The people of Haiti have suffered enormously in the aftermath of the earthquake in 2010. At the same time, their creativity, faith, hope and joy continue to lead them into a more gracious future. Yet, we are all diminished by the reality of the situation in Haiti. Reconstruction has been painfully slow, funds promised by other nations have not yet been paid or paid in full, and many, many people still live in tents.
The Diocese of Haiti has been serving the people of Haiti with schools (with more than 250 of them back in operation a few short months after the earthquake), with medical facilities and the beginnings of spiritual and cultural healing. The partnership of Episcopal Relief & Development has helped to provide shelter, clean water and some employment. The Episcopal Church as a whole is partnering to help the Diocese of Haiti rebuild the cathedral complex in Port-au-Prince. Before the earthquake, that complex included not only the cathedral with its world famous murals (three have been conserved), but a music school and philharmonic orchestral, a vocational school, a convent, and diocesan offices. Partnerships have helped to provide necessary infrastructure for strategizing and planning the redevelopment work.
The Episcopal Church as a whole has had its heart expanded in the support and partnership with our sisters and brothers in Haiti. I encourage you to continue your prayers, your active partnership in fundraising, and the solidarity that comes from learning about the situation and caring about the future. We all begin to experience more abundant life in caring for our neighbors. I give thanks for the treasure that is Haiti, and urge the faithful accompaniment of the whole Episcopal Church with Haiti!
Craig and Marc Kielburger: Haiti: The Forgotten Families
Holy Trinity Cathedral, Port-au-Prince - Wikipedia, the free ...
http://www.er-d.org/HaitiFAQs
As part of our ongoing recovery efforts, our support is assisting an additional 40,000 people with short-term employment, provisional homes and community and household sanitation systems. Our staff will continue to work closely with the diocese and CEDDISEC on the long-term humanitarian response to this disaster. Visit www.er-d.org/Haiti for more information about our humanitarian response to the earthquake in Haiti. You can also see where we work on the Haiti aid map on InterAction's website.
Episcopal Relief and Development has spent spent millions of money to provide shelter, food, water and sanitation, transportation support, agricultural endeavors, and microcredit operations.
Haiti was the poorest and worse run nation on earth before the earthquake. I shudder to think of what it must be like now. Good luck.
LET EM' EAT CAKE.
SAVING HAITI
You wretched inheritors of half a lowly land...
How dare you try to join God's chose children...
Your sins...your religion...your regal beauty...
cannot overcome the resentment..the uppity
arrogance...many children of the Conquistadors..
bear against you...Yet still they love you...
are drawn to you,,,want to save you...and your
precious children...It is like the laconic jail guard...
who falls in love with his charge...but cannot
safely set him free...Haiti!...you should curse...
the Olmecs...for such a meager...skimpy dowry...
You should curse again...the Great Liberator..
L'Overture...for setting such a high...tall bar...
none of your pathetic leaders...have met since...
Sing at...and continue to curse...the sibling bully...
living above you...meddling and feigning love...
We..the conflicted children of the Conquistadors...
must do all we can to save Haiti...and then mercifully..gratefully ....let Haiti save us!....
If there is, shame on him.
If not, why are the people of Haiti praying for help.
It seems like a simple question that people are afraid to ask, but if there is a God, why does he act like a sociopath?
If you do not believe in God you will not look for an understanding.
If you do there have been answers to this question penned for millennia.
As a non-believer you would not find merit in them.
But if you want to understand how people of faith respond then you
can look into any of the many works in the branch of theology
known as theodicy.