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 Published on : 2012-01-13
News d'Haiti - Rome

Haïti : 600.000 personnes sous les tentes, dont les séminaristes
Témoignage du nonce apostolique, Mgr Auza
ROME, vendredi 13 janvier 2012 (ZENIT.org) –

« Deux ans après le séisme, encore 600.000 personnes vivent sous la tente, dont les séminaristes », témoigne le nonce apostolique en Haïti, Mgr Bernardito Cleopas Auza, originaire des Philippines, dans les colonnes de l’agence vaticane Fides.

Voici tout juste deux ans, le 12 janvier 2010, Haïti était dévastée par un terrible séisme. Fides recueillit alors les premières nouvelles, alarmantes et terribles, par l'intermédiaire du nonce apostolique, Mgr Auza qui raconta au monde, avant que n'arrivent sur place les journalistes et les moyens de communication internationaux, le désastre qui venait de se produire (voir Fides 13/01/2010). Deux ans après, Fides a demandé à ce même Mgr Auza, de décrire la situation actuelle.

Témoignage de Mgr Auza :
« Il faut dire tour d'abord que se relever d'une catastrophe naturelle est toujours difficile et il est encore plus difficile de reconstruire après un désastre de l'importance du séisme du 12 janvier 2010 en Haïti. J'ajouterais qu'en Haïti, la reconstruction a été et se trouve être actuellement particulièrement difficile et coûteuse parce que tout est importé, même le sable. Il y a ensuite le problème des rapports entre donateurs et instances haïtiennes. Le mandat de la Commission pour la reconstruction d'Haïti est arrivé à échéance le 21 octobre dernier et il n'existe donc plus de structure ou d'institution qui guide ou oriente les efforts. Le Parlement doit encore traiter cette question et elle ne fait pas partie du programme législatif. Les thèmes relatifs à la gestion, aux personnes gérant les fonds et surtout à celles qui s'adjugent les contrats sont particulièrement brûlants ces jours-ci.

« Il y a encore environ 600.000 personnes qui vivent sous la tente. Nos grands séminaristes sont eux aussi sous la tente. Certaines places publiques ont cependant été évacuées comme l'importante Place Saint Pierre de Pétionville.

« L'Eglise a des dizaines et des dizaines de projets de reconstruction mais les phases techniques préparatoires sont longues et difficiles. En outre, il faut considérer la question des fonds et des priorités. En effet, il existe des projets qui sont presque prêts mais n'ont pas été retenus comme priorités alors que ceux qui sont prioritaires n'ont pas encore achevé les phases préparatoires. Par exemple, la reconstruction des deux Grands Séminaires nationaux de Philosophie et de Théologie, constitue une priorité absolue mais le projet n'est pas encore prêt parce que le processus relatif à la propriété du terrain n'a pas encore été porté à terme. Il a en effet été décidé de ne pas retourner sur les lieux où ses institutions se trouvaient avant le séisme.

« Entre temps, les graves problèmes d'Haïti, qui existaient déjà avant le séisme, perdurent : en premier lieu la pauvreté matérielle et sociale fortement généralisée. Les enfants ne vont pas à l'école ou bien y vont au prix de grandes difficultés en ce qui concerne le versement des frais de scolarité, les écoles publiques couvrant la scolarité obligatoire représentant seulement 10% du total de ces établissements alors que 90% de ces écoles sont privées et qu'il est nécessaire d'y payer fort cher !

« L'archevêque de Port-au-Prince, Mgr Guire Poulard, a adressé un beau message d'encouragement à tout un chacun, invitant à se souvenir des morts et encourageant les haïtiens à prendre la situation en main, déclarant que « la reconstruction sera haïtienne ou bien il n'y aura pas de reconstruction ».

« L'Eglise catholique ne se décourage cependant pas et continue à travailler en faveur des plus petits et des plus pauvres ». Le Nonce souligne en conclusion que de nombreuses activités sont prévues dont l'inauguration de la nouvelle unité de néonatologie de l'hôpital catholique pédiatrique Saint Damien, sponsorisée par l'hôpital de l'Enfant Jésus (Bambin Gesù) de Rome « donc par le Vatican et donc par le Saint-Père » ainsi que l'inauguration d'une nouvelle Université dans le nord du pays (elle s'appellera Université Henri Christophe), don de la République dominicaine à Haïti ».

