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

Category: News (Page 94 of 100)

March 2011

Mass Grave - HaitiWith the mountains where the epicenter of the earthquake was serving as a backdrop, the first picture you see is a stark reminder of all who died January 12, 2010. In this remote and barren area north of Port-au-Prince, thousands of unknown and unidentified bodies were buried in a mass grave in the days after the quake. Naturally, the picture does not capture the true feeling of being there or the thoughts that go through your mind while standing there. The black crosses you see are not on actual gravesites but were placed there on the anniversary of the quake by those wanting to create a memorial for those who died just over a year ago. The picture also does not show the entire area of the gravesite. It is actually about 3 acres in size and is covered with white gravel. A large cross has been erected on a near by hill, overlooking the site. Standing there, thoughts of that day certainly flood your mind and the terror that came with it. There are also thoughts of thankfulness and how much those of us who made it through the day unharmed were and are blessed to even be talking about it.

Camp Canaan - HaitiJust around the corner, to the left, is camp Canaan — the promised land — a sprawling camp of five thousand and eighty one people who were left homeless by the quake. Canaan is now their home, but one where nothing is promised — not even a cool drink of water. In the days following the quake these people, not knowing where to go, came to this area, owned by the government, and staked out a small piece of land to live on. As you can see, homes consist of tarps or battered tents, donated by the government or the UN. No aid has reached this camp even though it is on the main road to the north and very reachable.

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February 2011

The following letter and thoughts, written by Kettly Mars were published in the New York Times, entitled “Haiti Without Walls.”

“Petionville, Haiti, Jan. 12, 2010, 4:53 p.m. A high-magnitude telluric wave twisted the ground under our feet. In just 35 seconds about 300,000 people lost their lives and more than one million souls in three cities became homeless. How eerie the huge cloud of dust rising in the dying day over Port-au-Prince, and spreading up to this suburb of the capital. How unreal the sound of car alarms blasting under the building debris.

I believe that in all bad things there is some good — if we take a moment to look, if we don’t miss the essential. Often I ask myself, was there any good in that earthquake? And then I remember the first minutes, the few hours, the two days right after the shock. Before foreign aid workers arrived loaded with survival kits and good will. Before greed turned misery into business opportunities.

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