Thursday, 14 January 2010 08:45

Haiti: How to Help

Written by Alison Rose Levy

“Human poverty is hugely susceptible to nature's depredations, and Haiti, one of the world's poorest countries, has again and again been the victim of demonically destructive wind, rain and flood,” wrote Amy Wilentz who has lived in and written about Haiti.

“In the developed world, such vulnerability would lead quickly to measures for the public safety. But Haitians cannot expect what Paul Farmer, an anthropologist and physician who has worked there for more than two decades, calls 'protection from the foreseeable.'”

 

In the wake of the disastrous earthquake in Haiti, from many directions a variety of worthy organizations are calling for people to step up to support the Haitian people through financial donations.
Unfortunately, according to Tracy Kidder, author of Mountains Beyond Mountains, a book about Haiti, “many projects .. seem designed to serve not impoverished Haitians but the interests of the people administering the projects.” That’s why it’s vital to support organizations where the contributions go directly into aid, not “funding the infrastructures of the aid organizations.”

Joanne Heyman, Executive Director of the Urban Zen Foundation, has years of experience working with hard working non-profit organizations. She recommends CARE (www.care.org), Partners in Health www.pih.org, the Wayuu Taya Foundation, which works with indigenous Latin Americans (www.wayuutaya.org) and Yele Haiti (www.yele.org) founded by Wyclef Jean.

According to the website of Partners in Health www.pih.org, a relief organization, co-founded by Paul Farmer MD, “Haiti is facing a crisis worse than it has seen in years, and it is a country that has faced years of crisis, both natural disaster and otherwise.”

PIH is responding to the need for emergency medical care with a two-part strategy. Using a supply chain via the neighboring Dominican Republic, they are staffing and supplying field hospital sites in Port-au-Prince and neighboring regions where they can “triage patients, provide emergency care, and send those who need surgery or more complex treatment to our functioning hospitals and surgical facilities.”

In addition, trained medical personnel able to travel to Haiti for disaster relief can contact their website to volunteer.

Tracy Kidder who serves on the PIH board lauds PIH as “a solid model for independence — a model where only a handful of Americans are involved in day-to-day operations, and Haitians run the show. Efforts like this could provide one way for Haiti, as it rebuilds, to renew the promise of its revolution.”

Jacqueline Novogratz, the founder of the Acumen Fund and the author of the Blue Sweater says that Architecture for Humanity www.architectureforhumanity.org is a worthy organization that will "focus on the longer-term by building critically needed housing and community structures." The Acumen Fund, which uses entrepreneurial approaches to address global poverty, vouches for this organization as "doing the right things."

Grassroots International, www.grassrootsonline.org an organization that supports food sovereignty for Haitians to help build the local sustainable food economy, claims that “We know from over 26 years of experience that the best aid strategy – be it in Haiti or elsewhere – is to work directly with the people most affected.

Emergency relief, like all aid, needs to be led by the communities themselves and move from the bottom up, not from the top down. We know from past history that Haiti has not been well served by the aid industry – Haiti’s reliance on food aid has only grown over the years.”

As a result, GI will use contributions to “provide cash to our partners to make local purchases of the items they most need and to obtain food from farmers not hit by the disaster.”

Chavannes Jean-Baptiste, one of Grassroot’s partners and the leader of a Haitian peasant-based agricultural organization points out that while Haitians have no way to prevent natural disasters like earthquakes or hurricanes, “What we can do is mitigate their damage.” The goal is to empower Haitians via solutions that reduce the impact of natural catastrophes, which “sadly continue to challenge the hemisphere’s poorest nation.”

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Alison Rose Levy

Alison Rose Levy

As a bestselling writer and journalist covering integrative health, psychology, and spirituality for over twenty-five years, I've had a rare opportunity to explore the depth and breadth of health opportunity, as well as to work with countless prominent, and pioneering health leaders, scientists, and visionaries. I publish the Health Outlook a weekly ezine with select, in-depth blogs on health insight, science, news, and action which is available with a free sign up here.

I've been a featured blogger on the Huffington Post since 2007. I'm delighted to serve as Moderator on the Urban Zen blog, and I also blog on Psychology Today, Intent.com, and Citizens.org, a health action site. As Media/Editorial Director of Friends of Health, a non-profit organization, I'm currently at work on a new book on making attitudinal changes in health care, and you can follow me on Twiiter @healthattitude

An Integral Health Coach for ten years, I'm a Facilitator of Family Repatterning, which, based on collective psychology resolves family entanglements. Feel free to comment on my blogs here, and to write me at Alison@Health-Journalist.com with your questions and suggestions.

 

 

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