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 Published on : 2012-01-10
Two years after the earthquake

Oxfam America, hosted a panel entitled “Aid, Governance and the Status of the Reconstruction: Haiti, Two years after the Earthquake.”  Enclosed are links to the briefing note and progress report below.


 American Red Cross – Enclosed are the English and Creole links to the two-year update on the American Red Cross’ earthquake related activities in Haiti since receiving about $ 486 million in donations. 


To date, the American Red Cross has spent and signed agreements to spend $ 330 million on Haiti earthquake relief and recovery efforts in the first two years.  The largest portion of spending has gone to food and emergency services, followed by housing, water and sanitation, health, livelihoods, disaster preparedness, and response to the cholera outbreak.  Other highlights of the past year include:


  • Providing clean water and sanitation services to more than 369,000 people

  • Providing health services and hygiene education to more than 2.4 million people

  • Reaching more than 3 million people with cholera treatment and prevention

  • Teaching more than 436,000 people how to better prepare for disasters

  • Providing livelihoods assistance – grants, jobs and other help – to 114,000 people


Additionally, you may review a video posted by American Red Cross at http://youtu.be/yo51p-Fwm_o

 


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 Published on : 2012-01-06
A Billionaire Lends Haiti a Hand



PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Almost two years after an earthquake ravaged this city, some half a million people are still living in filthy tents, cholera has infected a similar number across the country and the president works from a flimsy prefab structure behind the still crumpled Presidential Palace.

Denis O’Brien, an impatient Irish billionaire who tends to make his points with a few choice profanities, is determined to change all that.

On a recent sunny morning, he presided over the opening of the 50th school that his vast telecommunications company, Digicel, has rebuilt since the quake struck in 2010 — and then he promptly pledged to build another 80 schools by 2014.

His intention is not, however, to be a one-man force for change. With a skill for what he calls “frying feet,” he has sweet-talked, cajoled, harangued, nagged, strong-armed and shamed government officials, international financiers and business leaders into doing more to rebuild Haiti.

“It’s all about project management,” Mr. O’Brien, 53, said in an interview at Digicel’s offices here. “Everyone’s on hand for the photo op, but where are the 100 houses that were promised after the cameras are gone? I’m the guy who’s going to count them.”

In the process, he has become de facto ambassador for an emerging business-centered approach to the redevelopment of this disaster-prone nation, which has so long relied on the work of nonprofit groups and aid agencies that it is known as the Republic of N.G.O.’s, or nongovernmental organizations.

“We’ve seen the growth of the N.G.O. community here for the last 20 years, and many of them do good work and there is a demand and a need for that work,” said Lionel Delatour, a business consultant and lobbyist whose brothers have served as government ministers. “But N.G.O.’s do not pay taxes, and when they bring their supplies and cars and other goods into the country, they do not pay customs duties.”

Digicel, on the other hand, is the country’s largest employer and taxpayer. The privately held company has invested $ 600 million in Haiti, making it by far the country’s largest foreign investor ever, and it has democratized communications with its strategy of selling low-price cellphones and services to the masses.

Mr. O’Brien has profited extensively from Haiti, which is Digicel’s largest market and accounts for roughly one-third of its 11.1 million subscribers.

“There is something that is two-way about this relationship,” Mr. Delatour said. “It is not only a story of what Digicel and Mr. O’Brien have done for Haiti, but also what Haiti has done for Digicel and Mr. O’Brien.”

For his part, Mr. O’Brien does not like to hear his work on behalf of the country or Digicel’s largess there described as corporate social responsibility. “If you make money in a poor country, you can’t just take it and disappear,” he said. “It would be bad business.”

Thus, Digicel unveiled plans in November to invest $ 45 million in a new 173-room hotel next door to its offices, to be run by Marriott. That announcement came at a forum sponsored by the Inter-American Development Bank that drew 500 business people from 29 countries.

It was kicked off by a ribbon-cutting at a new industrial park in Caracol whose first tenant will be Sae-A, a Korean apparel manufacturer with extensive experience in Latin America. It is building a plant that plans to employ 20,000 and, unlike the low-wage apparel manufacturing operations that spawned vast urban slums, incorporate housing developments and other infrastructure.

Just last month, Heineken, the Dutch brewing concern, increased to 95 percent from 23 percent its stake in Brasserie Nationale d’Haiti, a Haitian brewery and bottler, saying it saw greater political and economic stability in the country.

