Friday, June 14, 2013

Homework For A Trip

Before last year's trip to Haiti, I read When Helping Hurts by Steve Corbett and Brian Fikkert.  It was recommended to our group of mission explorers to warn against well-meant but harmful work by people like us.  It was a good addition to our preparation.  This year there is another book I plan to read, Toxic Charity: How Churches and Charities Hurt Those They Help (And How to Reverse It) by Robert Lupton.  Here is a review of Lupton's book that put it high on my required reading list.

The tough question is, Does charitable relief work take the place of doing justice?  Can we take satisfaction in our missions to help the poor while our public policies and private enterprises undermine capacity building efforts in poor countries?

My experience in community development law and local public policy has helped me see that too often those with economic and political power unilaterally determine what those without it should want and need.  Indeed, is there a time in the history of our country when one can find more examples of the powerful undermining and marginalizing those they can dominate?   Look at who got hit the hardest in the mortgage crisis and what was done about it.  Look at how we deal with medical and health care.  It is not just about how we treat less powerful people; it is that we so blithely place ourselves above and beyond those we deem to need us, helping them in ways that please ourselves.

Anyone who would like to consider this matter further might benefit from a number of articles like this one, and this one.   Jonathan Katz delivers excellent reporting on the earthquake, its aftermath and the failures in the restoration of Haiti.  I highly recommend his book, The Big Truck That Went By.  For a very penetrating look at the country since the Duvalier regime, see Amy Welentz, Farewell, Fred Voodoo, reviewed here.  At some point I'll post some literary work by Haitian authors.

Our return trip at the end of this coming October is planned to engage more directly and personally with partners we met last year in Haiti.  We will work on projects of the Little Brothers and Little Sisters of the Incarnation at tasks they assigned to us.  Specifics of our assignments will be clearer in October.  Yes, a few of us expect to do manual sanitation improvement excavation to reduce the shortage of latrines.  We will take time to listen to our working partners, share stories, tell jokes, sing songs and be present with them in their beautiful mountains.                                                                 

Actually, the trip has already begun.  Those planning to travel, along with others going in spirit, are reading history and current events, initiating correspondence with people we want to meet, and raising funds to bolster the projects of our partners.  Some of us are starting to learn Kreyol so we can listen and speak to Haitians in their language.  (More about that later.)

In these small ways, I hope we are preparing to help with a minimum of harm.  I hope we will be more transforming than charitable.  And I expect to be transformed in that process.
--kjl


Thursday, June 6, 2013

My Plug For The Haiti Fundraiser On July 14





Here is a shameless plug for a fundraising event on July 14.  It will be held at the SOHO Kitchen and Bar at 1889 W. 25th St.

As you may know, I spent a week in Haiti last year getting acquainted with some Haitian-based community development programs.  The purpose of the trip was to start a process of connection and relationship under the auspices of Forest Hill Church in Cleveland Heights with Haitians located in the center of the country.  We were impressed most with the opportunities in agrarian development, education of orphans, a mid-wife clinical and training program, a public hospital, and other basic health care projects. 


Now there is a larger group of more than a dozen of us going to spend time working and learning with Haitians who we met last year.  In preparation for that trip, Forest Hill Church is raising funds to support those with whom we will be working.  The resources we deliver will be used for scholarships for young farmers learning how to farm their small farms efficiently for self sufficiency.  Resources will also be used for educational enrichment, or medical care, or other community development programs of the Little Brother and Little Sisters of the Incarnation located in town of Pandiassou, near the city of Hinche.  Here is a link to their web site for details about the work they do.  All of the money raised goes to Haiti.  (Those of us traveling are paying our own way.)

So, I am reaching out to friends, colleagues and acquaintances to invite you to make a reservation for the event on July 14th.  All are welcome to attend and participate.  Notice that there will be an auction of some art quilts made and donated by my wife, Barb, and some of her quilt-making friends, along with a spectacular piece of art glass donated by Brent Kee Young.  If you can't come on the 14th, keep Haiti in mind.  

Sunday, June 2, 2013

Seeing Haiti



After seeing Haiti in 2012, it became fixed in my vision.  This blog is an attempt to share the vision.  I invite you to look with me, see what I can show here and acquire your own vision of Haiti.  

Blogging is new for me.  I'm not sure if it will work.  The occasion for giving it a go is the preparation for another trip in October.  I hope to connect those on the physical journey with others who want to participate vicariously.  I also hope a blog will help to connect with people in Haiti.  We can be joined in this venture as traveling companions. 

Preparations are well under way.  They are an important part of the journey ahead.  Let's get going, then.

--Kermit