Haiti Earthquake and disaster – January 22, 2010
People have asked me, “How I’m doing about Haiti.” It unsettles me when I hear this question. How are they doing about Haiti? Should I feel differently than they? Do I feel differently? I was there 40 years ago, when I was 15.
“Don’t be afraid of death…” These words were spoken by a woman carried out of the rubble six days after the first quake.
===
I am very afraid of death. I confess. I think my fear started there…in Haiti.
This catastrophe is nothing but death and fear staring us all in the face everyday on the news. It was the same 40 years ago for me – and it is now.
===
I still feel helpless. I still pray. I wonder about it all.
Perhaps the worse part of people asking me this question is that it takes me right back to Haiti emotionally, as a teenage child. I can’t really do anything that’s truly helpful now, except donate money, just like the rest of us sitting comfortably in our homes and offices. I feel guilty about being grateful I’m not in Haiti today. That makes the question harder to hear. Fear and guilt.
==
Mike always said that he wished he met me before I went to Haiti. He thought all my troubles began there.
The troubles he referred to was/is the emotional turmoil I bear deep within my soul from seeing starving children, hearing gun fire and running for cover, of the zealous Christians who believed the people needed to know Jesus above all, of voodoo, exorcism, rejection, fear and sickness.
He thought my physical ailments started there too – or at least they were seriously exaccerbated by the amebic dysentery I acquired during the trip. My digestion has never been right since.
Perhaps the physical and mental issues I carry began blending together into a major problem when I was in Haiti. I think Mike knew me better than I ever could know myself.
I was a spoiled middle-class brat going to a country that “needed me” as a missionary. uh …..not.
They didn’t need me. They needed food and clean water, then. They need food and clean water now.
They didn’t need me to tell them about Jesus so their souls could be saved. They needed to see his love in action by our teaching the children how to read the stories for themselves. They will need education now more than ever. The world needs to help the people of Haiti learn how to fish rather than just giving them fish.
The children I worked with during the three life-altering weeks, did more to change me than anything I may have tried to impart to them. If they took anything from me, it was humor. They laughed at me alot.
I was a silly white school girl with 30 beautiful black children to help get through a day.
We started our day with worship, we ate breakfast, cleaned, and laughed in the sun shiny days as we swam in the coral sea. I waited for the coral razor blades to slice my feet or an eel to swim between my legs. I never did like the salt water of the ocean. But the bay and sea was lovely splasing against the rocks at the base of the orphanage. I wonder if it is still there, or if it was shaken into rubble and fallen into the sea.
They laughed at me on chicken killing day when I cried at the sight of the killing. The chickens were the orphanage’s sustenance. They ate their eggs, their meat and sold many at the market in Port-au-Prince. Seeing death like that was horrifying to this spoiled person who shopped in grocery stores where chicken came neatly packaged.
Are the chickens now stolen? Is the orphanage a safe haven now for many? I don’t know. I search the pictures on the t.v. and in the newspaper to see any resemblance of the orphanage. I’ve looked online. I find nothing.
All these years later I am still affected by Haiti. I continue to feel helpless, but at least now as an adult, I can reach out with financial support and I pray in earnest for the precious souls of Haiti.