Then there are commitments from the 60-odd members of the Haiti Action Network of the Clinton Global Initiative, or C.G.I., which include installing solar panels, increasing energy supplies, refurbishing homes and providing job training.

Mr. O’Brien is charged with overseeing their progress on behalf of former President Bill Clinton, and so after the school opening, he headed to the Hotel Montana to grill the network’s members, as he does 10 times a year.

“I hear Digicel is a difficult company to work for because he holds the people who work there accountable for everything, and he runs the network in much the same way,” said Anne Hastings, chief executive of Fonkoze, a microfinance institution in Haiti that is a member. “But he does it with a nice sense of humor, so that no one is afraid — and Haiti is a country that can benefit from someone keeping account, believe me.” President Clinton said, “The Haiti Action Network symbolizes the best of C.G.I.” in large part thanks to Mr. O’Brien’s unusual commitment to it. “What is striking is how deeply he has embedded his Haiti work into both his business and personal life,” Mr. Clinton said. “Because he cares so much, it’s easier for him to motivate and hold accountable other network members.”

Mr. O’Brien does not limit his haranguing. He pointedly asked the guest speaker at a recent network meeting, Thierry Mayard-Paul, Haiti’s interior minister, about the government’s plan for a new Center to Facilitate Investment. “It has five people,” Mr. O’Brien said. “It needs 50. How will you staff it? How long will it take? How many weeks?”

They are the kind of questions Josefa Raymond Gauthier knows well. In charge of the agency that finances a variety of government projects financed primarily by international donors, Mrs. Gauthier was the first chief executive of the Digicel Haiti Foundation, which oversees the construction of the schools.

“I arrived at the foundation in late 2008, and all of a sudden it was, ‘We have to deliver a school by March because Denis O’Brien is coming,’ ” Mrs. Gauthier said.

“Then Denis arrived and said, ‘What a nice school. Let’s have 20 more, one in each department of Haiti, before the end of the year,’ ” she said. “That’s Denis.”

The foundation quickly realized, however, that simply putting up a school was not the answer. “Teachers are a catastrophe,” Mrs. Gauthier said. So Digicel began remedial teacher training and paying teachers when the Ministry of Education was late or checks went missing. And then there were textbooks and desks and myriad other things.

“I always thought building the schools would be the hard bit, because of the contracts involved and all that,” Mr. O’Brien said. “But the hard part is really about getting the community together to support the school and identifying the leaders and so many other things.”

As a young man, Mr. O’Brien thought he would make his fortune replicating the Home Shopping Network in Ireland, but instead he nearly went bankrupt, saving his investors and himself with the do-or-die purchase of an Irish radio station that became part of what is now the Communicorp Group. He then established Esat Telecom in 1990, eventually buying Ireland’s second mobile phone license — and igniting speculations that political favor had played a role in the bidding.

After a 14-year inquiry, a judicial tribunal last year accused the government minister who awarded the license of accepting payments from Mr. O’Brien, payments he vehemently denies ever making. He has denounced the tribunal as a sham and has been accused of using his investments in the Irish media to squelch coverage of it, accusations he has described as “malicious and simply not true.”

Amid the storm, Mr. O’Brien sold Esat in 2000, leaving him at 41 with a few hundred million in the bank and “bored out of my mind.” He saw an ad for the sale of a mobile license in Jamaica, picked up a phone in a Dublin pub, bid $ 47.5 million and won, opening the door to a telecom enterprise spanning the Caribbean and South Pacific. Forbes magazine ranks him 254th on its list of the world’s billionaires, with an estimated $ 4.2 billion.

He walks a fine line in Haiti, where his take-charge manner and ability to push projects forward highlight government ineffectuality and weakness. Digicel, for instance, has put up street signs in parts of Port-au-Prince, serving as reminders of the company’s role in public life as much as guides for navigating the city.

Most mornings, people crowd around the reception desk of Digicel’s office building, not to complain about the firm’s services but to see the mayor and other city officials whose offices are on the sixth floor since the earthquake.

The company provides the space rent-free, Mayor Jean-Yves Jason said, and gave the city computers and furniture. “We have plans to build a new city hall in downtown Port-au-Prince, but we are so comfortable here it is easy to delay,” Mr. Jason joked.

