31 January 2010

*Sigh*

Watching the Grammy awards w/Bea, the Black Eyed Peas just started 'I Got a Feeling', everyone wearing costumes that make me think of 'Back to the Future II' when Marty goes to the year 2010 (or something like that) and everyone is driving flying cars and wearing very technological-looking clothes; ya know, the cliche of 'the future'. In fact, BEP just finished the song, screaming out, 'WELCOME TO THE FUTURE!!!' All very peppy and well done.

Watching this performance took me back in a very visceral way to New Year's Eve: Stephane and I at Moulin sur Mer, the most stressful thing on our mind was finding a white outfit for me to wear to the theme party that night. The Black Eyed Peas' 'I Got a Feeling' was playing every 30 minutes, an optimistic audio backdrop to a day of snorkeling, drinking, and admiring Moulin sur Mer's comprehensive plans for development and expansion. That night Stephane and I enjoyed a beautiful time under the stars at the beach, and he told me that New Year's Eve should always be celebrated in top form b/c the popular belief is that however you start your year is a harbinger of the 365 days that follow. For some reason I felt like I could believe this and was euphoric as the fireworks started at midnight, contemplating the happy year ahead of us.

Until 12 January, I think the new year was on track to live up to popular lore -- warm, happy, and vibrant, just like our New Year's Eve.

Now it seems more like my New Year's Day, most of which I spent immobilized by a hangover, trying not to breathe too hard lest I throw up.

I have a hard time remembering life before this and believing that it can be that way again. I know that is irrational, but watching the Black Eyed Peas tonight was more like watching a re-enactment of my past, not a glimpse of a better future.

Back from DR and potential for fundraising

After a remarkably bad day of travel, I returned from the Dominican Republic last night, greeted by snow covered streets and sub-freezing temperatures -- quite a switch!! The DR was interesting, in good and bad ways. It was of course fantastic to see Stephane and spend some time together. It was not a particularly romantic time together, as it was spent mostly in a taxi driving all over Santo Domingo retrieving supplies and meeting with partners, but it was quite productive and it was good to feel like I was supporting Stephane and his work back in Haiti.

To update you on what exactly his work is right now, his agency has set up a tent clinic at an encampment of 12,000 people in Carrefour. They are providing primary health care, seeing 150-200 patients a day. They are also working on setting up a milk clinic for children. There have been efforts at coordinating the myriad health providers now present in Port-au-Prince, which is vital to ensuring an effective health response, but so far there seems to be a disconnect between what people say in meetings and what happens in practice. This is typical, but extremely discouraging -- and dangerous -- in this situation. However, it is still early in the effort (although it seems like an eternity since the quake, we are not even at the three week mark), things are still quite confused and fluid, so let's just hope that coordination improves from here.

Driving around Santo Domingo allowed me to see all parts of the city, including parts that I would never otherwise have seen. While it is still evident that Santo Domingo is the capital of a still developing country, I couldn't help but feel sort of upbeat about it -- the city is clearly heading in a positive direction. Looking at the large buildings in the city provided a fascinating contrast: Those built in the 1960s or 70s when the DR first started really working to become a modern nation appeared not only dated, but shabby and I was a bit suspicious of their structural integrity; they looked like poorly executed copies of styles that were trendy in the US and Europe at that time. The newer buildings, however, show a clear evolution of style and construction. Although reminiscent of buildings one might see in Miami or LA, these structures are not copies, they retain a certain Dominican aspect that makes them more interesting that they would otherwise be. Most importantly, judging by the works in progress that we passed, they are clearly investing in better building materials -- I saw steel frames and lots of rebar.

We stayed in the Zona Colonial, the oldest (and most touristy) part of town, which was quaint and filled with historical sites that almost rival those in Europe. The oldest working cathedral in the New World, dating back to the early 1500s, was just up the street, ruins of the first hospital in the New World were visible from the terrace where we breakfasted each morning, the foundations of the original fort are situated by the river, a few blocks behind the hotel, and every few feet you encountered either buildings or well-maintained ruins dating back four centuries or more. I was particularly pleased to notice that numerous reconstruction/rehabilitation efforts were underway or already successfully completed; the Dominicans are wisely investing in preserving these historical marvels.

On his last night in Santo Domingo, Stephane informed me that this visit had made him consider that maybe Dominicans aren't all evil, which is a pretty big step for a Haitian. heh. I think he was surprised to find that Dominicans and Haitians have quite a lot in common, though they are of course different. We were also fortunate to encounter a number of very nice, helpful Dominicans, all of whom seemed more than willing to do anything in their power to assist Stephane and his agency in getting things done in order to return to Haiti ready to help. Our taxi driver put in 12 hour days and did double or triple duty, serving also as an interpreter at times and a laborer at others. He was paid, of course, but his enthusiasm went beyond what money can buy. When I visited the cathedral on my own while waiting for Stephane to arrive, one of the historical association employees approached me and asked where I was coming from and why I had come to the DR. When I told him that I was meeting my boyfriend, who was Haitian and working in PAP, and that we had both survived the earthquake, he was not only in awe of the fact that I was walking around the cathedral, seemingly intact, he actually started to tear up and said that he was so sad to see the pictures of his 'neighbors'. Celo, the largest mobile phone provider in DR, had signage all over town telling people that they could text a number to donate money to Haiti, many with the slogan 'Helping Haiti: We Have To'. The Dominican Republic is by no means perfect, and the history of antagonism between Haiti and the DR is not easy to overcome, but it seems that at least some Dominicans are making an effort.

Stephane left Friday to drive back to PAP and arrived safely that night. Luckily, his two vehicles were able to link up w/a convoy of other aid organizations, so that provided a bit more security. The sheer number of aid groups moving in and out of Haiti through the DR is impressive. I saw many people from agencies large and small who were staying in our hotel. I was speaking to the hotel night manager my first evening in Santo Domingo, who told me that normally they hotel is around 70% full, but that since the earthquake it has been at full capacity or even overbooked, almost exclusively by people staging trips to Haiti. One day we walked back into the hotel to find half of the lobby filled with tall stacks of large bins filled with supplies for Haiti. Although there is definitely some price gouging going on in town as a result of the influx of aid agencies, our hotel's rates were and apparently will remain at their normal seasonal level; they are not trying to exploit the numerous people who need a place to stay for a night or two before crossing the border.

We were also able to see the family who are still staying in the DR, which was so nice. I was so happy to see Babeth, especially, and to see that Alex and Sarah and Junior are all safe. David (DX) and his family, along with Klaus and his girlfriend, arrived while we were there, but we did not get to see them. Everyone is working on getting to the US, so hopefully everyone will be Stateside soon. We're starting to consider what everyone is going to do after that, which is rather daunting, but it seems best to take it one step at a time.

On a non-DR note, my stepdad (who has been awesome at getting the word out about Haiti issues and did a great job letting people know Stephane and I were okay right after the earthquake -- thanks, Chester!) sent me the following, which he received from a friend involved in this project. It sounds like a great opportunity to help a great charity and to beautify your home (or someone else's):
Soulcatcher Studios has launched the "pictureHOPE" exhibition and sale of fine art photographs benefiting the people of Haiti through Doctors Without Borders. I have donated some of my work to this worthy cause. Soulcatcher is offering signed, limited edition photographs for just $50.00 each, and 100%of the proceeds will be donated to Doctors Without Borders.

Tell your friends and family to buy some art to support the cause!

Direct link to exhibition: http://www.soulcatcherstudio.com/exhibitions/haiti/index.htm

24 January 2010

Going to Dominican Republic

Stephane called on Saturday to say that he is going to DR to buy trucks and organize supplies to convoy over to PAP. (He will also be renewing his passport, which expires in one week....I had asked him to do this several months ago, but he did not -- you see why women nag?!? heehee...) I will be flying down tomorrow morning to join him; right now the plan is for me to come back to the US on Friday. However, we should have Internet at the hotel, so we should be reachable by email/blog if our phones don't work.

22 January 2010

Recommendations for charitable giving

A few people have recently asked me to whom I thought they should donate to help with the crisis/recovery in Haiti. I do have some preferred charities, based on my own experience with NGOs and who/what I have seen in Haiti before the earthquake, and I also have some charities I deeply dislike. But in the interest of not getting sued for slander, I will list only the ones that I think are doing a really good job in their response to the situation now, as well as generally how they allocate their funds (i.e., how much of it actually goes to programming and not into people's pockets):
CURE International A medical NGO who were one of the first groups on the ground in the aftermath, opening operating rooms and wound care services when almost no one else was able to do so. (see the update I have pasted below)
Habitat for Humanity Their disaster response team has put together an interesting long-term recovery plan with quite a bit of potential (see the press release below); they are also better than most about how they spend their money.
Medecins sans Frontieres/Doctors without Borders MSF had been scaling down their activities in Haiti, as they operate mostly in actual emergencies and Haiti was emerging from 'emergency' status. Obviously and tragically, this has changed, and MSF has quickly moved to reinforce their staff both in numbers and supplies. They are skilled, serious, and comparatively efficient.
Catholic Relief Services (CRS) CRS has a long-standing presence in Haiti and has built some good relationships with the Haitian people. They run a number of orphanages throughout the country, mostly in PAP, who will be in desperate need of food, supplies, and shelter.
Save the Children A big NGO that has somehow managed to keep focus on its real priorities, helping kids and families. They are also well-established in Haiti, particularly in the areas of nutrition and preventive health.
Mission of Hope I have to give these guys some attention b/c they let us take over a whole section of their compound, but also b/c they appear to be doing really good work -- providing free healthcare to the local community, free education for children (a BIG deal in Haiti), and housing a number of children. These people live simply, raising their own food stock and living in austere conditions in their guest house, and many of them have learned Creole so that they can communicate better with the community around them.
Hearts with Haiti This NGO provides a lot of funding to an orphanage that was extensively damaged by the quake. Their orphanage, St. Joseph's, has been around for quite some time and is well-known for rescuing children who have been living as restaveks (child slaves, essentially) and helping them recover from that experience, while also providing education, job training, and healthcare.
USAID This would be more of an advocacy avenue rather than charitable giving, but if you are interested in trying to help shape the USAID long-term response to the situation in Haiti, contact your Representatives and Senators telling them that you support long-term investment in Haiti, and make suggestions about programs that you think they should put in place and/or encourage them to continue the development initiatives already approved for the northern part of the country, which was not affected by the quake. Congress ultimately decides how much USAID gets for what programs, so let those politicians know that your vote is at least partially linked to their response to Haiti.

