Frontline Reports
Diamonds of Haiti: The Aftermath of Hurricane Matthew
[The following videos and blog post are detailed updates we’ve received from Joseph Bataille, World Relief’s Country Director in Haiti, about the relief efforts taking place in Haiti in the aftermath of Hurricane Matthew.]
Every year, my wife and I choose a new part of Haiti to explore for our anniversary. Our country is a gem, full of hidden treasures. And every year, we celebrate by uncovering one of these treasures together.
This past July, we explored GrandâAnse. We began with one of the furthest reaches of the region, Anse dâHainault. The two and a half hour drive from the entrance of the city of JĂ©rĂ©mie was scenic, but to tell the truth, it was a bit exhausting. We had already driven 6 or 7 hours that morning to get to JĂ©rĂ©mie. We could only hope that this additional 2.5 hour, slow-paced, rocky trek, would be worth it in the end. After all, we would still have to drive back in a couple of days.
We came up on the main stretch of the town of Dame Marie. It was almost evening and the sun was preparing to set. The colors of the sky dancing and glistening as they reflected off of the sea made us forget all about our uncomfortable drive. The people of the townânot accustomed to receiving many outsidersâeach watched from the front porch of their homes as we passed by. Life seemed beautiful and simple. Children played in their yards and in the streets. Men tended to boats and nets after a day of fishing. Women conversed and laughed as they finished various late-afternoon tasks or as they braided each otherâs hair, while they relaxed on the front porch. All the while, the sun, the sea, and the sky danced in the background. Beautiful and simple indeed. We took in similar scenes for the last half hour of the drive to Anse dâHainault.
The rest of our visit in GrandâAnse was equally beautiful. From Anse dâHainault, we traveled to the city of JĂ©rĂ©mie. The family of Alexandre Dumas (author of âThe Three Musketeersâ and âThe Count of Monte Cristoâ) hails from JĂ©rĂ©mie, as do other notable Haitian writers. This historic city is rightfully known as âThe City of Poets.â Traveling further to a hidden cove called âAnse du Clerc.â We sat mesmerized by the crashing of waves into the bay as we drank in beauty that few have the pleasure of seeing. All this while enjoying freshly caught fish served over boiled plantains, and of course, fresh coconuts to drink.
Even more beautiful than the scenery, as usual, were the people that we encountered. We met with our friend and my colleague, Esther, when we traveled back to Jeremie. She showed us around over the next couple of days. Each day, Estherâs aunts fought over the âprivilegeâ of getting to feed us. Every home that we visited had a table prepared; they would hear nothing of the meal that we had just eaten two hours earlier. They showed us around proudly, wanting us to love their town and region at least half as much as they do. They would give us everything, if we would ask, but would receive nothing but good company in return. Each evening we stayed with Estherâs godparents, in their home, set proudly in a Garden of Eden by the sea.
Last Saturday, I visited that place again. The house was still there, and so was the sea, but the garden was gone. So was everything else.
The town of JĂ©rĂ©mie was full of piles of debris stacked high. All along the ride through other parts of GrandâAnse, I saw homes that I donât remember seeing before. Each had lost the trees that had once shielded them from view. Nearly all had also lost their rooftops and many had lost walls as well. With GrandâAnse accounting for a major portion of the nationâs remaining forest coverage, it was devastating to see the hills and mountains, literally stripped bare by Matthewâs winds. At the time, with images coming slowly and rarely, I could only imagine what Anse dâHainault at the tip of the island might look like in the aftermath. I couldnât bear to imagine what happened to the people of Dame Marie and their simple and beautiful life.
Nothing was the same in the region. That is, nothing except for the people. Estherâs aunt was excited to see us, yet slightly upset that we surprised her, because she didnât have a chance to prepare a meal for us. She gently scolded her niece for not calling her in advance (although telephone lines were mostly cut off). Estherâs godparents were still the king and queen of hospitality and, despite the devastation, her godfather still wore his usual smile that you can be sure heâs had on his face since childhood. His wife insisted on preparing a goat for us, despite having lost several goats and their garden in the storm and despite the fact that we had brought our own provisions.
When visiting pastors in Pichon last week, the pastors, who had advance notice of our coming, would already have fresh coconuts ready for us to drink or something else for us to âtasteâ as we walked along the road. We would look to the few trees that were left standing to see if we could figure out where these gifts were coming from, but we found no sign that there was more to come. We were being offered their best. Their last. Their all. And they refused to be denied the opportunity to be hospitable. Wherever we went, there was a sadness in the air, but over and over we were awestruck by the palpable goodness that remained in the hearts of a people who still wanted to hope.