The mayor conceded that the arrangement has left the city vulnerable to charges of conflicts of interest and favoritism. Mr. Jason said, for example, he was having trouble getting another Haitian telecom company to pay its taxes. “We can’t really go after them publicly, though, because they are going to claim we’re aligned with Digicel, their competitor.” Mr. Jason said the city could not have functioned without Digicel’s help in the early days after the earthquake. The company prepaid its taxes, which allowed the city to make its payroll and other payments, and paid for dump trucks and tractors that were used to remove rubble and clear spaces.

Digicel does not always get its way. It would like, for instance, to increase its role in the redevelopment of downtown Port-au-Prince around the iconic Iron Market, which Mr. O’Brien rebuilt with $ 16.5 million of his own money after the earthquake. But so far, he has been unable to get the necessary government approvals to move forward and redevelop parts of downtown. “We’re getting the slow no,” he said. There are other challenges. In an interview in New York after attending the Clinton Global Initiative’s meeting in September, Mr. O’Brien spoke enthusiastically about plans by Haiti’s president, Michel Martelly, to finance his program to provide free primary school education to all Haitian children with fees on cellphone calls and remittances.

Mr. O’Brien said that despite opposition from his senior management, who knew the charges would be unpopular with customers, he regarded them as an innovative means of raising needed revenue and a promising sign of government resolve.

Two months later, word broke that $ 26 million in the new National Fund for Education was missing. “I’ve spoken with President Martelly about this, and there will be an audit,” Mr. O’Brien said. “I will make it my business that it will be audited, one way or the other.”



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 Published on : 2011-09-08
HAITI – EARTHQUAKE AND CHOLERA

FACT SHEET #12, FISCAL YEAR (FY) 2011 - SEPTEMBER 8, 2011

  • KEY DEVELOPMENTS

  • HUMANITARIAN FUNDING FOR THE EARTHQUAKE

  • HUMANITARIAN FUNDING PROVIDED TO DATE FOR CHOLERA

  • USAID AND STATE HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE TO HAITI FOR THE EARTHQUAKE


Click here to open the Fact Sheet (PDF)



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 Published on : 2011-06-08
Eritaj Foundation Inc.

Eritaj Foundation Inc.
Partnerships for a Better Haiti
78 Avenue Lamartiniere, P-au-P Haiti
www.eritajfoundation.org

Eritaj Foundation seeks to promote organizational, social and economic development in Haiti since 1999. A community organization based in Framingham, MA and Port au Prince Haiti, Eritaj (Haitian Creole for heritage) works with numerous grassroots organizations including churches, clinics, schools and community based actions for sustainable socio-economic change.

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 Published on : 2011-06-06
The 2011 National Haitian American Forum was a huge success- see photos, video clips and comments

Greetings,

The 2011 National Haitian American Forum was a huge success, you can read below some of the comments we have received. while you will be able to watch the entire forum on tv and online, thanks to our many partners, we would like to share some photos with you in the mid-time. Click on links below and enjoy.

Album 1: http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10150192358436316.307135.357928836315

Album 2: http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10100778504288013.3151193.5222413

Video clip: http://youtu.be/gVg_BbdyqvA

                    http://youtu.be/egxCyT-sYtU

Story: http://diaryofamarabou.blogspot.com/2011/06/2011-haitian-american-forum.html

Comments:

"A better Haiti takes all of us. The National Haitian American forum 2011 embodied that very principle by providing a platform for leaders in the community to come together for a wide ranging dialogue about issues that concerns Haitians in the US and at home. Thank you for starting this conversation!!!!!
The forum setting and related activities were astounding and offered an opportunity for the rich diversity of outstanding presenters to nurture and engage the participants both professionally and personally in a cultural feast. My sincere compliments to you for the care you have taken in your role as a bridge to the Haitian community. I also celebrate your partnership in empowering and enabling our community to act as one. I am touched and inspired by your generosity and your commitment to the transformation of Haiti.
Kudos !!!!" Delbie Noel

Thank you to Color of Hope for organizing this forum. it was a candid conversation that was well needed for our community. The panelists tackle issues about education, immigration, networking and community involvement. The women segment was my all time favorite. it's really rare to hear genuine conversation about women in Hati. Thanks again to Color of Hope. Thank you"

"The National Haitian American Forum was a great event. Looking forward to see the much anticipated values it will create in the next few months!" Marc Saint Clair

"The National Haitian American Forum was Great, the topics were very engaging; ranging from education to immigration. Lawrence Gonzalez inspirationally urged that we reach back to the younger generation and let them know that we care, and there by inspire the of leaders of tomorrow."