All of these agencies can be found by simply putting their name in Google and hitting search. Also, just b/c I didn't list a charity does not automatically mean that it is on my no-fly list; if you are really concerned about that, you can email me privately for details.

This was CURE's first update from Haiti and I am including it b/c it gives a lot of interesting details, but they have since issued a new update wherein they confirm that they are now able to deliver supplies overland from the DR, and also that they have several more medical teams on the ground. Please also notice that they are estimating their total disaster response costs at around $500,000, which really is not that much money in the grand scheme of things. This is possible b/c most of the medical people working for them are volunteers, people freely giving their time and skills to help people desperately in need.

Creating organization from chaos
The CURE team on the ground in Port au Prince is not only bringing life-saving care to hundreds of injured Haitians, but they are also helping to organize and facilitate the work of other medical groups and volunteers. With no centralized coordination in place, the team has been key to getting OR’s up and running.

We were able to get the 18-person team from Dallas, Texas, mobilized to a different hospital. They immediately got to work and divided an open room into three OR’s, created an OR in an open hallway and turned a radiology room in an OR. In just 48 hours, this team performed over 300 operations, including 40 amputations and applied more than 100 casts.

More teams on the way
People continue to step up to respond to the crisis. In the next few days, CURE will be sending more than 25 medical professionals and a substantial amount of donated orthopedic equipment and supplies. These teams will relieve our very weary team members who have been on the ground since last Thursday.

CURE will meet ongoing medical needs
While CURE was one of the first to arrive in Haiti, we will not be the first to leave. The medical needs are staggering - hundreds of thousands are injured and are in need of care. Throughout the upcoming weeks and months, CURE will provide care from a local community hospital in Haiti and hopefully, will also be able to care for patients at our hospital in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic.

The effects of the earthquake on Haiti are massive and our response must be equally substantial. We estimate that our relief efforts in Haiti will cost $500,000. Please consider joining us to reach this goal and bring healing and restoration to the Haitian people.

In the days to come, we will be bringing you stories and first impressions from our team and the patients they are treating. Check our blog (blog.helpcurenow.org) and watch for email updates. Please consider passing this on to your friends and encouraging them to support the work of CURE International in Haiti and the Dominican Republic.

With prayers for hope and healing,
Your friends at CURE International

Give online at http://www.helpcurenow.org/haitirelief
or text CURE to 85944 to give a $10 gift

Follow updates at http://blog.helpcurenow.org

And to help support CURE, add the following message to your Facebook/Twitter account: Help CURE in Haiti: http://helpcurenow.org/haitirelief or txt CURE to 85944 to give a $10 gift. Follow:
http://blog.helpcurenow.org

This is Habitat's press release following their initial needs assessment in Haiti. They do know a lot about housing/neighborhood planning, and there seems to be some real potential here.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Katie Evans
Habitat for Humanity
404-420-6728
kevans@habitat.org
www.habitat.org/newsroom

Habitat for Humanity International CEO Jonathan Reckford visits Haiti’s earthquake-devastated neighborhoods

ATLANTA (Jan. 22, 2010) – Habitat for Humanity International CEO Jonathan Reckford traveled to Port-au-Prince Jan. 19 - 20 to meet with Habitat for Humanity Haiti staff and to tour some of the earthquake-ravaged neighborhoods in the capital city.

“This is the worst humanitarian disaster I’ve seen,” said Reckford. “Video and images cannot convey the devastation and suffering of the people of Haiti.”

Reckford met with Habitat for Humanity Haiti staff at their temporary office. While all 50 Habitat Haiti staff members survived last week’s earthquake; Habitat Haiti’s offices collapsed.

Habitat for Humanity is offering a three-fold response to the earthquake that includes clearing debris from home sites, providing Habitat for Humanity Recovery Starter kits and repairing and rebuilding homes through a transitional housing method.

“We want to help families with shelter right away, while also thinking of longer term housing solutions,” said Reckford. “Our goal is to put families into safe, durable transitional shelters that can be used for long periods and improved upon over time.”

The transitional housing model involves small shelters that can be built quickly and provide permanent base structures that can be expanded over time. The shelters will meet humanitarian standards of adequate living space and provision of water and sanitation. The structures also will be designed with hurricane and earthquake-resistant features.

Donations are urgently needed for recovery and can be made at www.habitat.org and by calling 1-800-422-4828. Additionally, texting “Habitat” to 25383 makes a $10 donation to Habitat’s efforts in Haiti.

About Habitat for Humanity International
Habitat for Humanity International is an ecumenical Christian ministry that welcomes to its work all people dedicated to the cause of eliminating poverty housing. Since its founding in 1976, Habitat has built, rehabilitated, repaired or improved more than 350,000 houses worldwide, providing simple, decent and affordable shelter for more than 1.75 million people. For more information, or to donate or volunteer, visit www.habitat.org.




21 January 2010

Day Four

Sleeping in the car turned out to not be the best idea, as Stephane's mom and grandmother placed the air mattress in the bed of the truck and every time they rolled over or moved, the entire truck shook, making it difficult to tell what was an aftershock and what was just them getting situated. (I'm sure the same was true for them every time I twisted around in the seat trying to find a less uncomfortable position.) Very early in the morning, maybe 330am, there was an actual aftershock, a rather large one that woke most of us. Once I realized that it was just an aftershock and that everything still seemed to be standing, I tried to go back to sleep. Other people chose to simply get up. By 615, I couldn't tune out their noise any longer, so I gave up and climbed out of the truck, rather irritated. While I understood everyone's fear and nervousness, I also knew the importance of sleeping, or at least resting, during times like this. Under such extreme stress, a person's body uses far more energy than normal and without at least some rest, it leads not only to exhaustion and physical illness, but it also impacts a person's decision-making abilities. People do dumb stuff when they are worn out.

When I woke up, Stephane told me that Steve had to go back to the city for work (he runs logistics for a UN unit, so they were clearly in need of him right now). Steve had offered to take me to the Embassy on his way to work. Although Stephane and I had agreed that I would evacuate as possible, when the time actually came for me to leave, I didn't want to keep my end of the deal. I tried to put on a stoic face, but I'm not sure it was very convincing as I said my goodbyes. Mommy Lu said that I would come back to Haiti and when I would be coming back to my home. This meant a lot to me; I have come to think of Haiti as my home, and I was happy that she thought of me as belonging there.

Stephane's mom was initially less gracious. She pulled me aside and informed me very strongly that she did not agree with my leaving, believing that Stephane was forcing me to do so and that I should stand up to him and stay with him, b/c that's what you do when you're with someone. I eventually managed to express to her that although she was correct in perceiving that I did not really want to leave, my departure was not the result of Stephane forcing his will on me, but rather it was a difficult decision made by both of us together for the greater good. I pointed out to her that the 16 other people standing there with us were all looking to Stephane to figure out how to take care of them, that he also needed to start working on how his agency was going to conduct relief efforts, and that if I stayed, Stephane would continue to spend too much time worrying about me and not enough time worrying about these other important issues. Babeth was satisfied with this line of reasoning, and gave me a big hug.

I was standing with Stephane, each of us trying not to cry as we said goodbye, when Didie’s younger brother approached us and asked Stephane for a cigarette. Stephane said that he didn’t have any and suggested that the brother go ask Junior for one. Didie’s brother responded, in complete seriousness, ‘Ugh! I don’t want to ask Junior, he doesn’t smoke the kind that I like!’ Stephane had predicted the night before that people would ‘start to get annoying’ now that we had made it to safety; this incident seemed to confirm that.

Steve, the cats, and I left without having breakfast, and as soon as we started to drive away, I felt like my whole body was telling me this was the wrong decision; my stomach got tight, my heart beat faster, and of course I started to cry, albeit quietly b/c Steve had already told me that if I cried, he would cry and then he couldn’t drive. Not far from the mission, we passed a car that had been heading out of town but hit a huge pothole and blew out a tire. This is not an unusual scene in Haiti – they have potholes that could swallow an elephant, I swear – nor was it unusual that the many, many cars passing this one did not stop to offer help. What was unusual, but typical of him, was that Steve stopped. He stopped his car even though he was going in the opposite direction and he got out and helped these people.

While he was busy with that, the cats and I waited in the (very hot) car. It occurred to me that I could get out and walk back to the mission, but I knew that Steve would stop me if I tried, and at any rate, he had locked the car and apparently you can’t unlock the doors from the inside if they’ve been locked from the outside. Which became a pretty serious problem as we continued to sit in the car, parked in full sun, unable even to roll down the window further than the tiny crack that I had made while we were on the road. The cats both started to pant, which is a bit strange for cats, but it was the first of many times they would do so on that day, while I sweat profusely. I finally managed to yell loudly enough for Steve to hear me and he released me from the oven for a couple of minutes while he finished up the tire. Enjoying the relative comfort of standing outside of the car, I watched as the vehicular exodus continued: tap-taps were more heavily laden than normal, even their roofs were covered with passengers, the same for buses, all driving at breakneck speed out of town. Every once in a while a bus or car would drive by in the opposite direction, heading toward town with a couple of passengers either going to look for loved ones or providing transportation to those who wanted to leave and could afford the fare. At one point, a truck that looked like ours started heading toward us and I hoped that it was Stephane coming to get to me, but of course it was not and I continued to wait for Steve, taking advantage of the time alone to cry a bit.

