing the same, but this time hopefully be able to get all these same Hatians access to a continual flow of aid until it’s not needed anymore.  Pray that we get this truck.  The Canadian government is still doubling all donations, so if you can send some money to help with this truck or more supplies for this area, please click here and do that.

Going to sleep now, and onto day 5.

Day 5 was a day of church, and a brief drive-thru tour of downtown where the palace is.  It was quite disheartening to see the thousands of people all in tents all waiting for something, anything really.  Church services were great.  Voices rang in my head all day as they belted out their songs in French.  I recognized This is My Story, This is my Song and Great is thy Faithfulness.  They sing so beautifully, it really makes you never want to use instruments again.  In these churches, there is no such thing as a kids program.  There are more children than adults, and they sit there quietly and listen, and sing as loudly as anyone else.  We have so much to learn from others about how we pass along our faith to our children.

After the second service (I have been to two church services in one day in a long time) we went back to the house and Chris, Robert (the mechanic), Richard and Daniel (son of Pastor Martinez, but lives in Toronto currently) got into a great discussion about international development.  I have a lot to learn about this field, and the stories they tell about the history of the practice along with the history of Haiti is fascinating.  Bridges out of Poverty, a workshop I sat through in Sarnia is surprisingly a good tool for preparing me for what to expect.  There is so much going on in a country like this.  Everyone has their own ideas, and hopes and dreams.  It is a fascinating area of study that I am watching first hand the positives and negatives of foreign aid, international political involvement and missionaries.

We are offering a temporary band-aid approach right now, but the goal is to create a sustainable system that will keep going once we leave.  Pray that this happens.

Tomorrow we head to the Canadian Embassy to register, and also try to build relationships with the right people that can point us in the right direction to get more aid.  We are hoping it is a productive trip to finding out a lot of information about the logistics about how everything is working here.  We are also going to look for a new vehicle that Canadian donors are going to cover the expenses for, so we hope there is something in the country that we can purchase and get using quickly.

The Earthquake Only Lasted 15 Seconds, Praise God: Haiti Day 3-4

I’m fascinated with their optimism, as you might be able to tell by the titles of my last few posts.  I just can’t even fathom it.  I consider myself to be mostly optimistic, but this is a huge learning curve for me.  I don’t even know where this fits into my theology.  I’d much rather not attribute any tragedy or great thing to God rather than completely in either direction, they both feel uncomfortable to me.

Today was a day that I needed to write down.  Today we went about an hour from Port Au Prince, to Cabaert where we helped a team of volunteers distribute food to the families waiting.  So let me explain the best I can what happened.

We show up and there is already around 200 bags of food divvied up and ready to be handed out.  The pastor there handed us a crumbled piece of paper with a bunch of family names on it.  Unfortunately we needed a bit more information.  So we trained the four or so volunteers on what to do.  Write their family name down in the book, write their name on their official distribution card, write down how many kids in their family and give them their food.  All was working pretty well, we were handing out food at about one bag per minute.  About an hour into the process things started to get a bit louder as more and more started finding out about the food and showing up to the church in packs.  All of them were pushing to the front, yelling and trying to get their hands on some food.

I can’t tell you how intimidating this is, when you are the only two white guys and you don’t speak their language and you are trying to keep some order.  Chris and I made a point that the distribution wasn’t done by us, but we just sort of coordinated from the back.  There was so many people trying to push their way into the church that eventually we counted the rest of the bags, and handed out just enough cards till we were out of food.  We thought this would send away people without cards.

Children were handing off windows, always making eye contact with you while they point to their mouths and make a symbolic gesture showing you they are hungry.  A few of the older youth were making some trouble and trying to push their way to the front.  You start to think that the only way Hatians can resolve conflict is through raising their voice.  When the food ran out we had to lock the door quickly and we locked ourselves into the church for a half an hour as the crowd settled down.  A few tried to take off with the large bags of food meant to go to another site, then a few others confronted them.  We watched as they argued and fought with each other for quite a while.  The scene would have been something CNN taped to show how unstable Haiti is, but really it was just a lot of hungry people upset that they didn’t get food.  Who wouldn’t be unstable?

The ride back home was especially hard to deal with.  We took a way home where we passed by quite a few military bases, where soldiers with guns sat in the shade.  We saw the UN building that looks more like a fortress.  Occasionally a van full of white people drive by with their bravest passenger sticking their head out the window taping the devastation.  There were a bunch of makeshift communities where they were forced to tent without their homes.  Some buildings had completely collapsed…some as high as four stories.  It isn’t pretty.

Today, three things came to mind while we were driving that I wish would change.

