Posts Tagged ‘Haiti’

28 Mar 2010

Journal: Earthquake Rescue, Jan 23 – Feb 2

Posted by Richard Pickett. 6 Comments

Finally!

I hope you enjoy the journal of my trip to Haiti to rescue our children after the earthquake and bring them home. Here’s what you’ll find inside:

  • 126 of the 1900+ photos I took on the trip (none are too graphic, should be kid-safe)
  • My visits to 4 orphanages
  • My visits to 4 churches
  • My 9-day stay at a refugee camp with 1500 displaced Haitians who had lost everything – I tried my best to live like them
  • My visit to the hospital in St. Marc and a wonderful insight on going through tragedy

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28 Mar 2010

USCIS: Information for Adoptive Parents of Paroled Haitian Orphans

Posted by Richard Pickett. Leave a Comment

For families bringing children into the US under Humanitarian Parole, USCIS outlines the process for both Category 1 and Category 2 parolees to finalize their adoptions and become citizens.

This document was released February 23, 2010.

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27 Mar 2010

Adoption Info Pack

Posted by Richard Pickett. 1 Comment

A 10 page overview of the adoption steps, the qualifications for adoption (both in the US and in Haiti), and a document chart listing the the documents you will need and each step the documents have to go through before being sent to Haiti.

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16 Mar 2010

NPR: Letters To Haiti Provide A Different Kind Of Help

Posted by Richard Pickett. 2 Comments

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Eight-year-old twins Serge Jr. (left) and Serghinio Dieg hold letters they either wrote to or received from a pen pal in California. "I'm living in the streets," one wrote. "You are really kind. Thank you for your support."

March 11, 2010

When they heard I was going to report in Haiti after the massive earthquake, fifth-graders from Amylynn Robinson’s class asked if I could deliver some messages to any children I’d meet. Their letters included drawings of flowers, hearts and rainbows. And they began simply:

“Hello Haiti, nice to meet you.”

“Dear Buddy … ”

“Hi there, I’m a child as well.”

“Dear friend, I am your friend. I wrote this letter to tell you I care about you.”

The children wrote about their school, Balboa Magnet Elementary, a public school in Northridge, Calif., in Northern Los Angeles County, which was the epicenter of a magnitude 6.7 earthquake in 1994. Although these 10-year-olds were not alive then, many say they’ve heard stories about the damage in California. So they were sympathetic to kids coping with the magnitude 7.0 earthquake in Haiti.

“Because they were one of the poorest countries in the Western atmosphere, it shocked me greatly,” Issac Choi said.

“I was like, oh, my gosh,” said Joon Lee. “Their buildings were made out of rocks. Many people died, and I feel so sad for them.”

Help In A Different Form

Matthew Del Castillo said they thought writing letters to children in Haiti might cheer them up.

So they wrote about their best friends, sports and their hobbies.

“My hobbies are gymnastics, drawing, computer games and reading,” wrote Liliana Manamino. “I’m a total bookworm, but I’m not shy. I have a wild imagination and I’m not afraid to share what goes on in there. My favorite flower is a rose, and I really do believe in a lot of stuff like vampires and fairies.”

The California kids also wrote about the Lakers basketball team and things they learned about space during a field trip to the Griffith Observatory.

“Did you know you weigh the least on the dwarf planet Pluto?” asked Michael Gelnack.

Several of the girls wrote poems about happiness, and Sam Gorman drew a comic strip for someone to fill in because “they might have lost all their toys or possessions in the earthquake.”

I kind of want to encourage other people to send letters to them. Because even though help is like giving them food and stuff, another thing they really need is love and care.
- Carla Villanueva , fifth-grader at Balboa Magnet Elementary School in Northridge, Calif.

The students from Balboa Elementary also pooled their money to send to Red Cross relief efforts in Haiti.

“Many people are pitching in to help people like you,” penned Joon Lee.

“I donated my spare change,” Isela Reyes wrote.

“P.S., our school raised $1,732 and 33 cents just for you,” added Emma Martin.

Their letters included small candies and packets of seeds for planting vegetables. On the envelopes, they added glittery stickers and wrote things such as “Haiti Love” and “For a child in Haiti.”

Pen Pals

More than 3,000 miles away, I found a group of children living in makeshift shelters at a fetid, overcrowded camp in Port-au-Prince. With their schools reduced to piles of rocks and dust, they gather everyday outside the devastated College Saint Pierre.