We were back on the road about 20 minutes after stopping and arrived to the edge of town not long after that. Where the day before Clercine had been jam-packed, it was now almost empty, probably b/c the gas station had run out of fuel. Steve put a handkerchief over his face for a few miles to block the smell of decomposition that greeted us at a certain spot. Not far from the Embassy we turned down a shady side street and Steve explained that he wanted to stop at his parents’ house to check on his family. They, too, had all made it through the quake and were now living in a large courtyard shared with neighbors. When we arrived, Steve’s mom seemed very happy to meet me and sweetly offered me the use of a plastic chair while she and Steve chatted in rapid Creole. It seemed that they were preparing to get out of town, but they weren’t sure where they would go. Their house was still standing, but was seriously damaged, the staircase to their second floor had fallen and there were large cracks running through all of the walls. I played with Steve’s niece, an adorable little girl of maybe two years of age sporting a shiny new pair of plastic jelly shoes that I would have been nuts about at her age. She was giggling and happy, a brief picture of joy in an otherwise horrific time. During the quake, Steve’s mom said that the little girl kept repeating, ‘M’ap mouri’ – ‘I’m dying.’

Not realizing that we were again stopping for about 15 minutes, I had left the cats in the car. Luckily, the shade had kept the car from getting *too* hot, but it was still pretty hot. Both cats were once again panting and I began to be worried that they had survived the earthquake only to die of heatstroke and dehydration. I began to want to reach the Embassy just so that I could give the cats some water. We made two more stops, one for Steve to buy ice, which he put in a big cooler his mother had just given him, and one for him to buy water, two big plastic bags filled with smaller plastic bags. This was going to be all of the drinking water that would be available to the group back at the mission for at least a couple of days and the price, Steve said, was steep (I took the opportunity to teach him the English phrase ‘price-gouging’). I was in a pretty constant state of dehydration, having had little water since Tuesday, so I opened one of the small water sachets and shared it with Steve. When it was nearly gone, I pried open each cats’ mouth in turn and forced some water in, hoping that would at least keep them alive if not totally solve their problem. You can imagine how much they loved that.

When we had passed the Embassy the day before on our way out of town, there were a few cars outside and security had been obviously enhanced (armed guards were lining the sidewalk outside, which is unusual), but there weren’t many people standing outside waiting to get in. Today, it was a mob scene. Cars were parked on both sides of the street for some distance and there was a group of maybe 300 people standing outside the gate, evidently waiting to be admitted. Steve and I managed to grab one of the Embassy staff members who was outside informing people of their various options and the following conversation occurred:
Guy: First of all do you want to go, get out of here, or do you want to stay at the Embassy?
Me, hesitating: Well, I would like to stay….
Steve, jumping in: NO!! She is leaving, she has to leave!
Me: Okay, so I’m leaving.
Guy: Then you have three choices – you can get on a bus to the Dominican Republic…
Me: Oh, you’re arranging flights from DR?
Guy: No, you just get on the bus and go there.
Me, not keen on the idea of being dumped in the DR with no continuing travel arranged: Uh-huh. What else?
Guy: You can join this big group of people here who are waiting to be very slowly registered into our system and then allowed into the Embassy to wait for transportation to the airport, which will be a while because we don’t have enough vehicles. [I am looking at this huge group standing in the sun and thinking that if the cats didn’t die standing there, I very well might.] Or, you can go straight to the airport, where they are doing the same system, but you’re already at the runway and don’t have to wait here to get a ride.

Steve was not sure if we could even get to the airport (we had heard one of the roads leading there had been damaged heavily), but we decided to try anyway. As it turned out, the road we used was perfectly fine, aside from the fact that traffic was backed up for about three miles because UN and NGO vehicles needing to get in and out of the airport and the UN compounds along this road kept interrupting traffic. We were once again sitting in the baking heat of the car, one of the cats was even drooling by this point (seriously, cats don’t drool unless things are pretty dire), and I told Steve I was thinking of walking the rest of the way. (All I had was the cats and a shoulderbag w/my computer, some meds, and a couple of other things, so it’s not like I had to worry about toting luggage for three miles.) Steve insisted that I could not walk alone and was going to park the car in the now-empty lot of a gas station we were passing. Like most other gas stations in the area, this one had run out of fuel and was now abandoned except for the occasional group of people seeking some shelter from the sun under the fuel pump roof.

Unsure of whether or not we should walk, I offered to get out of the car and walk ahead to see if the problem was something that might clear up soon, or if we needed to resort to pedal locomotion. I had ascertained that the problem was a convoy of UN trucks trying to get into a compound and blocking traffic in the meantime and was on my way back to the car when suddenly traffic started moving pretty quickly, the trucks having gained admittance, and I hopped in Steve’s car as he drove up to me. We then quickly reached the airport, which was pretty much as chaotic as it always is, just chaotic in a different way that day. Steve handed me a huge bottle of water he had in his car (a big gesture, really, considering how precious water was at that point) and then walked with me until a Marine told us that only people with US passports could go further, at which point I hugged Steve and prepared to start the rest of my journey alone for the first time in days. It was not a very comforting prospect.

The Marine had directed me to join a large group of people at one end of the airport, but as I was walking that way, another Marine stopped me and an older gentleman who was behind me and told us to go to a door that was back in the direction we had come from. The Marine called to another Marine closer to the door, telling him to let us in; we were apparently being given a short-cut, though I have still have no idea why. As we were walking in that door, a Marine who had been pushing an elderly Haitian woman on a luggage cart asked the gentleman with me if he could take the lady inside. Before the guy could answer, the Marine left the woman and the luggage and walked away to address some other emerging problem. The guy seemed pretty bewildered and initially not very interested in getting stuck with a strange old woman, but when we got inside and saw that we were joining a line of people going out to the tarmac, the gentleman used his newfound burden to his advantage, pushing to the front of the line with his incapacitated charge.

Seeing this, as well as a couple of people with small children or on crutches passing to the front, some of the people in line around me who were not injured or accompanied by children began to get out of line and start moving toward the front of the line. Those of you who have ever boarded a plane going to or from Haiti should recognize this phenomenon, the Haitian inability to stand patiently in a line or follow directions about who goes first. (You know I love Haiti and its people, but seriously, I have even been stepped on by people rushing to get on a plane, and the whole notion of ‘Boarding Zones’ is non-existent for these people.) Annoyed, I said loudly to no one in particular, ‘There is a *line* here for a reason,’ at which point most of the people returned to their spots and this one older guy who had been behind me even said, ‘Oh, this is a line?’ Ha.

The group – which I later learned was the last group of evacuees they allowed on the tarmac that day – moved forward quickly, delivering us to waiting Haitian immigration officers who stamped our passports, took our visitor cards, and then waved us toward a door leading out to the tarmac. When I emerged, a guy from an Army Airborne unit that was manning the airfield asked me if I was with a big group of Americans and I said, ‘No, but where do I check in with the State Department?’ The soldier said all he knew was that if I wasn’t with the big group of Americans, I was supposed to go stand with the general rabble. (It turned out that the group he was talking about consisted of 19 people who had paid that extra $30 for travel insurance, which apparently includes evacuation from a disaster area; a private plane landed a few hours later and whisked them all back to the US. I’m prolly still too cheap to pay for it, but think about *that* next time you’re booking a ticket!)

After confirming that there was no way I could glom on to the travel insurance group, I resigned myself to the mass of people also waiting for a ride. Seeing someone sitting at a computer, I made my way toward him, thinking this might be the check-in area. It was not. In fact, I still don’t know what exactly that person was doing, but he worked for the Haitian airport authority and was sitting in front of a computer with what looked like a complicated spreadsheet open on the screen; I think he may have been the air traffic guy. I flagged down someone else who worked for the airport and asked him if there was a place to register with the State Department. We were having this conversation in French and it was very loud, so when he told me that there was no place to register and no one giving out tickets, I thought that I just had not understood correctly; it seemed inconceivable that there would be no organization to something as complicated and serious as evacuating hundreds of people.

Spotting what looked like a missionary group, I approached and asked them if they knew of a registration area. They laughed and said they had been there for a couple of hours and still not seen anyone from the State Department. They also mentioned that they had been assigned a day to evacuate when they somehow managed to contact the Embassy by phone. This group had been staying at an orphanage in Ti Goave when the earthquake struck, helping out with the kids, repairing/building things around the compound, etc. Although reports from that town were quite grim, this group said the orphanage had very little damage and all 41 children were safe, although they were concerned about security in the coming days, as the compound wall had fallen and hungry townspeople were letting themselves in. There was another singleton like me in this group, a guy around 23 who had been evangelizing in the streets of Croix Bouquets. It turned out that he was from the Baltimore area, the same place I was planning to go if we managed to get out of the country.

I attached myself to this group, thinking it was better to at least look like part of a group than to try to elbow my solitary way onto a plane. They were mercifully camped out in a shady part of the waiting area, the shadow created by the visibly damaged airport behind us. The wall directly behind us had a huge crack in the shape of a capital X; every time a plane or helicopter made a lot of noise/vibration, I would look uncertainly back at this wall, half-expecting to see the whole building to come tumbling down on us. The Haitian authorities must have had similar concerns, as they instructed us more than once to move away from the building. Of course, this directive directly contradicted the instructions given to us by the State Department officials on the occasions they came out; lacking sufficient water to distribute amongst us, they were understandably worried that if we spent too much time in the sun everyone would get dehydrated, so they repeatedly told us to move back into the shade, closer to the unstable building. I chose to brave the shade.

In total, we stood outside of the airport for about nine hours. We never registered anywhere, but the evacuations did get underway, starting with families with children, injured people, and the elderly (I guess that guy was happy he took over old lady duty then!). Two groups evacuated before us, one on a Coast Guard plane and the other on an Air Force transport. Previously, I had never seen more than four airplanes at one time at this airport. On this day, there were five planes parked at any given moment, with a steady stream of take-offs and landings and planes arriving bearing the flags of Venezuela, Colombia, France, and many more. (I later heard there was some uproar about the American forces hogging the airport; I can tell you first-hand that I did not see that. If planes weren’t getting in, it was because the tiny airport was overwhelmed, not because of discrimination against other nationalities.) Planes have been using the airport night and day, a huge change from normal operations, when no one flies after dark b/c most airlines have security policies forbidding their staff from being in Port-au-Prince then.

