Category Archives: Haiti quake

Haiti earthquake response a symbol of solidarity

Caritas Internationalis President Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga greeting Caritas Haiti President Bishop Pierre-André Dumas at Toussaint Louverture Airport, Port-au-Prince, on Monday February 22. Credit:Caritas

By Oscar Andrés Cardinal Rodríguez Maradiaga, S.D.B.

As President of Caritas Internationalis, I visited Haiti in February to offer solidarity with the people and to take aid from my home country of Honduras on behalf of our supporters.

When I arrived in Port-au-Prince, I was shocked because the tragedy and devastation were even greater than what I had seen in the media.

The Apostolic Nuncio to Haiti, Archbishop Bernardito Auza; the president of Caritas Haiti, Bishop Pierre Dumas; and the director of Caritas Haiti, Fr Serge Chadic, accompanied me to the destroyed cathedral and the house where my colleague, Archbishop Serge Miot was killed. We visited Renaissance Hospital and Champ de Mars makeshift camp, where tens of thousands of people have taken refuge. We also talked with Haiti’s Bishops’ Conference.

While I am deeply moved by the suffering of the Haitian people, I am also aware that there is a sign of hope. The huge swell of support that we have seen so far for the survivors of the earthquake shows that the world is not going to forget Haitians.

As President of Caritas Internationalis, my first commitment will be to make the voice of the Haitian people heard so that there is no danger that we will forget their plight.

Caritas has been in Haiti for many years and our staff bring love, compassion and determination to their work. We have 165 member organisations worldwide and I was delighted to see the fraternity and solidarity expressed by Caritas in Haiti.

When those who can help do, the world is a more just place. This is how things should be and this is one of the aims of our work in Haiti and around the world.

Caritas is already serving over half a million people in Haiti, helping them with food, water, shelter and healthcare. We are also planning our longer-term projects. We want to help Haitians rebuild, but also to help them on the path to autonomy so that they can live with dignity.

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Haiti quake: Storm clouds ahead

Caritas water and sanitation advisers testing water bladders in Nambanam Camp, in Port-au-Prince, where 250 families live. Credit: CARITAS/Mathilde Magnier

Available also in French

By Mathilde Magnier, Caritas Communications Officer, Port-au-Prince

One month after the dramatic earthquake that devastated Port-au-Prince, the coming rainy season presents another major challenge to Caritas and other aid agencies.

The quake killed 217 000 people and left over one million Haitians without shelter. With most quake’s survivors living in overcrowded temporary settlements, crammed into wooden huts made of bed sheets and plastic bags, shelter and sanitation continue to be issues of concern.

The rainy season could start as early as end of February. It is threatening to cause landslides and bring about health problems in the makeshift camps where more than 500,000 people are living. Rain is already falling and afternoon showers are more and more frequent in Port-au-Prince.

“The rainy season is our biggest concern at the moment. It will affect people’s well being and security,”  said Isaac Boyd, CRS shelter adviser (CRS is a Caritas member from the USA).

“As well as landslides and deteriorating sanitary conditions, it will cause a lot of misery. Many people worry about the fact they haven t received enough tangible shelters support so far, this is why we will give out as much plastic sheeting as possible in the coming days,” he said.

To date, the Caritas combined response has distributed nearly 11,000 emergency shelter kits and over 5000 tents to  Port-au-Prince, Jacmel et Léogâne.

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Fr Serge B Chadic, Director General of Caritas Haiti addresses Rome conference on Haiti

From left to right: Bishop Pierre Dumas, president of Caritas Haiti; Fr Pierre Chadic, director of Caritas Haiti; Bill Canny - Catholic Relief Services (CRS), Jacques Duffaut - Secours Catholique, Sean Callaghan - CRS

Speech by Fr Serge B Chadic, Director General of Caritas Haiti

Available in French and Spanish

Rome, 17 February 2010

Brothers and sisters, distinguished participants at this meeting,

Being called upon to address such a distinguished gathering makes me feel humble, and it is with humility that I wish to speak on behalf of Caritas Haiti, CRS, and the other Caritas organisations who are collaborating with us on the emergency plan at the National Office in Haiti. However, I feel highly honoured to do so. It is improper to dwell on other people’s suffering. The only appropriate response is resourceful charity to alleviate suffering and destitution, whilst respecting human dignity and evangelical principles. Haiti has shown such generosity and solidarity in the recent disaster that people don’t know whether to cry or admire this nation for its courage. Haiti has shown that it is trustworthy. Before the deployment of urgently needed international aid, rescue teams, experts and funds come Haiti and its people. I bring you the greetings, friendship, courage and generosity of the rest of the population of Haiti who survived the earthquake of 12 January 2010. Continue reading

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Haiti quake: Mourning the dead

Photo by Sara A. Fajardo/Catholic Relief Services


Available in French

By Mathilde Magnier, Caritas Communications Officer in Port-au-Prince

A month after the earthquake that devastated the country, Haitians remembered their dead with three days of mourning and fasting.

From dust till dawn in Port-au-Prince, the loudspeakers blasted gospel, sermons and prayers in a strange atmosphere of joy, despair and reverence. In this deeply religious country, Catholics, Protestants and followers of voodoo join in the same celebrations, their arms raised to the heavens.

