Resources, responses to questions,
updates on Haiti
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Dear
readers,
The cartoon at the left was prepared by
well-known Uruguayan cartoonist and journalist Luis Haro, who sent it
to a fellow Salesian journalist in Cambodia, Fr Albeiro Rodas, with the
encouragement to use it freely in any campaign. Should readers prefer
the original version (approx 2Mb download), let me know, or you can
find a larger version on the blog http://enhaiti.wordpress.com/
which is being run by Fr Albeiro. This blog, largely in Spanish,
contains video updates as well on the situation.
In the UK, Fr David O'Malley, vice provincial, has
prepared a ppt presentation for use in their schools. It would be
equally usable in other English-speaking settings. It too is approx a 2Mb
download . He suggests 'Bridge over troubled waters' as a suitable
musical accompaniment and would email you a wma file of that if you
needed it.
The Salesian
Missions CNN iReport may also be a useful resource for you.
In all of this we need to be very careful of
misinformation, well-intentioned though it may be. Fr Mark Hyde
who is coordinating the Salesian Relief operation from Salesian
Missions in New Rochelle was in touch this morning noting that MISNA
had stated '200 seminarians' under the rubble at the collapsed Salesian
school at Enam. This is incorrect. They are school students. The report
was then repeated by an Australian-based Catholic agency, Aid to the
Church in Need.
Current information (there are now Salesians and FMA
from Santo Domingo in Port-au-Prince evaluating the situation) suggest
that four Salesians have died. A fifith, is seriously injured and will
be flown to Santo Domingo at earliest opportunity. There is no
change reported in the situation of the collapsed school where a
significant number (200 is being quoted, some quote more) of students
are under the rubble. Natural fears are that many if not most will not
have survived but currently we simply do not know.
Other Salesians have been injured. The Antilles
Provincial who is in Port-au-Prince is endeavouring to set up an
'air-bridge' to get the worst injured to hospitals in Santo Domingo.
The Provincial in Port-au-Prince, who is unharmed, is setting up a
coordination centre in what remains of the Provincial House. All the
communities in the city were physically destroyed.
Santo Domingo Salesian presences are considered to
be likely staging points for relief efforts already under way by
Salesian and Catholic agencies. All of these efforts are being
coordinated, however, in conjunction with the US Federal Emergency
Management Agency.
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(continued from FMA report)
Sr.
Elizabeth tells us: “Truly, the sisters feel the strong protection of
Mary Help of Christians, with faith and serenity, and even though they
are fearful because of the tremors that continue, they still have
hope.” Notwithstanding the shock, they are seeking to give this hope to
others and have taken on the care of the girls who are with them. Their preoccupation is that of not being able to communicate. The
FMAs of the Antilles province are planning other trips to Haiti, and
after having seen what is needed they are organizing things in the best
way possible. "When
we arrived at the house of Pétion Ville,” continues Sr.Elizabeth, “from
the outside we could already see the condition that it was in. We
met the animator, Sr. Aline Nicolás, and were frightened, but she
welcomed us with a smile and a strong embrace and said, ‘We are all
safe!’ We will probably have to raze the house, but the sisters and
aspirants are all right. Even the sisters of Kenscoff are
fine. We have no news from the community at Jacmel, and we are
planning to go there by a road that is less frequented.” “I
have one more thing I want to tell you,” said Sr. Elizabeth, “and it is
about the people of Haiti who have been so afflicted. During our
return trip, we saw lines of people who were looking for their loved
ones or who were moving to leave the city. On their faces I saw
dignity in their suffering. The suffering faces that I saw were
also faces of hope. Even our sisters carry sorrow in their
hearts, but they succeed in showing that they are hopeful and share the
little that they have.” "There is fear of rioting and problems, but
there is hope that the international organizations that are arriving on
the island can support the people with their help. A great
problem is the crowds of people at the border with Santo Domingo, where
people are trying to escape.”
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