And that’s what we did: Stood, traded horror stories, shared water, marveled at the gigantic luggage so many people had with them (seriously, I was shocked at how many people had two or more big suitcases, but maybe they were taking everything they owned and starting over in the US). The cats had given up on worrying and spent most of this time unconscious or at least motionless. Some officials from the military brought out MREs around 3pm, telling us that four of us had to share one MRE b/c they didn’t have enough (we were just grateful for food). I asked a couple of the State Department people if they knew a friend of mine who worked at the Embassy and said she would be working at the airport that day. One of them informed me that she was working a later shift, while the other one, a small Hispanic-looking dude in aviator sunglasses who had been flitting around the tarmac like it was America’s Next Top Model: Disaster Edition, rolled his eyes when I asked and said in an exasperated tone, ‘I am NOT even FROM here – I work in Santo Domingo!!’ Well, okay then.

When the commercial plane that eventually took us to Miami arrived, it wasn’t clear that anyone was going to get on it. They offloaded a full planeload (around 200 people) of assorted relief workers and then…..the plane sat there. And sat there. We stopped speculating about whether or not we would get on that plane b/c it seemed as if the plane wasn’t going to move. Then, suddenly, there was a glut of State Department people, most of whom appeared to be my age (27) or younger, urging us to form groups of 25, then lines of 25, then to move the lines, move them back, make them straighter, straighter still, on and on for about an hour and a half until finally they determined the exact number of people present. There were *exactly* enough seats on the plane to accommodate everyone, not one more or one less. We were then given a five-page form to complete before boarding, which included a promissory note wherein we agreed to reimburse the State Department for the cost of the evacuation, but the cost was not specified, making some people understandably nervous (it’s not as if the government is known for being cost-effective).

I had been somewhat concerned that the cats would be spotted and turned away, in which case I was going to be living at the Embassy (sorry – they had made it this far, I wasn’t going to leave them at the airport now!), but the only comment I got was from a flight attendant who informed that the cats would have to stay in the bag (no problem there).

It was dark by the time the plane took off at 630pm, the city below was quite dark, illuminated by the few lights still powered by generators and inverters or by flickering cooking fires. As we took off and the destruction below receded, I felt the same sick feeling that I had experienced when I left the mission compound almost 12 hours before; it felt profoundly wrong to be sitting on a plane heading away from Haiti in her time of need.

The captain addressed us several times throughout the flight, each time acknowledging in a very touching way his sympathy for our experiences and his gratitude that he was able to help us at this time. At 830pm, we landed in Miami, whose bright lights saturated the landscape and delineated its grid of well-aligned streets, a marked contrast with the slapdash ‘design’ of Port-au-Prince’s now-darkened sprawl. As we moved toward the Immigration hall, there were several Immigration Officers waiting to welcome us back, seeming somewhat in awe of our ragged, careworn appearance.

Before we landed I was pretty sure I would have to put the cats in quarantine, although I had managed to take all of their veterinary paperwork, and I was expecting that I would have to spend the night in Miami. Instead, the cats and I arrived at the Customs counter, handed over our paperwork, and were directed to follow the green dots to the exit. Upon entering the main airport, I checked a departures board and found that there were two flights going to the DC/Baltimore area, both with the same airline. Mustering the last reserves of my energy, I trucked it over to the ticket counter, which was no small distance from my original position. I got to the counter just in time to buy the last seat on a 10pm flight to Baltimore, after first repeatedly explaining to the agent that I didn’t have a ticket and I hadn’t paid for the cats beforehand b/c *I*just*came*from*Haiti*. The guy I had met at the airport who was also going to BWI got to the ticket counter a few minutes after me and initially was told he couldn’t get a seat, but got lucky when someone cancelled at the last minute and a seat came available. This was also fortunate for me, as I didn’t have a phone and borrowed his to call Bea and tell her I would be in MD in three hours.

When I got to the gate, I washed my face for the first time in four days and tried to make myself a bit less stinky for the benefit of the person destined to sit next to me on the rather small plane. It didn’t really work, but it felt pretty good. As it turned out, I sat next to a fascinating person who was both comforting and appropriately interested, helping make this overwhelmingly sad voyage somewhat less excruciating.

We touched down at BWI and Bea was waiting at the arrivals area with flowers and a warm wrap, knowing that I wouldn’t have anything like a coat w/me. She had also run out to the store in the time before my plane landed and bought cat litter and cat food, as well as Coke for me AND she had washed my sheets. It was the sweetest homecoming I’ve ever received.

I had taken a short nap on the plane, so when we arrived home I was wide awake (I think my body was getting used to the short bursts of sleep), so I enjoyed a bagel and some wine and Bea and I started watching a funny movie. I made it til about 230am, but then finally crashed, falling asleep sitting in my chair downstairs. The cats and I managed to slog upstairs and crawl into bed, where I burrowed deep in to the covers, unused to the chilly temperatures.


It seems that phone communications are more or less restored now, Stephane and I have been able to talk in the morning and evening every day since Tuesday. He sounds exhausted, but appears to be making progress, securing medical supplies and preparing to open a tent-based clinic. Also, it is possible to purchase phone credit for him (and any other Digicel users) online; if you are interested in doing so, let me know. I bought him credit this morning and apparently Digicel matched the amount that I spent (I purchased 500HTG, Stephane received 1000HTG). I don’t know if that was an accident or if Digicel is being generous (they are known for their charitable activities in Haiti, so it’s possible), but it would be pretty nice if that continued for a little while.

My essay will be run in the Charleston Post and Courier on Saturday and my blog is, I am told, making the rounds on Facebook; thank you all for your help with this, it makes a huge difference. To prove it, Google 'Haiti relocates 400,000 people' and read the news articles that come up -- they are moving people out of the city and into camps for exactly the reasons presented in the essay. This is only a first step -- demolition and construction need to start quickly once the people are moved out, and keeping these camps secure and relatively clean will require vigilance and commitment, as well as funding. But it is a step in the right direction, and I like to think that we all helped make that possible.

19 January 2010

Day Three

14 Jan 2010
Just before dawn (maybe 5am), there was a loud rapping at the gate to our refugee courtyard. For some reason, in my half-asleep-but-not-rested mind, I thought this was the police, but it may just have been someone looking for a relative among our motley group. I never really found out b/c I went back to pseudo-sleep soon after this, awaking two hours later when Stephane shook me and said it was time to go.

I didn't really know what this meant (where were we going and how?), but I bolted upright and said I was going to get the cats. With eyes still swollen by interrupted sleep, I stumbled across the street to our house, where I quickly extracted the cats, shoved them in their carrier bag (it fits under the seat in coach class to give you an idea of how cozy that was for them!), and stumbled back out. Only then did I think to ask where we were going or how that was happening. Part of the question was answered when I saw our truck (an extended cab Toyota pickup) and Stephane's friend Didie, as well as his nine year-old daughter. Somehow Stephane and Didie had gotten in touch w/each other and hatched a plan to get us out of town and into the large compound of a charitable group called Mission of Hope.

To get everyone out of town was going to involve two trips, as there was not enough space in the truck. Stephane, Didie, Anne-Lys, Sarah, and I got in the cab of the truck while Alex, Junior, Mita, and Marc Eli sat in the bed on top of the luggage, leaving Babeth, Mommy Lu, Steve, and Leitzia to await the second shift. We then made a mad dash through the city to pick up Didie's mother, sister, and brother, who lived in Delmas, which had been pretty hard hit. (Miraculously, not only had they all survived, their house remained standing, unlike most of their neighbors.) We stopped along the way at Didie's ex-wife's house, where he frantically tried to find his daughter's passport; her mother had been in the DR when the quake struck and he was hoping to send Anne-Lys there for safety. While he ransacked the house, we waited outside in the truck on a middle-class street normally pretty busy with foot traffic, lined with reasonably nice houses. That morning, 60% of the houses were laying in heaps of rubble and things were strangely quiet, the silence finally broken by the wails of a woman up the street whose child had just been found dead.

Unable to find the passport, Didie returned and we set off once again for Delmas, passing whole blocks that were downed. Bidonvilles once full of uneven rows of one- and two-room cinderblock shacks had fallen down, forming a concrete shell covering the hillsides. After we picked up Didie's family, we headed down Route Freres, towards National Road 1 (one of Haiti's two 'highways'). We drove by Caribbean Market, an upscale supermarket that once stood five stories high; it, too, had collapsed and even the wreckage was not tall enough to be seen over the surrounding walls. As we went further down Route Freres, the destruction seemed to decrease somewhat, but the numerous funeral processions we passed indicated that many here had not been spared. When we got to the US Embassy, it looked much the same as before, but then again, it was built to withstand everything from hurricanes to terror attacks.

We encountered some severe traffic blockages and had to re-route more than once after finding that the roads we normally used were impassable due to debris or damage. It took nearly an hour to get through the tiny borough of Clercine, as traffic came literally to a dead halt, partly because their gas station seemed to be one of the few in the city to still have fuel and cars were lined up for more than a mile waiting to refuel, blocking the already narrow two-lane road. At one point we were stopped directly next to a black SUV whose back hatch door was left open to accommodate two pairs of feet that belonged to two corpses laid out in the back of the car. The drivers wore masks in an attempt to mitigate the growing smell of decay emanating from their passengers. There were several other vehicles carrying coffins or shrouded corpses. Buses, tap-taps, and private cars were jam-packed with passengers and luggage; everyone who had the means was clearly trying to get out of town.

About two hours after leaving our house, we were finally on Route 1, just slightly out of Port-au-Prince, coming into vistas of teal waters and pebble beaches. Thirty minutes later we arrived at the gate of Mission of Hope, a religious charity that has been operating in Haiti for almost 30 years, though they have had their current compound for only about 10. They operate a school, a clinic, and (I think) an orphanage; they definitely had kids living there full-time. Their compound has many acres backing up into the mountains, most of it open space, as this part of Haiti is almost desert-like in climate, yielding mostly short, scrubby bushes, and spindly, water-efficient trees. The staff was rather surprised to see us, as we had not been able to contact them ahead of time, but they welcomed us nonetheless and offered the use of three of their schoolrooms, which they were not using due to the earthquake. The structure in which the rooms were located did not appear to be damaged (in fact, they had only one building on their whole compound that had sustained serious damage), but they had cancelled classes for the rest of the week to allow the children time to process and cope a bit with the trauma of the earthquake. The children were setting up tents in the large courtyard when we arrived, where they were planning to sleep for the foreseeable future, fearing aftershocks or another quake.

