Thursday, October 23, 2008

Haiti Websites of Interest

Here is a short list of a few of the websites that I have found helpful and interesting regarding Haiti on the Internet:

The Haitian Consulate in Chicago- www.haitianconsulate.org/

Parish Twinning Program of the Americas- www.parishprogram.org/

Bob Corbett Haiti Reference Site (Webster University)- www.webster.edu/~corbetre/haiti/haiti.html

Haitian Proverbs translated to English- www.haitianproverbs.com/

Monday, October 20, 2008

CASEDHAI Community

Typical street in the CASEDHAI Community

CASEDHAI photos (Pastor Amable)

This is Pastor Amable Constintine, founder of CASEDHAI. The photo is from 2001

CASEDHAI Photos continued

This is Dooglas and Chester Amable

This is Lovely and Jean Baptiste Amable


CASEDHAI photos


This is a photograph of Malourne with the children (John Baptiste, Lovely, Chester, and Dooglas) Malourne's husband, Amable Constatine was the founder of CASEDHAI




CASEDHAI

One of the programs of Rays of Hope for Haiti is CASEDHAI (pronounced: CAAS-duh) which is an acronym of the "Committee to Support the Unprovided Children of Haiti" It is located in a very poor slum area known as Cite Pele, which is an impoverished ghetto area of Port au Prince. In these areas there are many shanty homes built with old pieces of scrap metal, cardboard, or whatever people can find to make a shelter.
Unfortunately the area is located at the base of the Capital City, Port au Prince. So when it rains, the flood waters rush into the community and stagnate, mixing with sewage, waste, and the garbage from the streets. People in these communities have nowhere else to go, so they live in the flooded debris until the water subsides.
Life in these communities is very hard. There is no electricity, no clean water, no hope for jobs, no way of growing food, no education, and no medical care. The people are intensely poor, and they have continued to be that way for generations.
CASEDHAI is a grassroots Haitian program established in 1999 by Pastor Amable Constantine. He was a good friend of mine who worked at the airport in Port au Prince. He lived in the community where CASEDHAI ministers. Constantine died at the age of 32 from TB. He left behind his wife, Malourne and four children Jean Baptiste, Lovely, Chester, and Dooglas.
Constantine's early death is common for people who live in these slums. It can be very disheartening to see such poverty and know that although we, as visitors, can walk out of the area, over 30,000 people will remain there, and many will die soon.
Whenever we visit Haiti it is my hope that we can meet with some of the children of CASEDHAI. Our program is not monumental. Fund prevent us from helping no more than 50 families per month. But of those 50 families there are countless children who are able to have food because of our partnership with CASEDHAI. Each month we send the committee $800 to purchase food for 50 families. Unfortunately the cost of food has skyrocketed and what the committee could purchase a year ago was much more than what they can buy now. In fact, rice is so expensive they no longer purchase rice for the children, but some pasta.
On this upcoming outreach to Haiti, I am not sure we will be able to visit or meet with the Children of CASEDHAI because of our time constraints. However, please keep them in your prayers.
I will post some photos of CASEDHAI so that you can see the children and the community.
Blessings
Doug

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Grace before the Meal

This is the traditional Grace or Prayer sung before a meal in Haiti:
(Creole is written just as it is spoken which makes it easier to learn the pronunciations)

Manje sa-a ou voye ban nou a papa
Manje ki bay lavi.

This food you sent to us our Father
It is the food of life