[Vision2020] Nancy Casey on the Haiti Earthquake

keely emerinemix kjajmix1 at msn.com
Wed Jan 13 20:44:27 PST 2010


Nick, thank you for giving us a place to put our concern and our faith into direct action.  My prayers won't cease, but I need to do more than pray, and I'll urge everyone I know to contribute.  I don't know Nancy, but she's a hero in my book.

Keely
www.keely-prevailingwinds.com




Date: Wed, 13 Jan 2010 14:33:49 -0800
From: NGIER at uidaho.edu
To: vision2020 at moscow.com
Subject: [Vision2020] Nancy Casey on the Haiti Earthquake








Nancy Casey on the Haiti Earthquake




Greetings:



I'm sure that Nancy Casey, who makes yearly humanitarian trips to Haiti, will not mind me sharing this with the Vision.



As I'm sure you know, a catastrophic earthquake struck Haiti yesterday.



Most of the news from the media is coming from the capital and other

cities where the situation is very bad. Most construction is of concrete

that is skimpy on cement and rebar. (Once I heard a homeowner argue with

a handyman over whether a repair was going to require 4 or 6 nails.) The

poorest people live in shacks made of materials propped together. In the

cities, the destruction, terror and suffering going on now are on a

scale that is hard for us to imagine. Survivors won't have access to

clean water, sanitation will go south, the roads that bring food from

the countryside are surely broken and every family has lost loved ones.



The disaster on LaGonave has a somewhat different flavor. Casualties and

damage are less in the countryside than in the capital. Life is lived

outdoors. There are fewer buildings and fewer people inside them. They

experienced shock after shock (see below). Many houses fell down. People

were hurt, but I don't know that anyone was killed. People are frantic

for family members on the mainland, especially children going to high

school in Port au Prince. Cracked cisterns will cause water shortages.

The transportation system that brings food to the island--docks, roads,

vehicles, ships and boats--is entirely disrupted, so in a few days there

will start to be a critical food shortage there.



The good news/bad news is that the progressive community on LaGonave has

experience with this kind of catastrophe--in the aftermath of the coup

of 2004 and the hurricanes of 2008, they faced crises of similar

magnitude (from which they are still recovering). Even now they are

organizing their response. There will be a fund to expand school meal

programs to include families. They might charter a boat to bring food

over from the mainland. They will know what to do. There will be a fund

to expand the reconstruction program put together after the hurricanes.



More good news is a coalition of groups called "Farming is Life". They

have been working for many years to heal environmental damage and strive

for food sustainability. Every year they make gains towards the goal of

making the island less vulnerable to these kinds of food crises.



So here's the pitch: You can put money straight into the hands of people

who truly need it in the throes of this disaster by sending a check to

the VP Foundation PO Box 9757, Moscow, ID 83843, fiscal agent for this

work in Haiti. On your check you can write:

FOOD and the money will ward off starvation

SHELTER and the money will go to the reconstruction of homes

FARMING and the money will support long-term food self-sufficiency.

Or you can write "as needed."



You can also donate online using PayPal. Go to vpfound.org/support.html

and click on Courageous Women.



LaGonave is a remote hinterland of Haiti, so help that emmanates from

the capital might or might not trickle there. The support you send is so

much more than a drop in the bucket. Thank you very much.



Nancy Casey



p.s.  A group of us from Moscow (4 people) have been planning a trip to

LaGonave and will still probably go in March.



---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------





 From Benaja, the school secretary, on the night of the earthquake

writing in Matenwa on LaGonave via satellite connection



” 7:16 pm: Until now everything is ok around here, I mean Matènwa, Plèn

Mapou, Bwa Nwa, Nan Kafe, Grande Source. You know, people are yelling

everywhere, because it’s the first time this has happened in Haiti like

this. There are a lot of houses broken everywhere, thank God we are safe

here. But almost every 10 to 20 mn, we feel the earthquake. But in Port

au Prince there is a lot of damage.”



8:20: Up to now the tremors are still intense. You know that people are

not used to this kind of thing, it is really difficult. People are

running around, they are trying to get in contak with their families,

there is shouting everywhere. You know that many people in Matènwa have

children in Port Au Prince, which is worrying everyone. The cement roof

is shaking tremendously.



8:34 One just passed now. It had a lot of force. I would say almost as

bad as the first one, if not the same.



9:10: The school yard is filled with people now. Bernise went to get

Anita [her Mother, known for her coffee] and even she is here in the

lakou. SHe is lying down in the yard where the children usually play

ball. It is like a huge funeral in the yard tonight. It is totally

filled with people. Thank you for this big meeting place that is

equipped with light. No one wants to go inside anyone’s house to sleep.



After midnight there was another one that felt just as harsh as the

first one.”





 		 	   		  
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