After we had unloaded our numerous bags and people, Didie and Alex got in the car to return to PAP to retrieve the rest of our family and members of his ex-wife's family. I stuck the cats in a corner of one room, letting them out of their bag, but tying them to a school desk, so they were limited to a two-foot radius. I fashioned a litter box out of a cardboard box and dirt dug up from the yard (which the cats actually used, somewhat to my surprise). Then I helped Marc Eli w/sweeping out the very dirty rooms to make them a somewhat nicer place to sleep than the places we had been the nights before.

Stephane, exhausted, blew up the super-deluxe air mattress I had brought from the US this past summer. It was originally purchased to be used by guests at our old house, which had only one bedroom, but was now quite handy and amazingly comfortable. Stephane lay down to take a nap, and I was just going to sit nearby and enjoy this moment of quiet inactivity -- the first since the earthquake, really -- but instead Stephane and I ended up talking about everything and nothing, also for the first time since the quake. It was nice to be able to chat as we usually do, to reconnect a bit, to help each other decompress a little. This was also the first time we had an opportunity to have a serious talk about what we were going to do in the near and long-term future. It had begun to be clear the night before that Stephane's family was pretty much looking to him to figure everything out for them, no small task. The addition of Didie's family increased the number of mouths to be fed and watered using our limited stock. We had no liveable home and no clear idea yet of where we would be able to go, but Stephane would definitely need to spend some time in PAP locating his staff and, if possible, retrieving his agency's medical supplies and food kits to start providing some relief services in the city. And Stephane was spending a disproportionate amount of time worrying about me when he had so many other things to manage.

As we were talking, we both came to the difficult realization that my being there was, for the next few weeks anyhow, rather more of a burden than a benefit, although Stephane did say that I was his biggest comfort at this time. We agreed that I should try to evacuate with the State Department as soon as possible. However, we also agreed that a) we did not want to be apart indefinitely, and b) I could be of use in the longer-term relief efforts, helping people with grief and trauma issues. So we decided that I will be in the US for six weeks, at which point we will re-evaluate the situation (e.g., whether or not Stephane's family was safely situated somewhere, whether or not we had a house, whether or not his agency had a long-term plan worked out, etc.). If things are still not ready at that point, I will wait another four weeks, but that's it. I will be going back to Haiti, probably in March.

Stephane also agreed not to do anything that *I* would consider foolish while I was away, so hopefully that will make those family members reading this feel a bit more reassured. (haha)

We were happy to be interrupted around this time by Didie's brother bringing us each a plate of pasta, prepared by Didie's mom. This was the first real meal we had had since lunch on Tuesday; that one plate contained more food than we had eaten in the last two days combined. Probably the best freaking pasta I have ever eaten. As we were eating, a young girl walked over to us and identified herself as the daughter of two Canadians who were currently manning the mission. She explained that her parents had brought her and her two younger siblings to live at the mission for a year, even hiring a teacher to come with them and teach the two younger kids (this young lady was 16 and was doing her work via correspondence courses). She shared that she had spent the night in the clinic holding the hands of patients who had been injured during the quake and saying prayers with them. At her request, we gave her a list of the people who were with us, but told her that were not yet complete.

A bit later, Stephane and I went to the main office in search of Internet and we were met by some of the Canadian staff working there, one of whom is a medical professional working in the clinic. They said that they had had several staff members who lived in PAP who had been injured or killed, and Stephane mentioned that I was a mental health specialist and that I work with trauma victims. The doctor immediately perked up, saying that one of their staff members was exhibiting some signs of mental distress. The young man had been attending evening class in the city and his whole school collapsed, killing almost everyone inside. This person escaped with his life because someone else fell on top of him just before the building collapsed; the person who fell on top of him died, but his body prevented the young man from being crushed by the falling concrete. After several hours, the young man was able to wriggle free and escape, and somehow managed to get all the way back to Mission of Hope, where initially he seemed more or less okay, but earlier in the day started exhibiting some severe psycho-somatic symptoms. The doctor indicated that I could 'be busy all day tomorrow with him.'

This was the moment where I started to realize that I am not okay. Most of my professional experience has involved working with people who have had terrible things happen to them -- children who have been sexually assaulted, Darfurian refugees, kids living in extreme deprivation and violence -- and I have never before had a problem with this. While it makes me sad to hear these people's stories, I am always able to go home at the end of the day and separate my work from the rest of my life. This time, hearing this kid's story made my whole body start shaking and I thought I was going to throw up the pasta I had eaten earlier. I had to fight the urge to put my hands over my ears while the doctor was speaking; I just couldn't handle hearing yet another story of death and implosion. This time, I had no idea how I could sit in front of this person who had experienced this unimaginably terrible thing and *not* break down myself. Basically, I was incapable of helping this person. I really, *really* wanted to help him -- this is my job, and I usually like my job -- but I just could not. I couldn't.

I didn't say anything at that moment besides a vague murmur of acknowledgement, but later when Stephane and I were in the office using the computer, he noticed that I was not quite myself and when I tried to explain what had just happened, I started to cry. I was overcome by grief, exhaustion, and guilt, and I just couldn't stop myself from crying a few tears. I made myself stop pretty quickly b/c I didn't want Stephane to worry, but I knew at that moment that something had happened to me that may never totally heal.

After we left the office, it was quite dark, and had been for some time. We had been a bit worried that Didie and Co. weren't back when we walked over to the office, and we were *very* worried when we got back to our area and saw that they still had not arrived. The next hour was spent watching the gate and trying not to think too extensively about the many things that could have happened along the road that would result in death or dismemberment. At length, however, the gate opened and Didie drove in with his in-laws in the truck (three elderly, rather unfriendly ladies), followed by Steve, Leitzia, Babeth, and Mommy Lu in Steve's car. The truck was nearly out of gas, but Steve had been able to refill at one of the UN offices (he is in charge of logistics for one of the large UN units).

Everyone was now in relative safety, out of the city and its threat of collapse, disease, and violence, and into the countryside where the aftershocks could still be felt, but at least there was a lot of open space in which one could avoid being crushed by falling debris. The overall mood was almost upbeat, everyone being high on relief, but the removal to safety also removed the focus on physical survival that had kept everyone emotionally contained over the last few days. With that urgency removed, people began to break down. Mita cried for about 30 minutes, knees tucked to her chest, arms wrapped tight around the knees. Leitzia, after getting cleaned up following the long drive from Port-au-Prince, joined the group with a quivering lip and shining eyes. I got up and went to her, wrapped my arms around her, and felt her large body go weak, clinging to me and sobbing. We sat down and I held her hand, Stephane on the other side hugging her. Those who did not cry appeared to be making a visible effort not to do so. We were all realizing that we were not okay.

Most people were having a few beers that Junior had found at the outdoor market a few miles away, or having some of the whisky that Didie had brought from his house, but I just couldn't do it. My stomach felt as leaden as my head, and I opted to retire early, curling up in the front passenger seat of our truck, drifting into an uncomfortable, miserable sleep amidst the sounds of everyone trying to cheer up or, failing that, forget for a few moments what we had been through.


On Thursday, the Miami Herald is running as an op-ed my essay about evacuating PAP, but I don't know if it will be in their print or online edition. I am also working on a policy brief to submit to my former school in the Netherlands; they have offered to distribute it among their network, which would be amazing. I am trying to focus on all of these things, doing everything I can do to help while I am here instead of feeling as if I failed to help the people I love.

18 January 2010

Day Two

13 January 2010
We woke on the golf course around dawn to the noise of the UN soldiers scurrying into position with little red flags, apparently to wave in a helicopter that didn't come until about eight hours later. Looking down at the city below, I was surprised to see that it didn't look *that* bad from up there, or at least not as bad as I had expected. There were buildings down, certainly, but there were a number that still seemed to be standing. As I have said before, PAP is not a particularly nice-looking city under the best of conditions; from our perspective up the hillside, it was a little difficult to pick out the new destruction from the pre-existing dilapidation.

About this time, a white guy in his 50s was seen coming onto the golf course from the club building, striding quickly over to the a UN officer who had apparently taken over operations at the course. It turned out that *this* was the manager of the club, *not* the guy who had welcomed us the night before. Apparently, the group that had been eating, drinking, and making less-miserable when we arrived consisted partially of some neighbors of the club, along with a few people wholly unknown to the manager. They had taken over the kitchen, the bar, and the premises with no real permission from him, as it seems he had decided to withdraw to his room immediately after the quake. He offered us water, beer, and soda (all that was left), and told us of how he had been standing on the course when the tremors started. The initial force of it knocked him to the ground and he recovered his footing in time to witness a panorama of collapse. Repeatedly squeezing his index finger to his thumb, he said, 'I just saw these three and four story buildings start going, "Poof, poof, poof..." all over town, and I thought, "I'm watching a million people die."'

Breakfast for me consisted of a handful of peanuts and some Skittles. Stephane's cousin Sarah had grabbed a bunch of Skittles and Starburst that were in her office and kept insisting that what we needed was sugar. I lacked the energy to argue this point with her, but tried to encourage everyone to have a bit of proteinacious sustenance, as well. Junior started his day with a beer. We helped clean up the club a bit -- although it was largely undamaged, one of the central beams in the restaurant area had fallen down, part of a staircase bannister had crumbled, and there was a thick coating of dust on all of the tables and chairs. I helped the manager check to be sure a piece of art he re-hung was straight. Most of the waiters and maintenance guys for the club straggled in, and in a rather comical moment, one of them asked us first if we were planning to order anything for lunch, and then for a list of what we had eaten the night before, as he would need to charge us for that. The manager overheard this and informed his employee that while he appreciated the man's diligence, now was not the time. A UN helicopter circled overhead for some time, but never managed to land, either changing its mind or missing our little nook.

