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OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE SALESIAN MISSIONS ANIMATION OFFICE (FIN) ISSUE NO. # 8 – VOLUME 3 AUG -SEPT 2010
UPDATES: PROGRESS
AND HOPE IN Haiti
Dear Friends,
We never missed an issue
since the inception of the
M28 newsletter which was
then called the Auxiliaries of
the Mission. We began in
March 2007 publishing hard
copies and sending soft
copies by email. At present,
we have produced 41 copies
already in our monthly issues
tackling different missionary
news and stories in order to
strengthen
missionary
animation here in the FIN
province.
We have built a respectable
database here in the country
that reaches out to regional
countries as well.
The sad part is that we
missed a single issue in the
publication of the August
newsletter for 2010
And the reason, I broke a leg
literally that sent me to the
hospital for surgery,
recuperation and rest. But all
is well. Although, it should
have been 42 and not 41,
Continued on page 3:
Last January of this year a massive
earthquake hit struck Haiti just before 5
p.m. on Jan. 12, about 10 miles southwest
of Port-au-Prince, the country's capital.
The quake was the worst in the region in
more than 200 years. A study by the Inter-
American Development Bank estimated
that the total cost of the disaster was
between $7.2 billion to $13.2 billion, based
on a death toll from 200,000 to 250,000.
Earthquakes in the Caribbean
Haiti sits on a large fault that has
caused catastrophic quakes in the past,
but this one was described as among the
most powerful to hit the region.
The Caribbean is not usually
considered a seismic danger zone, but
earthquakes have struck there in the past.
"There's a history of large, devastating
earthquakes," said Paul Mann, a senior
research scientist at the Institute for
Geophysics at the University of Texas,
"but they're separated by hundreds of
years." Most of Haiti lies on the Gonave
microplate, a sliver of the earth's crust
between the much larger North American
plate to the north and the Caribbean plate
to the south. The earthquake on Tuesday
occurred when what appears to be part of
the southern fault zone broke and slid.
The fault is similar in structure to the
San Andreas fault that slices through
California, Dr. Mann said.
Such earthquakes, which are called
strike-slip, tend to be shallow and produce
violent shaking at the surface. They can be
very devastating, especially when there
are cities nearby. An earthquake of this
strength had not struck Haiti in more than
200 years, a fact apparently based on
contemporaneous accounts. The most
powerful one to strike the country in recent
years measured 6.7 magnitude in 1984.