  1. That peacekeepers could keep peace without automatic guns strapped around their shoulders.
  2. That water would be more readily available than Coca Cola is.
  3. That the news media would stop spinning stories to make this place look out of control or that we would stop watching these brutal news stations all together.

God Saved Those Two Houses Over There: Haiti Day 1-2

“God saved those two houses over there” says Pastor Martinez has he points to what looks like every other heap of ruble through Port au Prince, the capital of Haiti, as we drive through its city. This perspective on life, death and God’s will has basically summarized my experience with the people of Haiti so far. They are stronger people here. They have a lot of faith. They are not whining and complaining. “I have no time for dead bodies, I can only help the alive ones” says Pastor Marintez as he explains to us what it was like moments after the quake. “If you look really sick, or you need special attention, I will probably move on to the next one because you will probably die soon anyway. We need to save as many people as possible.” The earthquake made many people weak and to care for only the weak ones in many cases won’t go very far. If it rains, these people are already sick and will die. “So we pray to God for no rain, and he is a good God.” It’s hard to even comprehend. Some people blame God for this mess, others thank him for what was saved. I think I land in the middle somewhere; blaming and thanking.

We just arrived only a few hours ago in Haiti. We flew into Dominican Republic and stayed with a pastor there. He happened to be a Free Methodist pastor who was ordained by Bishop Bastian at the time which was a great connection. He showed us some community projects he was working on and then first thing in the morning we ran to catch a bus that would take us to Haiti. The drive there was long, hot and cold depending on how much AC the driver wanted to put on, a little nerve racking because they had our passports and hilarious because the bus was full of Hatians telling stories in Creole and you couldn’t help but laugh because they were all having such a good time.

In the bus line we met a women who we helped get a ticket (we were in line hours before hand and were still the last people to get tickets). Turns out she was important here in Haiti. She was an assistant to one of the officers of health in Haiti. It was a great contact to make as she helped explain some of the system here and helped us figure out what to expect.

Now we are finally here in Port au Prince, Haiti. I’ve never been here before so I have nothing to compare it with but the city is absolutly full. People walking everywhere, markets spread out over the sides of the roads, motorcycles weaving in and out of traffic and lots of braking so you don’t hit the random pedestrians that walk out in front of the car. You can’t miss the rubble all over the place. Entire buildings collapsed, people rumaging through the heaps of steal and cement trying to find anything that is valuable.

Two young English guys were at the bus station with us. They were pretty zealous in wanting to help, but also crazy in that they had no contacts, they weren’t here with an organization and they just kind of showed up. The exact thing that I read a little while ago in an article said not to do. We ended up leaving them at the bus station, I hope they are allright and can do some good here.

We got to Pastor Martinez’s house and we sat down to figure out what our plan was going to be. He basically said he only had a little plan, and no time to figure out anything else. So that put all the pressure on us to explain what our plan was. We know that there are ten sites that he has setup, they have distributed what they have so far in food to ther 14,000 or so people and that is it. So with only that information in mind we have the following things that we have to do.

1. Setup some sort of system so we can register and record the people who are using each distribution. This way, when we approach the UN or other larger relief agencies we can show them that we are organized and ready to roll out food and aid to a specific amount of people who need it. We have registration cards, bags and ledgar charts. We’ll see what kind of system we can put together.

2. Build relationships with other NGO’s and other relief agencies in hopes that we can somehow get Martinez’s sites into the schedule of food distribution. The food will be coming, but we need it to trickle out into our centers. We know that they meet once a morning not to far from us and we are working on some other contacts in the area so we can get the ball rolling there.

3. There is 16 medical professionals coming in on Saturday, so we want to be prepared for them so they have places to go and a proper setting to administer health care. Hopefully Rachel will be joining them in the same clinics soon, that has yet to be decided, but we should know soon.

4. Talk to Rogers to see if they will wave my roaming fees, or figure out how to get internet on at least one computer. This way we can make calls for next to nothing as opposed to the $1.50 a minute on the sattelite phone or the $3.00 a minute of roaming charges on our cell phones. This will make our lives a lot easier for the calls we will be needing to make. I am able to connect quickly to post these posts and send a few e-mails, but even that is going to cost me quite a bit. Another option is to get some type of data or 3G card for their mobile towers, but from my understanding we need to sign a contract for that.

We head out to the first two sites tomorrow morning to hopefully standardize the process a bit and get these sites being even more effective distributors of aid. We are going to bed now outside under mosquito nets because people are still afraid that there will be more aftershocks and they aren’t comfortable sleeping in their homes yet. Pray for us here, and pray for the Hatians that we are among. They are great people who are trying to help as many people as they can manage.