The manager then revealed that he had satellite Internet running with a wireless connection and the next several hours were spent taking turns using the one computer to email family, friends, and Stephane's bosses to let them know that we were okay. Sometime in the morning, maybe around 9am, a small helicopter landed outside and we went down to see who it was, as it did not appear to be UN or anyone else for that matter. It turned out that this was a private helicopter, chartered for a neighbor's wife and three small children by his father-in-law, who apparently had connections with the Dominican Ambassador. We asked the co-pilot, who had emerged to look for his human cargo, if the helicopter could come back if we paid them, or if they had a larger helicopter they could send to us, but the answer was rather vague, something to the effect of, 'I'll radio back and see.' Throughout the morning, helicopters touched down and left, including the long-awaited UN chopper and two more private helicopters arrived to evacuate people who apparently knew other well-connected people. Stephane tasked me with doing an Internet search for Dominican helicopter companies and I spent a lot of time sending SOS messages to charter companies.

While I was chasing this long-shot chance of escape, Sarah and Alex decided to walk down to their house to see if they could salvage anything and to check if Alex's cousin and/or the maid were there. They were then going to walk to our house to grab some supplies and retrieve Alex's beaten up SUV, which they had left parked near our house the day before. I asked them to look for my cats while they were there, telling them where the carrier bag was and where they liked to hide. I know many people will scorn me for thinking about my cats, but I just could not abandon the two creatures I have cared for almost 10 years now, and whose personalities are to me as well-developed as most people I know. At least we as humans have some understanding of what is going on around us, even if it doesn't make sense; animals do not have that ability, but are able to feel fear and insecurity. At any rate, I knew that Alex doesn't really like animals *and* that cats are not a priority at times like this, so I hoped rather than believed that I would be reunited with my four-legged dependents.

Stephane and I tried again to get some information from the Ambassador's residence, but all we found was that the Ambassador was not there and that there were two Americans trying to find assistance. They were accompanied by a wiry French guy working as a pharmacist for Save the Children. These three had all spent the night at the same place, and the Frenchman had offered to walk with them from Pacot (near our house) up to the Ambassador's house on his way further up the mountain; he intended to get to work straight away, if possible, dispensing medication to victims. It was eventually confirmed that the Embassy was sending a vehicle for the two Americans, at which point the Frenchman took his leave. Stephane started to tell me that I should go w/the two Americans when the vehicle arrived, but I told him he may as well stop talking b/c I wasn't leaving. He was clearly tired, as he did not try to convince me further.

The two Americans -- both males, one around my age with a bandage on one of his hands/wrists, the other in his mid-40s -- had apparently been doing some research related to saving and spending (or more accurately, gambling) habits in Haiti and whether or not there was a way to use the gambling to increase savings (unsurprisingly, they don't think so). They had been on the fourth floor of a bank building meeting with some people when the quake started. As they tried to escape, they found that the door to the stairway was somehow locked or wouldn't open from their side, so the younger guy punched through a glass window to reach around and open it from the other side, a pretty heroic move that resulted in the bandage I had noticed earlier. They said that when they got to the stairwell, the stairs were swaying back and forth, as if they were part of a carnival funhouse. After debating whether or not to risk going down four flights of obviously unstable stairs, the whole group ran down as fast as they could and managed to get out alive. I sat for about an hour with these guys, waiting for the Embassy transport, which the guard had told me would also contain an Embassy staff member to whom I could speak. When the van came roaring up the road at an impressive speed, I saw that the Haitian driver was the only person inside of it, which pretty much put an end to my plans to gather information and ask about possible assistance with arranging a private charter for our group. I bid the guys goodbye and walked back over to Petionville Club.

I spent about three minutes trying to cry by myself in a shady corner next to the pool, which was not only intact, but incongruously beautiful, it sparkling turquoise water occasionally rippled by a breeze or aftershock, but generally creating a false image of tranquility wholly out of place under the circumstances.

Sarah, Alex, and Junior returned without the cats, but with their maid and several of my and Stephane's suitcases, all crammed with a rather puzzling assortment of clothing, food, and household items. Rather than limiting themselves to the many non-perishable items that were in the kitchen, including numerous cans of beans and lentils, as well as bags of pasta and rice, Sarah and Alex brought most of the contents of the refrigerator, including mayonnaise and blocks of cheese. Although they did take the pasta and rice, they left most of the beans. They brought Stephane's leather jacket and two of my coats, but neglected to take more than one of our t-shirts or pants, despite the fact that we were all quite dirty and would *all* need clothes. They took every electrical device in our living room, including my Vonage phone system and parts of the system for our outdoor Internet antenna that are useless without the antenna itself, but did not take the big bottles of soap that were sitting on the kitchen and bathroom sinks. Beyond that, all of the bags were extremely heavy; it would be impossible to walk with them like this and Alex's car is notoriously unreliable and had about two gallons of gas, which meant we wouldn't be going far on wheels. It all made no sense. I am still trying to convince myself that this was probably the result of stress and insufficient sleep, but I cannot help marveling at the lack of common sense that went into this.

Happily, Junior had managed to get a phone call from his sister while they were out and learned that she was alive, after which he began to return to something closer to his usual jocular self.

It became clear around 230 that none of the helicopter companies we contacted were going to come get us, which coincided with the discovery that we could not stay another night at the club. Just before this, a new group of UN soldiers came in to relieve the group that had been there since dawn, although the relief group had been working all night long, too, and seemed to be just as worn out as the ones they were replacing. As they were taking up their positions and inspecting the area, they discovered that there were thousands of residents gathering at the north end of the golf course. A large wall had fallen on that side, thus creating a breach through which tumbled person after person, creating an ever-encroaching mass of people who would normally not be allowed on the grounds of this exclusive club. The helicopters had attracted their notice and, believing that the choppers were delivering food and water that was not being distributed to them, the people decided to come find it themselves. While this is completely understandable given the situation, it is not a good feeling to find yourself facing a growing number of hungry, scared, desperate people. The UN soldiers were quite edgy and began to indicate that they might not stay the night. Even if they did, we did not feel that we could stay there and so began to decide where to go next.

This did not seem like such a hard task to me, only because we had so few options. No one had a house that was safe. There were no other large, open spaces in town that were not already given over to large groups like the one converging on our current position. Our trek the night before had confirmed that our neighborhood was one of the 'best' places to be in the city. To Stephane and me, it was clear that we should just go back to our house. Alex and Sarah resisted this idea, but had no other realistic alternatives to offer. They finally agreed to this and seven of us proceeded to pile into the already luggage-laden SUV. The clown car analogy does not do justice to this arrangement.

We wound our way back to the main road, where we were immediately greeted with a procession carrying a sheet-shrouded corpse down to the city. Once they passed, we turned on to the road and made fair progress for about half a mile, at which point traffic stopped and did not move more than six feet for a good ten minutes or more. Stephane and I got out of the car, initially just to see if we could determine what the problem was, but it became clear that we could walk faster than they could drive and so we continued. It turned out that the traffic snarl was partly caused by debris in the road that turned the two-lane road into one lane, partly by the massive UN medical tanks that were trying to get out of the unit we had passed the night before and into the city (or vice-versa), and partly by the dense foot traffic. Adding to the difficulties at the UN entrance was a woman who emerged from within on a stretcher who was clearly pregnant and bleeding, appearing barely conscious, maybe in labor, it was hard to tell.

The streets were filled with people, everyone looking for something -- loved ones, food, safety, medical treatment, etc. The side of the road that backs to the ravine was most heavily traversed by pedestrians, as it seemed that during the night, the UN had managed to clear most of the abandoned/mutilated vehicles out of the street and on to one side of the street. It was like walking through a macabre used car lot. Unfortunately, the land underneath the sidewalk on the ravine side had crumbled away in some places, but it was not always obvious that there was no terra firma underneath what appeared to be a perfectly intact sidewalk; I kept waiting anxiously for someone to step on one of these overhangs and have it give way. We passed the same crumpled houses we had passed in the night, only now there were bodies, usually covered, sometimes not, placed outside of the houses on the sidewalk. One house had what looked like an entire family laid in front of it. I sort of stopped looking anywhere but at the back of the person directly ahead of me; there was just too much awfulness on all sides. Unfortunately, this meant that more than once I nearly stepped on something that my peripheral vision initially interpreted as just another piece of the trash that is ubiquitous in PAP even on normal days, but in fact turned out to be a body laid out on the sidewalk, causing me to change step in mid-stride to avoid contact.

When we came to Stephane's lawyer's office, we paused for a moment. The building, which housed several more white-collar businesses, had been four or five stories and pretty good-looking, for a building in Haiti. It was now reduced to 10 ft-tall pancake, its stories so compressed that I initially thought I was looking at a different building, even though the sign proclaiming 'Moulins d'Haiti' was still standing next to it. I later learned that our chauffeur's daughter was likely crushed within that wreckage, as she had still been at work inside when the quake hit. The husband of one of Stephane's cousins also worked in there, but happened to have stepped out just before, a perfect illustration of the capriciousness of who died and who didn't.

Instead of going home, we ended up wandering down to Stephane's mother's house. When we turned onto her street, we passed numerous neighbors sitting outside on the street, the beginnings of a tarp-covered street camp emerging. We stopped at the house of an elderly woman, who was cooking on her porch, a tiny tabby kitten sitting at her feet. Stephane's mother and grandmother were not at their house when we arrived, but his aunt, who lives next door, informed us that they had gone to our house that morning after spending the night in the street outside with all of their neighbors. Titi began a long catalogue of who had died and who was injured, but neither Stephane nor I had the heart to listen too closely. I noticed that it looked as if her stairwell had collapsed in the middle, which meant that it would be difficult to get to the second floor of the house, where most of the actual living space was, and I can't imagine that the second story is particularly sound, even if you could reach it.

