"Ask not what the world needs. Ask what makes you come alive...then go do it. Because what the world needs is people who have come alive."
Howard Thurman

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

I couldn't have said it better....

Our friend Andrew MacCalla had a very insightful article on HuffingtonPost.com this week:

Andrew MacCalla

Andrew MacCalla

Posted: June 28, 2010 04:59 PM



Hope For Haiti's Future

This article originally appeared in the Sacramento Bee. Since the devastating earthquake that rocked Haiti on Jan. 12, I've
spent nearly three months in the Caribbean island nation conducting
assessments of health care providers in order to deliver needed medical
supplies. My time in the capital of Port au Prince, in deeply
impoverished communities and in outlying towns has provided a good
introduction to the obstacles facing Haiti in its efforts to rebuild.
However, the more time I spend there, the more Haiti feels like a study
in opposites. It is a country that just cannot seem to get ahead,
despite all the help it has received and the great character of its
people.

In my work for Direct Relief International, California's largest
privately funded international nonprofit, I have been locating and
determining the needs of quality medical facilities in Haiti, the ones
that are still standing anyway. They range from large-scale hospitals to
facilities made up of a couple of tarps propped up in tent cities
engulfing Port-au-Prince.

The goal of Direct Relief, which focuses on bringing critically
needed medicines and supplies to health care providers worldwide, is to
allow these facilities to maintain patient care for tens of thousands of
people, and to enable patients and facilities to get a foundation for
the long recovery effort ahead.
But as I leave Sacramento today and head back to Haiti for my fourth
trip, solutions to rebuild the country remain elusive.

Haiti often has been bumper-stickered as "one of the poorest
countries in the Western Hemisphere." However a two-hour plane ride is
all that separates Haitians from the United States, the richest country
in the world. Even so, each time I step off the plane after landing in
Haiti, I'm jolted by the differences between my home in Sacramento and
life in Port-au-Prince.

At home, there's water in the faucet, flushing toilets and lights
that turn on. Streets are paved, traffic is bearable, and you can easily
buy gasoline at the station. In Haiti, nothing comes easy and nothing
is taken for granted. Water is carried from wells over great distances,
baths are taken in streams, toilets are often holes in the ground, and
electricity is a luxury for the wealthy. Streets are unpaved and turn
into muddy rivers after heavy rain, traffic is so bad that you often
don't move an inch for hours, and you're often confronted by men
carrying shotguns in the line at the gas station who are filling their
cans to sell for a profit down the road.
The U.S. government has directed more than $1 billion to Haiti since
2005. Many other donor countries also have spent large sums to help.
These facts make it hard to understand how Haiti can have 54 percent of
its people living on less than $1 a day and 80 percent of its people
living below the poverty line. It seemed to me that if Haiti couldn't
capitalize on its proximity to the United States, then at least all the
foreign aid it's received should be enough to stabilize the country.

But now that I've spent time in Haiti I've seen the opposing
realities firsthand. I think often about a woman I met on the street who
held up her two naked babies and asked that I take a picture of them to
show people back home that she doesn't even have money to put clothes
on her baby girls. We are working hard to help the people of Haiti,
infusing the country with large sums of well-allocated resources, but
there are huge gaps not being filled.

And despite the fact that the people of Haiti are doing all they can
to find jobs, unemployment hovers between 70 and 80 percent. Anytime you
walk the streets of Port-au-Prince or enter into the U.N. Logistics
Base at Toussaint L'Ouverture Airport, you are likely to be approached
multiple times by capable people looking to become your translator,
laborer, driver or cook.

Pino Blanchard, a local businessman, runs a water filtration plant in
Port-au-Prince. When he opened the plant Jan. 1, more than 10,000 people
lined up outside for 500 available jobs.