That same charity and goodness has all but become a national phenomenon. Many miles away, on the first Sunday morning after the storm, churches in the capital were gathered as their usual custom. Surely, the faithful came with the usual personal desires that they wanted to ask God to fulfill, but that day, they also shared a common heaviness. Together, they lifted the burden of those suffering after the hurricane in prayer. Many also began collecting funds and items to send to the victims in distress.
In Les Cayes, that same afternoon, our staff met with a group of pastors, all of whom have churches that have sustained damages. As we discussed with them the importance of preaching the gospel by loving acts, together they resolved to see to that the homes of their more vulnerable neighbors are rebuilt, even if it meant that their church buildings were the last to be repaired. We recently met with a group of pastors in Duchity (Pestel, GrandâAnse) who have agreed to do the same.
Late last week, I participated in a meeting with more than 200 Haitian church leaders in the capital. The purpose was to join together collectively to reach out to the affected areas with short, mid, and long term relief efforts. We had similar conversations with our partners in the capital. All of them excitedly agreed that the primary responsibility for relief must go to the local church. In Belle Anse, church leaders are assessing the damages together, while reflecting on ways to help those who were hit the hardest. Immediately after the storm, some even worked overtime to finish a home that they had begun to build months earlier for a single mother of three. After many months of being stalled by various obstacles, they finished the project in only a few days.
I could fill pages and pages with the difficulties and hardships that are still yet to come. But I would rather put a final exclamation point on what I have attempted say so far…
Haiti has a lot of good things. The best of all these things are its people. Haiti is gold. The Haitian people themselves are diamondsâhard-pressed but not hardened, and refined by many years of adversity. When they pull together, nothing is impossible to them.
The local church is full of such gems, and across the country, near to and far from the disaster, they are pulling together. They are helping one another and looking out for the weakest among them. World Relief is privileged to know some of the best of them. They are a light to their communities. World Relief is working closely with these leaders as they help their communities to recover shelters, gardens, livelihoods, and autonomy. But we refuse to let our work to be the basket that covers and hides the goodness and the light of Godâs love that is already present. Rather, we are working in such a way to put that light on the lamp-stand, where it belongs, that the world will see their good works and glorify our Father who is in heaven (Matthew 5:15-16).
The nation is full of people with hearts of servants who are more than ready and more than willing to carry the weight of their vulnerable neighbors. Our job in this time is to help them to find the resources that match the largeness of their hearts and to equip them with skills and knowledge to build back better. Our mission is to help them to accomplish their mission.
That has always been our mission, and it will never change. We empower the church. They seek out the least, the last, and the lost among them, and together we make a world of a difference.
If you have already donated, please consider a second donation to Haitiâs hurricane relief efforts, or a general donation to World Reliefâs other work around the world. Also, we invite you to share a link to this page with your friends and family.
UPDATE: Relief for Haiti
Since Monday, when Hurricane Matthew struck Haiti, we’ve been getting reports from our staff and local partners in the country. The situation grows worse by the day. Please consider taking action and donating today.
Haitian officials are reporting that at least 400 people have died, and the death toll is likely to continue rising. The UN Office for Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs is also reporting that 350,000 residents are in need of immediate aid.
Because of our longstanding relationship with churches throughout Haiti, World Relief has a built-in system to deliver that aid, one that empowers local leaders in Haiti to lead their own relief efforts.
As the death toll continues to climb and reports of widespread damage and destruction pour in, now is the time to act.
For the sake of the men, women, and children of Haiti, please donate today.
South Sudan: Worldâs Youngest Nation on the Brink of Civil War
[This post comes to us from a team member in South Sudan, however weâre choosing to keep the authorâs identity private at this time.]
In most parts of the world, Independence Day is something to celebrate. Itâs a day to remember past sacrifice and to celebrate the victory of a battle hard fought. And yet, last weekâs Independence Day in South Sudan was a different story.
July 9âa date that has been celebrated in South Sudan since the country gained independence in 2011âwas greeted this year with heightened vigilance, rumors of violence, and little sense of victory. Fireworks did not end in awe-inspiring bursts of color and grace, and families were not underfoot admiring the spectacular display. The color in the South Sudanese sky that night was brought instead by tracer ammunition and accompanied by the reverberating staccato of heavy weaponry.
As we settled into Thursday evening, I could hear the distant bursts of gunfire. Itâs been a while since itâs been this loud and this consistent. Itâs been a while since tensions in Juba have been this high. Thatâs why, when my phone rang that night, my brain began anticipating several scenarios. In the end it was a warning from one of my security guards. âSecurity isnât goodâŠstay in your compound. Iâve taken shelter with a brother because I canât make it home.â
I offered my thanks for his update and a few shallow words of encouragement. What can you say when this nation finds itself once more on the edge? Where a slight nudge is sufficient to ignite a conflict with unimaginable consequences.