We left Titi after a few minutes and headed slightly back uphill toward our house. We passed in front of the hospital on our streetcorner, its entire front sheered off, the occasional lamp, bed, or heart monitor visible squeezing through the layers of concrete piled on top of each other. I honestly cannot adequately express the number of buildings laying in ruins, the level of destruction that surrounded us. Suffice it to say, the perspective that I had earlier up on the hill, that things maybe weren't so bad as I had thought -- that was deeply incorrect. Even the graphic pictures saturating television screens, newspapers, and magazines do not show you how bad it is.

Anyhow, we soon arrived back at our house, where we found Babeth and her mom, as well as Stephane's cousin Leitzia and her husband Steve. We lugged the suitcases back into the house from whence they had just come and I tried to put some of the less-hopeless refrigerator items back in the refrigerator, which was still being powered by our inverter. I also found my cats, who were hiding exactly where I thought they were, in the liner of the boxspring of our bed. Actually, Adrianna came creeping out when she heard my voice (those of you who know her are not surprised by this), making this funny croaking noise very unlike her usual incessant, sharp chatter. When I looked under the bed for Delilah, I saw a lump in the liner that indicated she was there, but when she did not move even after I poked her repeatedly and shook the liner, I started to fear the worst. Ripping away the liner, I found that she was not dead, just refusing to move, and now seemingly unfazed by big vibrations. I tried to give them some food and a quick pat before re-packing the shoulder bag I had taken to Petionville Club the night before, this time to include our passports, my laptop, some medications, and a couple of heirloom pieces of jewelry. Another aftershock sent me scurrying out of the house amidst the screeches of Stephane and his family calling for me.

We staked out a bit of space in the neighbor's courtyard, the one we had stood in during the first hours after the earthquake and started discussing options for the next morning. We still did not have a vehicle b/c during the quake, our chauffeur and Stephane's friend/employee Didie had been out in the city on an errand and we had not been able to find out where they were, although we did have the relief of at least knowing that they were alive, as Alphonse, our chauffeur, had gone to Titi's earlier that day. After our return journey through the city, Stephane was all for hopping on motorcycle taxis and heading to the Dominican Republic, but I think the thought of his elderly grandmother clinging to the back of a mototaxi convinced him a different plan was needed.

For dinner, Stephane and I each had four crackers and half a piece of cheese. I'm not sure if Babeth and her mom ate at all. Everyone else was eating as if we could go to the store tomorrow, prompting Stephane to ask them what the hell they were thinking. We also discovered that our landlady had apparently gone into our house while we were away and had taken a full 5gallon container of water (the last potable water we had), as well as a $40 bottle of wine that had been a Christmas present for me from Stephane, and Stephane's only pair of flip flops. Her taking the latter two items was just a bit offensive; the theft of the former item was quite serious, as we needed to have water for at least 11 people. Had she mentioned to us when we arrived that she had taken the water, we would have understood -- it is an emergency, after all -- but the fact that she cached it away and didn't feel compelled to tell us where until we asked was over the line. This is the same woman who keeps a shrine to the Virgin in our driveway, but who had not paid her own staff for more than two months prior to the earthquake even though she had the money (yes, we know she had the money). Lovely woman.

In the courtyard, there were about 20 people, some who lived in the house or were related to the people who lived in the house, some were like us, just neighbors with nowhere else to go. One woman had lost her young son. Several people were clearly injured, their arms in slings or bandages on their heads. As it became dark, everyone tried to settle in, but the murmurs and whispers that persisted showed that everyone was too keyed up to sleep. Somewhere between 8 and 10pm, the panic in the streets started. It was suddenly quite loud, like the whole city was screaming again, as they did after the quake, punctuated by the honks of car horns and the blaring of police sirens.

We all went outside to see what was happening, Stephane and Junior went down to the main street to ask people what was happening, and a tiny panic started rising in our own group. For myself, I found the whole idea of the sea swallowing PAP incredibly implausible and in my exhaustion I was rather annoyed that everyone else was even considering that this was a real possibility, let alone contemplating joining the heaving masses of people moving uphill. A tsunami was unlikely, there was no moon so the tides would not be as strong, and even if the part of the city that was built on man-made land gave way, we were far enough inland and uphill that it wouldn't matter. Joining in the panic was not going to help anything. I told Stephane I wasn't moving from where we were, which was a bit snappish of me, but I was supported by his cousin Leitzia, who also thought the whole thing was ridiculous. Steve was able to use the radio at a neighboring NGO's compound to contact his UN co-workers and eventually learn what had really happened (CAMEP's big blunder). Most people then returned to the courtyard and tried again to settle down, this time after singing a hymn together and saying a prayer.

Sleep was once again quite choppy, due to aftershocks, fear, and discomfort, but it did eventually come. Stephane started snoring so loudly I was worried he would wake those around us, and someone woke Leitzia up in the night to tell her that her snoring was keeping their children awake. I still had no idea what we were going to do the next day, but I thanked God for blessing us with the safety of so many of our family members, for that night at least.


Since my last posting, I have spoken to Stephane once again, who sounded tired but okay. He told me that he and Didie were able to get into their warehouse in Carrefour to retrieve some food items, which they left at the Mayor's office, who is supposedly in charge of conducting distributions in the area. Stephane said that they hired some local guys to take the stuff out and load it into the trucks, but that most of the men were so dehydrated and malnourished, several of them began to throw up or pass out after less than an hour of work. Those of you who have been to Haiti know how hard-working and tough Haitians really are; for these men to be unable to do an hour of work is a scary sign.

Stephane also said that his boss was supposed to be arriving today from the Dominican Republic with a van, in which she plans to evacuate everyone currently with Stephane who has an American visa or residence permit, first to the DR and then they will go to the US to family. This would be a huge relief for everyone involved, but I have not yet heard from Stephane today and cannot confirm that this has happened.

A friend of a friend is trying to set something up for me to talk to NPR, and I am looking into some other outreach/awareness/advocacy avenues. Suggestions are always appreciated, thanks for those that have already done so.

Please keep Haiti in your thoughts.


17 January 2010

Day One

I will write everything here that I remember from the earthquake and the days after. I know that everyone wants to know what happened, and I understand that, but it is very painful for me to talk about these things and I hope you will all understand if I don't really want to talk about what happened for a little while.

Tuesday, 12 January
I spent most of the day cleaning my house. Stephane got home early and we worked on editing the English version of a report his office needed to send to headquarters. At 453, I was standing in the kitchen making bread crumbs to use for dinner that night; I was going to attempt making homemade black bean burgers. I heard what sounded like a really big truck coming down our street, a really loud rumbling noise. Then I noticed the dishes were shaking and I felt vibrations, and I thought the big truck must have hit something, maybe our big metal gate on the compound. I looked up to ask Stephane what was going on and saw him running out of the door, just hauling ass without a word (this is actually really funny to me, even now), I saw one of my cats running toward the bedroom (she hides under the bed when she is scared, which is often), and then I realized that the *whole*house* was shaking and I thought, 'Oh, my gosh, our crappy house is falling down!' It wasn't until I started to go out of our kitchen door and saw that our tall compound wall was swaying back and forth as if it were made of styrofoam instead of concrete that I realized the whole world was falling down.

I thought briefly of getting the cats, then thought they were probably safest under the bed, even if the house did fall down, and in any case I didn't think I could get to the bedroom in time to get them. Then I had to decide whether to stay in the house that may or may not collapse or to brave running down the narrow alley between our house and the now-mobile barrier wall, which would also involve running underneath our precariously constructed cistern. I made a run for it and got to our front courtyard, where our guard and landlady were screaming for God's mercy and Stephane greeted me with, 'It's an earthquake and I didn't tell you!' (haha)

All of this sounds like it took a long time, but I was out of the house and in the courtyard probably 10 seconds after I heard the 'big truck.' The initial tremor lasted less than 30 seconds in our estimation, but was followed rather quickly by a couple of big aftershocks. A cloud of dust enveloped us, so thick that we could see neither the sun nor the big Digicel building (one of the very few American-style office buildings in PAP) that is less than a quarter mile from our house; people kept saying that it had collapsed b/c they couldn't see it through the dust. After a few minutes, it became apparent that the Digicel building was still intact, but the hospital across the street (i.e., on the corner of our street) had collapsed. Stephane and I did some running about to find a place that was relatively open, free from large, close walls, tall buildings, and trees. The best we could find was a neighbor's courtyard across the street, neighbors to whom we had never spoken.

Throughout all of this, I was still wearing my cleaning clothes, which consisted of VERY short shorts (like you could probably see the bottom of my butt cheeks -- haha), a cardigan, and a pair of flip-flops that I only wear around the house b/c they are half-broken. Clearly not prepared for running out of my house.

Thousands of people were surging through the streets, there were screams, crying. A woman came into our compound with a cut so deep that you could see two inches of fat and muscle tissue. Several minutes later she ran out of the compound delirious, screaming down the street. Someone passed carrying a dead baby, explaining to everyone and noone that she was too small to run and that he couldn't get to her in time. Stephane just kept pacing back and forth, occasionally saying, 'Shit.' I felt like I wanted to vomit, but didn't want to do so on our neighbor's bushes, and my legs were wobbly, but I couldn't seem to sit down. A small panic erupted on our street when we saw a thick plume of black smoke rising from the direction of a gas station about 1/3 of a mile from the house. The black smoke became piqued with flashes of orange and then bright yellow, indicating that the gas was on fire. Fearing an explosion, most people came rushing up the hill on which our house was placed. The gas burnt and there were some small explosions, but it seems more like the gas just burnt itself out without a huge fireball.

Stephane's mom managed to walk to our house, which was a huge relief, as her house is rickety under the best of circumstances and we were both afraid of what had happened there. Miraculously, her house, though now unsafe, was still standing, which allowed her, her 83 year old mother, and two of Stephane's cousins to get out safely. Mommy Lu, the grandmother, was knocked to ground by the force of the tremor, but she did not break anything; a small miracle, really, considering how frail she is.

