Posted on 01/22/2010 2:29:15 PM PST by greyfoxx39
PORT-AU-PRINCE, HaitiThe day begins early in the capital city: In the middle of packed streets, whole families rouse from sleep as the sun comes up, stumbling out of makeshift tents crammed along the entire length of cracked medians. Others huddle under tarps and sheets that cover the open space in small parks and soccer fields, a sign they are either now homeless or afraid to return to homes that might be structurally damaged.
On another street corner, some 200 people form a growing mass at a tiny bus stop, waiting for the multi-colored school buses that have long bustled through the streets of Port-au-Prince. But nine days after the citys 7.0-magnitude earthquake, many of the buses arent heading across towntheyre heading away from town, loaded with the few possessions some people have left: a chair here, a bundle of clothes there. Two mild aftershocks Thursday morning deepen fears that leaving the city may be best.
As Haitians flee Port-au-Prince in search of critical supplies of food and water, many may not realize what awaits themmore need for miles and miles. As non-governmental organizations and news media pour into the overwhelmed city, fewer seem to be focused on the needs of rural communities with equally overwhelming needs.
At a community well just outside of Port-au-Prince, a group of villagers crowd around the only water source, washing clothes, taking baths, and gathering drinking water. As a Samaritans Purse worker tests the quality of the water, Franklin Marceus waits for help. Hes ridden his bicycle here, hoping aid workers would show up. He wants us to visit his community a few miles down the road, devastated by quake damage.
The centerpiece of Marceus village was an orphanage that housed 30 young children. On a tiny dirt road piled high with rubble, Marceus points out what remains of the childrens home: a mostly collapsed structure, completely uninhabitable. Twenty-nine of the children escaped; a handicapped 10-year-old girl died. Down a twisting series of gutted roads, Marceus shows us where the children now live: a series of tattered tents on a tiny, shadeless patch of dirt, already baking in the morning sun and blanketed with the smell of sewage and burning trash.
The women who tend the orphans look tired as they tend to a small fire and a pot of food to feed nearly three-dozen people. The children look happy to see attention from the outside world, smiling broadly and holding our hands as we walk through whats left of their neighborhood. What will happen to the children now that village families cant care for themselves? We really dont know, replies Marceus.
At a nearby camp, dozens more Haitians wonder what will happen to them. Theyre packed into makeshift shacks outside a makeshift medical clinic treating quake victims. As the heat grows more stifling, a woman recovering from a leg amputation shifts uncomfortably on a thin blanket under the shade of a pink sheet. On a nearby folding table under a tarp covering, a volunteer doctor tends to small baby, lancing an infected groin with limited anesthesia as the baby wails in pain. Chris Buresh, an assistant clinical professor of emergency medicine at the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, is helping lead the effort at the camp, working in cooperation with Japanese medical personnel that have set up an X-ray machine and surgical rooms. They need both, says Buresh, Were seeing mostly amputees.
Villagers outside the city say the UN has visited, and a handful of U.S. Army trucks roll through the streets. But widespread aid isnt visible in these areas, even as city-dwellers stream toward them.
After a water treatment assessment by Samaritans Purse in the tiny town of Petit-Goave, Gideon Sanon, a pastor of a local Apostolic church, says the people in his church arent losing heart. Were believing the Lord will take care of us, and praying that He will send us help, he says. But mostly, were just praising Him that we are still alive.
"For over 35 years, Samaritan's Purse has done our utmost to follow Christ's command by going to the aid of the world's poor, sick, and suffering. We are an effective means of reaching hurting people in countries around the world with food, medicine, and other assistance in the Name of Jesus Christ. This, in turn, earns us a hearing for the Gospel, the Good News of eternal life through Jesus Christ."
Twitter with Samaritan's Purse
SBTM Ping
I just love these guys.
God bless Mr Graham and his people...
Bump.
A chip off the old block.
What was the atheist haul again?
These are just awesome, loving, giving disciples of Christ. Doing nothing for their own gain, but giving freely, loving deeply through Christ!
My charity of choice. BTW our church sent a group of medical folk yesterday, we helped sort and inventory medicine etc the night before. Please keep them in your prayers, as I know this is going to be a tough trip for them. We have a partnership with a couple of orphanages there, and so we often have mission trips to Haiti.
ping
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