Friday brought that nudge.
While the details are not entirely clear, hereâs what the weekend held. There was heavy fighting on Friday at the Presidential Palace while the President, First Vice President, and Vice President were meetingâresulting in significant loss of life. Saturday was calm by comparison, but Sunday was chaos.
Hundreds have died and thousands have fled. The peace negotiated almost a year ago is over. Staff are at home, reporting fighting in their neighborhoods. They are lying on the floor, hiding under beds, and reporting that they do not know if they will survive the day. I expect the worst.
My heart breaks for this nation and for these people. Please pray for the following:
- Our teams in South Sudan, as we finalize safety and security plans for World Relief staff and volunteers.
- Our work, as the nation spirals back into chaos.
- This nation. It has been reported that war has been declared; we do not know what tomorrow will bring but we trust that this will not be the end.
How You Stand with the Vulnerable
Because of the generosity of donors, World Relief was able to help Preemptive Love provide food and other essential items to 500 families in Fallujah.
Two weeks ago, Iraqi military forces began ground operations around the city of Fallujah to reclaim it from ISIS. Within the first week, 500 families were liberated but left without food, water, or shelter. However, because of your support, that quickly changed. Hereâs how:
Our partners at Preemptive Love Coalition provide aid and relief on the front lines of the war against ISIS. They operate behind enemy lines in some of the most dangerous and heavily militarized zones of the Middle East. As ISIS cuts through the region, leaving death and destruction in its path, Preemptive Love follows behind, giving food, shelter, and essential non-food items to families affected by the conflict.
Two weeks ago, as the Iraqi-led military operation against ISIS drew closer to Fallujah, Preemptive Love anticipated the humanitarian crisis that would unfold as the conflict reached the city. In need of immediate funds to supply aid for thousands of people, Preemptive Love reached out to a number of its partners, including World Relief.
Thanks to the donations many of you regularly make to World Relief, we were able to quickly give Preemptive Love $20,000 to provide food, mattresses, medicine, and hygiene products to the families of Fallujah. Because of your support, 500 families in Fallujah have food! Thatâs no small accomplishment.
When you make a donation to World Relief, you make it possible for us to fulfill our calling to stand with the vulnerableâboth by expanding our operations, and by allowing us to give to organizations like Preemptive Love.
Consider making a one time donation today, or commit to showing your continued care for the vulnerable by committing to give $29 per month.
Thank you for your commitment to the vulnerable, and your trust in World Relief. Your support for our organization and organizations like Preemptive Love means the difference between life and death, and between hope and despair for so many around the world.
Finding Hope on the Front Lines, Part 2
Editors Note: What follows is an excerpt from another update received from Maggie Konstanski, World Relief’s Disaster Response Manager. (Read Maggie’s first update.) Maggie writes from Iraq, where she is currently working with local leaders to assist families forced from their homes because of the ongoing conflicts in Syria and Iraq.
This week, my heart has been broken 10 times over. As I learn more about the stories and challenges of people I care for deeply, as statistics are transformed into stories of people I have come to love, I feel frustrated that I cannot do more to help. During a training exercise, we were sharing about what strengths existed within their communities and how those strengths were helping the community. Each one shared stories of how the community had surrounded each other, supported one another and sacrificed for each other. They had come from different towns, different backgrounds, and all faced their own share of hardship. They could have retreated within and only looked out for their own interests, and no one would fault them for it.
Instead, as every person in the room shared their own story of displacement, there was one phrase weaved as a common thread in each story: â…and then I said, âhow can I help?ââ
In circumstances that would lead many of us to ask, âHow can someone help me?â this was a group that courageously asked the opposite, responding to the needs that surrounded them using whatever capacities and abilities they had to offer, however humble. Oh what this world could learn from such courage and compassion.
Daily, I find myself asking how I can be more like my colleagues here. How can I be more courageous, more compassionate, and more generous? We so often look for hope in security, wealth and accomplishment, and are angry when these things fail us or when life does not measure up to our expectations. What if instead we looked for hope and joy in how we could serve others? What if our joy was not measured by our achievements, but by how much we had given away, by the number of people we had welcomed into our home?
In Jeremiah 29:7 it says, âWork for the peace and prosperity of the city where I sent you into exile. Pray to the Lord for it, for its welfare will determine your welfare.â I have always loved this verse, but struggled to comprehend how to put it into practice. People here are teaching me what this verse looks like in practice. In displacement, in towns not their own, they are seeking the peace of the entire communityânot themselves, not their family, not only those that share their homeland or religion, but of the entire community. At times, this means forgiveness and loving those that turned their back on your suffering. It takes great sacrifice to seek not your own welfare, but the welfare of others, especially when your own welfare is in such great jeopardy.
