Medical and Evangelical Missions Touching Haiti, Reaching Out to the World Since 1994

Category: News (Page 87 of 100)

March 2012

Sometimes, it seems we write the same things over and over, especially when it come to the political situation in Haiti. Once again we have a stalemate. The prime minister who oversees the day to day operations of the government and more importantly now, any reconstruction efforts, has resigned because those in parliament won’t work with him. He said after he had called a meeting with several of them and no one showed up, he knew he had no support. The reasons for that are many and we won’t go into all of them here. But what this does is effectively shut the government down until someone is named and approved to replace him.

This is not welcome news, especially to the estimated 515,000 people still homeless and living in 707 camps scattered across the capital. In an article that appeared in the Washington Post and written by William Booth on February 20, 2012, he states that many of those who have left the camps are now living in conditions worse than those found in the camps. And we know this to be true.

He goes on to say, “In Port Au Prince, 84,866 buildings have been marked with red paint, indicating they should be demolished. Nonetheless, more than half of the red-marked houses are inhabited, with little or no repair, as people desperate for shelter live in the ruins. Although it is not unusual for refugees fleeing conflict to be stuck in camps for years, rarely are people displaced by natural disasters for so long, and almost never in a camp in the central plaza of a capital city.”

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February 2012

“If I rise on the wings of the dawn, if I settle on the far side of the sea, even there your hand will guide me, your right hand will hold me fast.” Psalms 139:9-10

Recently I found myself reading in Psalms, which is not oddity and I’ve been there before, but I normally read or study one of Paul’s letters. One of my favorite verses, and what I call my travel verse, is Psalms 139:9. When traveling to Haiti, I normally fly into Miami in the evening, overnight there and leave on the first flight, which leaves right at sunrise, “the wings of dawn.” After flying several hundred miles over water, I land in Port Au Prince and “settle on the far side of the sea.” I can tell you for sure this verse came into mind after the earthquake and I said to God, “You really do have me in your right hand.”

But, when reading further, I came to Psalms 142, and after reading the first few verses, I had to stop because of what the last verse I read said to me. I had stopped with verse 4 and the last part of it says, depending on the translation you are reading; “no one cares for my soul”. Wow. What a situation the writer must have been in to feel that way, that they would feel that no one around them would even care about their soul, or life as some translations say.

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