“Some of these kids have lost brothers, sisters, cousins, parents, friends and neighbors,” said Jeanne Pocius, a trumpet player from Haiti’s National Philharmonic Orchestra. She’s been teaching the children to write about their feelings and aspirations in a daily journal.

“A lot of them have no possessions at all, other than basically the clothes they have on,” Pocius says.

Their parents lined up for food relief and walked by carrying donated bags of rice on their heads and over their shoulders. Meanwhile, the children read the letters with delight. And they wrote back with paper and markers sent from friends of mine in California.

“Bonjour,” wrote 11-year-old Jean Pierre Mason. “Me, I’m really sad. My house collapsed.”

Mason chronicled what happened when the earthquake struck. He was home from school and watching cartoons. Then his house crumbled, killing his older brother. He told me what he misses the most about his brother is that he made him laugh, and he used to help him with his homework. Mason said he remains traumatized.

“Je sui triste,” wrote 9-year-old Beatrice Guillon, who said she’s very sad her two sisters died. And 13-year-old Christian Marcus Bucicoo said he’s haunted by so many deaths. “I lost my favorite cousin. I cry a lot,” he wrote. “But thank you for your letter.”

Mandalit del Barco/NPR

Fifth-graders at Balboa Magnet Elementary School in Northridge, Calif., sent letters of hope and support to children in Haiti.

Some children wrote about being trapped under rubble for days before they were rescued. Others asked for help.

“My name is Serghinio Dieg,” wrote one adorable twin boy. “I’m living in the streets. Do something for me please? Send me a tent if you can or some food. May God bless you. Thank you for your support.”

The Haitian kids also wrote to say they enjoy soccer and American movies like Transformers 2. Some said that they hope to someday be doctors and nurses. And despite the devastation, they still play with whatever they can, such as kites fashioned out of old plastic bags, rags and small branches.

For their new friends in California, several of the boys sent back a handmade toy car they created from discarded plastic juice bottles with bottle-cap wheels and lollipop sticks for axles.

‘Merci Beaucoup’

The Haitian children said thanks in many ways and drew pictures of flowers, houses and themselves.

“Merci beaucoup,” wrote fifth-grader Jovelyn Bosse. “Thank you for thinking of me, my friend.”

“Thank you because you tell us to be strong,” wrote Suze Dazeer. “We wish that this catastrophe never hurts your country. You’re my friend for life. I’m going to keep this letter forever. This is a good gesture of life you sent us. I love you.”

Sixteen-year-old Stefica Jean Pierre even wrote in English: “I thank your school for the money sent to my country. I am very happy for the poem you wrote. I don’t know anything about poetry, but I will sing for you.”

I recorded her beautiful voice soaring over the misery around her: “I’m so glad you’re here in my life,” she sang. “I’m so glad you came to save us.”

Lessons Learned

I brought Stefica’s song and their letters from Haiti back to the fifth-graders in California, who were impressed by the music, stories and the toy car.

Mandalit del Barco/NPR

Stefica Jean Pierre, 16, wrote her letter in English. "I thank your school for the money sent to my country," she wrote. "I am very happy for the poem you wrote."

“They’re very resourceful,” Sydney Setsui said. “They use what they can find.”

Gabriel Martinez agreed. “Kids in the U.S. should be doing exactly the same thing instead of sitting on their butts all day with electronics,” he said.

After reading her letter, Carla Villanueva said she was glad her class did more than just give money to the people from Haiti.

“I kind of want to encourage other people to send letters to them,” she said. “Because even though help is like giving them food and stuff, another thing they really need is love and care.”

The children in California and in Haiti told me they’d like to be pen pals for life.

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9 Mar 2010

NPR: In Haiti, Quake’s Orphans Long For A Home

Posted by Richard Pickett. 21 Comments

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Boys who lost their families and homes live together in a Port-au-Prince park

A group of teenage boys who lost their families and homes in Haiti's Jan. 12 earthquake have formed a brotherhood of sorts, and are helping one another survive. They live in a Port-au-Prince park with no shelter and no adult supervision. The boys have washed and worn the same clothes they were wearing the day of the quake.

March 9, 2010
Debbie Elliot

Haiti is a country of children. Half the population is under 18 years old. And since the earthquake, it seems kids are everywhere — carrying water buckets, pushing wheelbarrows full of rubble, flying kites and playing with toy cars amid the tents that are now homes.

There also are many children who are alone, orphaned since the Jan. 12 quake that killed more than 200,000.
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8 Feb 2010

Food “Riot”

Posted by Richard Pickett. 1 Comment

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