Those who have seen the destructive power of hate and experienced dehumanizing discrimination know that peace is only found in recognizing the inherent value in our shared humanity. I pray that we will see each other as God sees us: equal in value, created in Godâs image, sharing an equal inheritance in Godâs grace. If we truly saw people this way, then surely indifference would be impossible.
Finding Hope on the Front Lines
Editors Note: What follows is an update recently received from Maggie Konstanski, World Relief’s Disaster Response Manager. Maggie writes from Iraq, where she is currently working with local leaders to assist families forced from their homes because of the ongoing conflicts in Syria and Iraq.
Since last May, this is my fourth month here in Iraq, and I am enjoying being able to come back to friendships and appreciating the comfort of familiarity. Local shop owners know me and are happy to see me, friendships are strengthening and my love for this place grows.
Some things have changed even since my last trip here. The frontline has been pushed back in some places, opening access to some locations and creating new opportunities. There are new tensions, howeverânew groups being targeted by violence, with civilian communities caught in the crossfire.
Another change is the temperature. Many homes here are built to stay cool in the hot summers, which means they are incredibly cold in the winter. The key to staying warm is to have four walls, a sturdy roof and a heater, luxuries that many of the displaced do not have. It breaks my heart to know that many of my friends are cold through the night, while I enjoy a warm, dry and comfortable night of sleep. These are the disparities that are so hard to comprehend. Honestly, the more I learn, the less I understand.
It is hard to explain, but even though my heart aches over these disparities and the injustice and horrors of conflict, I keep coming back to hope. While the realities of war and conflict are devastating, and the losses many, it is in these same places that I see courage, hope and love on a scale I could never have imagined. I get to spend my days with people who have lost much and suffered deeply, yet daily choose to serve others and build towards the future. I am surrounded by peacemakers. Their courage astounds me.
This week I had the privilege of training a group of local trainers who will train others in facilitating child-friendly spaces, running support groups for youth and providing psychosocial support to their communities. If the love, generosity and courage that I have seen in these people and so many others is any indication, then I believe we can pray for peace and healing with great hope. It is hard sometimes to not despair, but I now can count some of the most courageous people I have ever met as friends, sisters and brothers. What a privilege.
An update from Iraq (Update 1)
Below is an update from our Disaster Response Manager, Maggie Konstanski, in Iraq. The best way I can think of to describe what it is like being here is whiplashâconstantly being thrown back and forth between two extremes you did not know could coexist. The city where I am staying has been a place of refuge for communities fleeing violence and conflict. Within the city limits, there is peace and life has a fragile normality. However, as you drive in and around the city, the hills are dotted with the camps and shelters of the displaced. Dotting the hillsides are ancient structures, beautiful vistas and temporary shelters. The cradle of civilization now caught in chronic conflict. The depth of this placeâs history cannot be ignored. Mosul may have not been familiar to many people until recent events, but we all know the name Nineveh, Mosul’s ancient name. So whether it is fortresses of Salahadin, historical places with significance for countless traditions worldwide, or ancient monasteries, the richness and familiarity of this placeâs history is not felt in remnants but it in an ever present part of daily life.
In the media, we are given a very narrow and singular narrative of the conflict that is happening here. While that conflict is very real and the stories that come from it are truly horrific, the reality is that much of normal life goes on, even in the midst of very abnormal circumstances. Even in the face of conflict and suffering, much of life goes on as it always didâbabies are born, people form new communities, people care for children and try to reestablish routines. It is this contrast that causes the whiplash. One moment, you are all dressed up to attend the opening of a Carrefour at a new mall when only hours earlier you were sitting with people who had experienced unimaginable atrocityâwater cut off from their community in an effort to kill them, fleeing with young children while others are left behind, and realizing that the woman who has a two month old baby had fled while in the late stages of pregnancy. The stories of the missing and the dead do not seem to fit within the context of peaceful weekends spent enjoying the many beautiful places in the surrounding mountains, but yet they coexist.
For everyone I have talked to so far, recent events are understood only within the context of the past two decades and the two wars with the USA. No one was left untouched by these wars and the stories of loss, suffering and hope are numerous. These stories are shared with me never with accusation or animosity, but with a desire to have their story understood, fearful that I have only heard an incomplete version. I am reminded that it is such a common part of the human experience to want our stories heard and understood. I find I have no words appropriate to respond to these stories, and in these painful moments my heart longs for peace with a ferocity I didn’t know was possible.
For those of you looking for ways to respond, here are four simple ways: