Reflections from Haiti
Friday, Feb. 12, marked the one-month anniversary of the earthquake that shook Haiti apart. Feb. 12 also marked the beginning of the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver. For the next few weeks, the news will be filled with young, beautiful, healthy people performing incredible feats and setting world records. All I can think about is what will happen when Haiti’s rainy season starts in March.
Try to imagine thousands of people living outside, too afraid to sleep in any place with real walls and a roof. Babies and old people. Strangers and families. Sheets, tablecloths and towels for their walls. Mattresses and blankets for their floors. Even a gentle rain will bring new misery. And there is already enough misery.
Louis and Madame Felix, 74 and 76, are probably out of rice and beans by now. They were so happy to get their share of the first food distribution made by the United Methodist Committee on Relief. Their faces glowed as they talked about the Methodist church they were baptized in, the one they were married in, the one that is now brown rubble spilling out on the churchyard. Samuel Loomery, 17, was so close to completing his secondary education when his school crashed down on him. Classmates helped pull him to safety.
He wonders about another student who was trapped close by. He’s still not sure what happened to him. Is Winsley Polo, 2, still alive? So frail, so small, lying quietly in a crib sheltered by a blue tarp. She is one of the lost children, babies who were not claimed by parents after the earthquake, who are living with compassionate caregivers at Grace Hospital.
The kind people who work at the Methodist Guest House care for travelers even though they have all lost everything in the earthquake and are coping with personal grief. Each one has a broken heart over the deaths of United Methodists Sam Dixon and Clint Rabb. Emile Belorne, a Guest House supervisor, broke our hearts as she told us of her fear and faith in God. “I say, Lord if I am still alive, it is by your grace. I am no better than the others who died. You made me a favor. If I am here, I have to do something for your glory.”
The new death toll from the earthquake is 230,000. That number does not include the bodies yet to be recovered from collapsed buildings or the many people who were pulled from the rubble and buried privately by families. That rubble is becoming part of the landscape. People are going on with their lives without any of the things we find most basic—a private place to bathe, a quiet place to read, a safe shelter from the weather, a door to shut out strangers. Women on the side of the road sit all day waiting to sell their meager supply of vegetables. Men tackle the great mounds of debris one piece at a time. And everywhere, they live with the dread of the rainy season. “We have been lucky so far, no rain yet,” said one man. “But the rain will come.”
~ Kathy Gilbert, UMNS