"The National Haitian American Forum was fun while being socially productive. Information, laughs and even free authentic Haitian food ie mourue, banan, chicken, griot, etc. + Haitian cake and akasan for FREE. The convos were great and the subtle layout changes were creatively inspired. like Lucson Joseph said let's not just educate but lets induce leadership and purpose." Lawrence Gonzalez





Color of Hope
www.colorofhope.org


 



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 Published on : 2011-05-06
Local efforts to rebuild Haiti's universities

Kenneth J. Cooper
The Bay State Banner


Local Haitian educators are taking a lead role in forming an international consortium of colleges to help rebuild and reform Haiti’s system of higher education, which was devastated in the earthquake last year.

More than two dozen colleges have expressed interest in joining the new consortium, including Harvard, Boston and Bentley universities. Helping to put together the educational initiative are Carole Berotte Joseph, currently president of Massachusetts Bay Community College, and Alix Cantave, associate director of the Trotter Institute at the University of Massachusetts Boston. Both were born in Haiti.

“I think it’s wonderful that people are coming through because there are big needs in Haiti,” said Berotte Joseph, the first Haitian-American president of a U.S. college. “Some people didn’t know there was a university system in Haiti. They think there’s nothing but poverty.”

The earthquake destroyed the campuses of most of 32 colleges surveyed in Port-au-Prince, the capital, and the rest were damaged. As many as 200 professors and 6,000 students were killed, based on one estimate. The schools have since reopened, holding classes in temporary quarters, tents and even outdoors as they await funding to rebuild.

Haiti’s 159 colleges, which had enrolled about 40,000 students, were already struggling academically before the quake. The country lacks a system for accrediting colleges to assure quality, and only a few are internationally recognized. Most use teaching methods based on an outdated French model.

The Consortium for Rebuilding and Improving Higher Education in Haiti will focus on modernizing academics and restructuring how the institutions are governed.

“It’s a good time for us to rethink everything and pull from the best of all the various systems” of higher education, Berotte Joseph said.

A cross-section of the county’s colleges have applied to become members of the consortium, which will coordinate their efforts. Besides the three private universities locally, Wheelock, Lesley and Regis colleges are interested in helping. So too are Notre Dame, Syracuse and New York universities, big private schools.

Among public institutions wanting to get involved are the City University of New York, University of Michigan and University of California-Santa Barbara.

“We have some really good institutions,” Cantave said. “It’s a very healthy mix of institutions that’s interested.”

Colleges from Canada and Spain have moved to join, with other international applicants possible from Chile and the Caribbean.

Through the consortium, Haitian colleges and member institutions will be paired.

“Some institutions are known for certain things,” Berotte Joseph said. “I think they will pair with an institution in Haiti that needs that kind of development.”

Cantave said Bentley, for instance, wants to work with the business school at the State University of Haiti. The business-oriented university in Waltham is willing to help on business education, curriculum and faculty development, graduate student and faculty projects and effective administrative practices.

Harvard is preparing to extend 11 scholarships to Haitians as short-term executive fellows at the Kennedy School of Government and Institutes for Higher Education in the Graduate School of Education.

California State University-Sacramento has offered its expertise on using educational technology for distance learning and online coursework. CUNY wants to work with regional Haitian universities outside Port-au-Prince, which did not sustain as much physical damage from the quake but need to build their educational capacity.

“We expect institutions will have to raise funds to do what they do” by applying for grants, Cantave said.

Support for a coordinating staff to facilitate communication, Berotte Joseph said, could come from the U.S. Agency for International Development, the Clinton Bush Haiti Fund or private foundations.

Planning for the consortium began taking shape not long after the January 2010 quake and solidified at a meeting with educators in Haiti last fall. Leaders of consortium members plan to convene in Boston later this month. During the summer, a workshop on academic governance and administration is scheduled in Haiti, Cantave said.

Even with the unmet basic needs in post-quake Haiti, where so many people still live in tents without an adequate water supply or proper sanitation, Berotte Joseph said it was important to the country’s future to upgrade its colleges.

“This is part of the rebuilding process. As we rebuild, we want to build something that is better than what we had,” said Berotte Joseph, who this summer moves to Bronx Community College as its next president.


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 Published on : 2011-04-28
Breakdown of CRS Spending in Haiti in the First 12 Months (as of December 31, 2010)

Marie Lucienne Charles stands proudly in her new home, one of hundreds of transitional shelters constructed by CRS and local partner Hospice St. Joseph in the earthquake-stricken neighborhood of Christ Roi.

After the quake, CRS found a natural partner in Hospice St. Joseph, a ministry of the Diocese of Norwich, Connecticut, working with Haitian people to provide health care, education and hospitality services. Twenty-one hospice organizers work with CRS staff every day, verifying land rights for families so they can rebuild on their original home sites.

Thanks to the overwhelming generosity of supporters in the United States, Catholic Relief Services
can ensure that help reaches those who need it most. As part of a plan that will span five years and beyond, CRS will spend more than $ 200 million to help the people of Haiti recover from their catastrophic loss.

CRS has received $ 165 million for Haiti relief and rebuilding. Of this, $ 127 million came from private donors, including $ 50 million received from special collections for Haiti in Catholic dioceses across
the United States.

An additional $ 33 million* from special collections taken by the bishops of the United States will be used for reconstruction of Church structures in Haiti.

Thanks to your generosity, CRS has: Delivered food to nearly 900,000 people and continues to provide monthly food rations to more than 100,000 children. Provided emergency shelter materials to
more than 274,000 people and has built more than 1,300 transitional shelters with plans to build 8,000.

Supported more than 900 emergency operations and 64,000 outpatient consultations and continues to provide support as Haiti rebuilds its medical system. Installed more than 600 latrines and bathing
stations, and has provided an average of 375,000 gallons of clean water per month. Created short-term jobs for more than 10,000 people. Distributed vouchers to 6,000 families for the purchase of seed and fertilizer.

Registered more than 300 children for family reunification, and provides them interim care and support. Worked to reduce the spread of cholera in camps, including water purification and sanitation efforts, and supported health centers to manage the influx of patients.

Click here to see more ...

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 Published on : 2011-04-28
CRS: Journey with Haiti

The Catholic Church Responds - Special Report 18: April 27, 2011

In the Easter Spirit of rebirth and renewal, we are featuring information on new initiatives which aim to support and strengthen the Church in Haiti as it rebuilds its spiritual and social services infrastructure. With much of the immediate disaster response coming to a close CRS and the USCCB Church in Latin America and many others are focused on recovery working with local leaders in Haiti and the US to create and strengthen systems and infrastructure in Haiti that foster coordination, collaboration and local ownership. There are several exciting new initiatives to strengthen the infrastructure of the Church in Haiti, the Catholic Hospital system, and US/Haiti Parish Partnership (twinning) initiatives. Read more about them below!

UPDATE Rebuilding Church Property in Haiti- PROCHE- The Haitian Bishop’s organization to rebuild Church property in Haiti is officially up and running. Please read a special message from Fr. Andrew Small, O.M.I. for instructions on how to apply for funding for Church construction projects in Haiti as well as information on projects currently in the pipeline, and how to sponsor Church reconstruction projects through PROCHE.

New Grants Opportunity for US/Haiti Partnerships- The matching grants program is a new CRS grant program for Church-based solidarity partnerships that are focused on sustainable development. It will also support the strengthening of “right relationships” between the two partners by encouraging mutuality in the partnership and Haitian leadership in the project. To apply for a grant, please read the Request for Proposals and Instructions, and fill out the application form. Proposals are due July 30, 2011 and funds will be disbursed by September 15, 2011. For additional information, please contact Kim Lamberty with the CRS Haiti Partnership Unit.

Catholic Healthcare Campaign for Rebirth and Renewal – U.S. Catholic health care organizations have joined with Catholic Relief Services in an ambitious effort to rebuild a Catholic hospital for the Archdiocese of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, and to strengthen Catholic health care throughout the island nation. For more information about this Healthcare strengthening initiative please visit the Catholic Health Association

Please contact us at haitipartnership@crs.org for questions or comments on any of these new initiatives and visit the CRS Haiti Partners website for continued updates!


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 Published on : 2011-03-23
Daughters of Charity Sisters in Port-au-Prince

Daughter's School

If anyone would like to contribute, send donations to:

Vincentian Center
St. John's University
8000 Utopia Parkway
Jamaica, NY 11439








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