In the shattered capital, the main places of worship have been destroyed, forcing people to organize ceremonies in the city’s waste grounds, schoolyards or temporary shelter camps such as Petionville Club or the Champ de Mars. In the streets solemn mourning processions follow groups of people openly grieving. Women are dressed in white, children wear their best clothes and men have tied black armbands of mourning around their arms. Those who can walk help the injured in their wheelchairs and support those hobbling on crutches. Some sing and dance while others are prostrate. The crowd is so dense it is difficult to know who believes in what and who prays to who.

“These are difficult days. As Haitians we have to mourn our dead together “, explains Lérénie. Continue reading

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Caritas Internationalis Secretary General from Haiti

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-Haiti’s lost children

Diego Jean (12) who lives in the Lakoun centre for street children in Port-au-Prince. He doesn't know if his parents survived the quake and is too frightened to find out. Credit: Conor O'Loughlin/CARITAS

By Conor O’Loughlin, Communications Officer, Trócaire (Caritas Ireland), in Port-au-Prince

Haiti is not an easy place to be a child. It has the highest rates of infant, under-five and maternal mortality in the Western Hemisphere. Diarrhea, respiratory infections, malaria, tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS are the leading causes of death. Thousands of the country’s schools were ruined in the earthquake of January 12, and even before the earthquake only half of children attended primary school. Less than one in fifty finish secondary school.

As many as 2,000 children are trafficked to the Dominican Republic every year. Sometimes their parents cannot afford to look after them. Sometimes they are trafficked by force. Many end up working in the sex trade for western tourists and others end up in domestic service for little or no wages.

Often, those who stay fare little better.

Diego Jean is a little man of twelve. Continue reading

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Un mois après le séisme, l’effort continue en Haïti

People waiting for food distributions at 5.30 am in the Champs de Mars area of downtown Port-au-Prince. The distribution was being carried out by Caritas Haiti and partners for displaced people living in the shadow of the city's decimated Presidential Palace. Credit: Conor O'Loughlin/Caritas

Mathilde Magnier, Secours Catholique

A quelques jours de l’anniversaire du premier mois du tremblement de terre qui a décimé Haïti en janvier dernier, le gouvernement haïtien a publié des chiffres alarmants sur l’ampleur de la catastrophe dans le pays. Si l’on compte aujourd’hui plus de 230 000 morts, le bilan devrait augmenter rapidement dans les jours à venir, les décombres commençant seulement à être dégagés. A l’heure actuelle, on recense 300.000 personnes soignées pour blessures, 250.000 maisons détruites et 30.000 commerces perturbés.

Le prix des biens de consommation est de plus en plus élevé et les services arrivent à saturation. Le secteur le plus touché : celui de la santé, avec l’arrivée en masse de victimes du séisme grièvement blessées.
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Haiti one month on and ten years backwards

A woman holds a ticket to receive 50 pounds of rice at the Salesian Seminary in Port-au-Prince. Photo by Sara A. Fajardo/Catholic Relief Services

By Conor O’Loughlin, Communications Officer, Trócaire (Caritas Ireland) Port-au-Prince

As we approach the one month anniversary of the earthquake that decimated Haiti 12 January, the Haitian government has released updated figures that give a chilling account of the destruction.

The death toll stands at over 230,000 people, around the same number who were killed in the 2004 Asia tsunami (in 14 countries). With the rubble only starting to be cleared in Haiti, the figure can be expected to rise.

250,000 houses were destroyed and 30,000 businesses disrupted. Approximately 502,000 people remain homeless throughout Port-au-Prince alone, spread between 322 different camps.

The government fears it could take ten years to rebuild Haiti, one of the world’s least developed countries, to the same level it was 11 January. Reconstruction efforts will begin after the initial relief effort has finished, but we’re still in the initial phase.

The response, one of the largest seen anywhere in the world for years, is continuously adapting to the changing environment. Continue reading

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Debt victory for Haiti

CRS, a caritas member from the USA, delivers food to the Foye Ti Zanmi Jezi Orphanage. Photo by Sara A. Fajardo/Catholic Relief Service.

The G7 group, which includes the US, Canada, the UK, Germany, France, Italy and Japan, announced at the weekend that they will cancel Haiti’s US$ 1.2 billion outstanding unilateral debt.

Increasing pressure to do so were came from various NGOs, including Caritas Internationalis, for the international community to help Haiti recover from the catastrophic earthquake of January 12.

Caritas congratulates the G7 for their action and also applauds all the campaigners who put pressure on their governments for speedy action.

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Praying for Haiti

Kindergarten and first grade students of Catholic Academy in Granite Bay, CA. USA. wrote these prayers to share with the people of Haiti and all united around them in prayer.

First Grade Prayers:

Dear God the Father
You are the Father of all nations
Thank you for sending your Son, Jesus into the world.
Please bless Haiti. Keep them safe. Be with them in their troubles.
Most importantly, keep their faith alive.
Please take the people in Haiti who died into heaven.
We ask these things through Christ our Lord.
Amen.
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