As a result of high unemployment, the government of Haiti is left
with a largely untaxable population, which makes providing social
services and developing infrastructure nearly impossible. Therefore,
Haiti has been inundated with nongovernmental organizations, known as
NGOs, that try to provide many of these basic social services. Indeed,
Haiti has been declared a "Republic of NGOs" because it has the second
highest number of NGOs per capita in the world - between 3,000 and
10,000 before the earthquake hit.
And while many of these groups work in education, health care and
development, illiteracy is estimated at 44 percent, 60 percent of
Haitians don't have access to basic health care, and roughly half the
population lacks access to clean drinking water.

On one trip, I visited an elementary school in Mirebalais, a town an
hour north of Port-au-Prince that is funded and run by a nonprofit
organization started by a Haitian professor. It was the first place I'd
visited since the earthquake struck where I'd seen smiles on the faces
of all the children.
But I noticed there were fewer and fewer students as I walked into
each higher grade level. While there were roughly 150 kindergartners
running around the playground, there were only about half a dozen
sixth-graders sitting at their desks in a classroom upstairs. The
headmaster told me students often have to drop out to help make money
for the family or because they can't pay for their uniforms. Even a free
education provided by a nonprofit cannot be utilized by everyone in
Haiti.

Another often cited statement about Haiti is that it's "one of the
most dangerous and violent places in the region." Perhaps statistically
accurate, but my experience belies that statement. Not once in my three
months there was I ever threatened or accosted, and most of my time was
spent in impoverished communities and without any security arrangements.

I believe that our organization's effective response in Haiti - more
than 400 tons and $42 million in specifically requested medicines and
supplies - has been due primarily to the extraordinary kindness and
generosity extended by dozens of Haitians who have assisted and guided
us along the way. From the minute we landed in Haiti we made friends
with people whose answer to every request was, "Whatever you need, we
can do. No problem."

I'm beginning to think all the people we have met are not unusually
generous; they are just Haitian. One man I didn't know literally gave me
the shirt off his back after I told him I liked it.
Before going to Haiti, I thought that was just an expression.

It's impossible to project what the future holds for Haiti. The
optimists hope this earthquake will generate so much attention from the
international community that the country will be rebuilt from scratch
and be stronger than ever. The pessimists are discouraged by the
possibility that the billions of dollars pledged won't materialize and
that the money already donated - mainly to large, international
organizations - will just be consumed without any more or better results
than previously experienced.

Surprisingly, many Haitians I've asked about the future say things
will improve only if the United States (more specifically, former
President Bill Clinton) is put in charge.

Haiti has an astoundingly high set of barriers to overcome. But after
seeing the resident talent, compassion, intense desire to work and
other contrary-to-the-bumper-sticker characteristics, I feel hope.
I'm hopeful because it's hard to ignore the tens of thousands of
people who have decided to invest in or travel to Haiti to assist in
whatever way they can. I've met many people, from middle-school students
to world-renowned surgeons, who left their families to volunteer their
time, expertise and money. I've seen hundreds of NGOs working hard and
selflessly in Haiti and, despite some failings, it's clear that they do
make Haiti a better place to live.

But most of all, I've had a chance to meet and live with Haitians. I
have seen Haitian men, who are desperate to work and tired of waiting
for somebody else, climb atop collapsed multi-story buildings and pull
the rebar away from concrete piece by piece, using only a sledgehammer
and an occasional wheelbarrow. Hospitals that were overrun with patients
and families who had nowhere else to go, are now functioning almost at
pre-earthquake levels. And children are going back to school, dressed in
the cleanest uniforms I have ever seen, even though the rainy season
has started and most are still sleeping outside under tarps and tents.
I've never met a person whose life aspiration is to be an aid
recipient, least of all Haitian people who have incredible work ethic
and great sense of pride. So I find myself with refreshed optimism. I am
looking forward to going back today to see what has improved since my
last trip, how far they've come and what other barriers have been
broken.

Eventually, I may be able to stop going to Haiti to distribute medicine, and I can spend more time with my wife in Sacramento helping people in our neighborhood who could use a hand. But for now, I'm anxious to see my new friends in Haiti and proud to be helping them get their country to where it deserves to be.

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