Babeth went back to her house after a few minutes, leaving Stephane to continue pacing and me to continue standing, listening to the roar of panic and distress in the streets. A few minutes later, Stephane's cousin Sarah and her fiance Alex arrived along with their friend Junior. They had apparently been downtown near Champs Mars when all of this happened and were carrying a digital camera, with which they captured images of the gradual collapse of le Palais National, formerly the only building in PAP that made one feel somewhat awe-stricken.

By this time, it was getting dark and the aftershocks, though still continuing, were becoming less severe. Our house was still standing, but was visibly weakened (fissures, doors didn't fit in frames, etc.), but we decided to go back in to get supplies for the night. I told Stephane I would go in to get blankets, a flashlight, candles, matches, and a can of peanuts and soynuts that we had in the kitchen so that we would have some protein-rich food. I also grabbed a pair of pants and some tennis shoes. I told him to grab a mostly empty 5 gallon bottle of water that was on our countertop; he also took his computer bag. Oddly, the Internet, which barely works on a good day, was still up at this point and my stepdad and one of Stephane's cousins called right as I was walking out of the door, so I was able to tell them that we were alive, but leaving the house. Babeth's protege, Marc Eli, arrived around this time and we decided to all walk to Petionville Club, a private sports club located just above town about three miles from our house where they have a one-hole 'golf course' that was the only open space in town Stephane could think of (Champs Mars was going to be flooded with people and we did not feel safe going there). I wanted to stay at the house, feeling that the neighbor's courtyard was pretty okay, and also fearing what we would find in the dark streets outside. But I decided to trust Stephane and we all set off.

It is difficult to find words to describe what that walk was like. It felt like wading through the topmost level of Hell. In addition to the ubiquitous swirling masses of people, there downed power lines, whole blocks of buildings collapsed, and spots on the streets that in the dark could be either water or vomit or blood, you just stepped on it no matter what because there was nowhere else to go. We passed a school that had collapsed, covered by parents and family members frantically trying to dig out their children. Just past the school was the first of many dead bodies we encountered over the next few days, a woman lying face down, her limbs akimbo as if she had fallen flat from the sky. At some point I scratched myself on the sharp points of a huge metal gate that had fallen from someone's compound entrance, but that was my only 'injury'. We wound our way to Canape Vert, the destruction becoming more total as we got further from our street, which had been hit comparatively lightly, aside from the hospital at the bottom and a neighbor's house that lost its front.

To get over to Ave John Brown/Lalue, the road that leads to Petionville Club, we had to cross a ravine, but every street we tried was either blocked by debris taller than ourselves, or the bridge was out and the ravine too deep to cross otherwise. At this point, we had been walking for nearly an hour and were at best half-way to our desired destination. We contemplated going back, but decided to push on, turning back toward the way we came and veering off into Bourdon. Junior left at some point before this, scrambling nimbly over wreckage, determined to keep going, to try to find his family, who lived in Canape Vert.

When we got to Lalue, we saw cars in the street for the first time, but there was no point in them being there since, as we discovered, the road was totally blocked not far up the mountain. It was blocked by two buses that had been half-crushed by a falling retaining wall. People were trying to dig out trapped passengers, though the silence of the buses and the angles of the bodies that were visible seemed to indicate that there was no one alive to find. By this point, the road was rather quiet, no more screaming, just a steady hum of people talking amongst themselves or muttering continuous prayers. To the right, the side that backs up to the ravine, house after house was collapsed, houses that we had driven past day after day when we lived in that neighborhood. There were injured people sitting on the sidewalk staring impassively, cradling broken arms or ignoring the blood on their faces.

Somewhere along here, we stopped for a few moments so that Sarah and Alex could go down their street to check on their house, worried that one of Alex's cousins who had just moved to Haiti might be there. They returned grim and bewildered; their house was completely flattened, they had no idea if Cliff or anyone else was in there. Junior was with them, silent and tense; he had arrived at his sister's apartment building to find its four stories toppled into one, with no sign of his sister or anyone who could say they had seen her. Normally ebullient with a ready smile, Junior barely spoke the rest of the night, even when spoken to.

While waiting for Alex and Sarah, the rest of us waited across the street from a UN compound, which was constantly opening and closing its barbed wire improvisation of a gate to allow people and vehicles in and out. Stephane and I walked across to see if they had information about rally points or shelters or anything else, but it quickly became apparent that they were not able to offer anything. The soldier we were speaking to began to get teary, saying, 'I'm sorry, we can't help you. We're just trying to find our own people -- they're trapped, you know, and dying. There are no hospitals for us to take them to. There is nothing.' We had not yet heard that the UN headquarters had collapsed, trapping more than 100 of their staff and killing the Brazilian general heading the peacekeeping mission along with several of his top deputies.

After about almost two hours of walking (briskly) through the city, we arrived at Petionville Club. I expected to find a lot of people like us, but instead there were only about 12 people there -- some expatriates, some Haitian-Americans, all relatively wealthy. Once the guard let us through the gate, we were met by a clean-looking white guy who seemed totally nonchalant about the situation, inviting us to use the facilities freely. This apparently did not include sharing the spaghetti that the rest of the group was eating when we arrived, nor did it include having a glass of whisky or a beer, although some of us desperately needed one and it was clearly available. There were about four kids between the ages of 11 and 14 playing hide and seek or gossiping about friends, all speaking English. The general impression was that the owner had offered shelter to some friends, who were making free with the supplies of the bar and kitchen, while we were simply grateful to have arrived at our target.

We soon learned that the American Ambassador lived next door, so Stephane and I once again attempted to glean some information, once again without success. It seemed that telephone communications with the Embassy were not available, it was strictly radio. But most of the radios were dead, which meant that we could sit outside the gate and wait until they managed to make contact, but we gave up after about 30 minutes and five aftershocks.

We went back in to the club, gathered our few belongings, bid everyone a good evening, and headed out to the golf course. We examined the course, judged the distances surrounding trees might fall if they were jolted out of their complacency, and picked a spot that seemed the least likely to involve being crushed in the event of a second quake. Ostensibly we were going to sleep. But I'm sure I need not tell you that was difficult. Actually, Junior fell directly asleep after a couple of cigarettes and Marc Eli before him; sometimes sleep is the best refuge. As we sat on the golf course, there was a vista of the city below spreading before us, and we could hear the din of millions of people below. Initially the noise was just that -- innumerable conversations, the occasional wail, general chatter. But around 11pm, the noise turned into organized clusters of hymns and prayers. This amazing display of faith and solidarity was enough to lull me to uneasy sleep a few times, though it was always short-lived, interrupted by aftershocks, anxiety, or people talking nearby.

Around 1130pm, one of the women from the group at the club came down to our area with her pre-adolescent daughters. The woman seemed oblivious to the fact that we were trying our darnedest to block out the days' events and find solace in sleep, insisting instead on re-hashing it all, whispering through the parts that she thought would scare her daughter, apparently unaware that she was far more scared than her child. She did share that the radio had reported the earthquake registering 7.0 on the Richter scale and that everything between Jacmel and Port-au-Prince was levelled. Intellectually, I knew this was probably right -- a quake of that magnitude could do that level of damage -- but I just couldn't accept this as an actual fact. It was inconceivable that the Jacmel of my memory would no longer exist, even though that very night almost everything I had in Haiti no longer existed in its 'proper' form.

Eventually I convinced Stephane that it was okay for him to stop talking to her and lay down, that it was good to lay down and rest even if it did not lead to sleep. But it did; I heard him snoring pretty soon after that, at which point I was able to sleep, too.

This repose ended close to 130am with a huge aftershock that continued for around 15 seconds. The hymns below quickly turned into screams of terror, an aural wave of horror flooding over us. The same happened between 2 and 230am, simultaneously wrenching and stopping our hearts. Close to 3am we were once again roused from our waking dreams, this time by the calls of the club's guardians. A captain from a Pakistani UN contingent had arrived after hearing that there was a large open space that could be used as a helipad, which happened to be the location of our little refugee camp. The UN wanted to use the site to evac their injured soldiers, who were now being pulled from wreckage around the city. I don't remember what prompted him to say this, but at some point the captain said in accented English, 'I don't know if you know, but the Haiti has collap-sed.' I didn't know what this meant -- had the government collapsed? was the whole country gone? -- but it felt as if the air had left my body.

A group of armed UN soldiers arrived soon after to secure the perimeter, we were told that helicopters would start arriving in one to three hours and we laid down, truly and finally exhausted to sleep as much as we could before that. I remember thinking as I drifted off that I was afraid of what we would see when the sun rose. Although we could hear everyone below and see the twinkling lights of cooking fires across the city, we could not really see what was awaiting us, what had happened to our city before it was plunged into the longest night of our lives.


I'm sorry; I had planned to write it all today, but I think I will need a couple more days.

For Stephane's family reading this, know that he and most of his mother's family are safely outside of Port-au-Prince right now, staying for the moment at a mission near Kaliko Beach. I spoke to him twice today on the phone and he sounds in good spirits, though he may be making an effort to fool me a bit. He was able to go back to PAP yesterday and retrieve some food from his agency's warehouse, which they used to conduct a small distribution, I believe in Carrefour. He would not have been able to do this comfortably had I been there, so I am trying to fool myself into thinking that it is good I am in the US. I am very sorry that I do not have any information on anyone that you asked about, I wish I could give you some news.

Thank you all for your thoughts and prayers, they are so badly needed. I know a number of you are not religious, but I hope you can appreciate the comfort and strength in the Bible verse below that my friend Christy sent to me. She said that she came home from working a long shift at the hospital and wanted to pray, but was very tired, so she was flipping through the book of Isaiah and found this verse, which she has prayed every night since:
Isaiah 43
The Redeemer of Israel
1But now, thus says the Lord, who created you, O Jacob,
And he who formed you, O Israel:

'Fear not, for I have redeemed you;
I have called you by your name;
You are Mine.
2When you pass through the waters, I will be with you;
And through the rivers, they shall not overflow you.
When you walk through the fire, you shall not be burned,
Nor shall the flame scorch you.
3For I am the Lord your God,
The Holy One of Israel, your Savior;
I gave Egypt for your ransom,
Ethiopia and Sheba in your place....