CELEBRATE CHILDREN AND YOUTH INFANT JESUS SCHOOL PETIT-GOAVE, HAITI SUMMER ARTS PROJECT JULY 2010

posted Dec 10, 2010 11:38 AM by secular servite   [ updated Dec 10, 2010 1:30 PM ]

  
Arts and Crafts . 2010

The objective of this Summer Arts Project was to provide an experiential learning environment where children and youth are empowered, explores new skills and engage in new experiences. In addition to offering various art domains, the Summer Arts Project provided opportunities for children and youth to get involved in recreational activities such as tennis, volleyball, and double-dutch. Through hands-on creative activities, discussion and role playing, the Arts Project attempted to foster an understanding and appreciation of the arts as well as to sharpen the children and youth's perception, stimulate their imagination and increase their ability to see and interpret the world.

The two-week program engaged both children and school staff in creative activities daily. Research shows that the benefits of interactive creative activities extend way beyond providing creative outlet for children. Such education can help develop imagination, cognitive skills, creative skills, problem solving, fine motor skills, social skills and more.

Another key advantage of the Program was the exposure of the staff members to new ideas and activities. Their participation reinforced the value of the various creative activities as truly enriching for the children.


~ Fr. Vidal Martinez, OSM

Photos
The Team / Team and Children / Children Arts and Crafts / Jumping Rope / Outdoor Activities / Dancing

HUSH Benefit - Photos and Gift Giving Celebration

posted Dec 10, 2010 11:20 AM by secular servite   [ updated Dec 10, 2010 12:46 PM ]

HUSH Opera Benefit Concert - Report

posted Nov 8, 2010 5:12 AM by secular servite   [ updated Dec 11, 2010 8:03 AM ]


 

Compassion and Care for our Sisters and Brothers in Haiti

posted Oct 15, 2010 1:42 PM by secular servite   [ updated Oct 16, 2010 11:24 AM ]

The parents of the children who attend Infant Jesus School, Petit-Goâve, Haiti, are involved in a clean-up project of the grounds of the school. As a result of the earthquake in January, 2010, the security, cement wall that protected the grounds, the school, and the children, collapsed. With the support and assistance of so many generous people, we have been able to re-construct the wall and to assure the safety and welfare of the children as well as to protect the facilities and the property.

In order to assist these families, who, in some cases, have lost much of what they formerly owned, the parents have been invited to work in the clean-up project and to be paid a stipend for their participation. Thus, the school grounds are being cleaned, the parents are receiving a stipend in retribution, and aid is provided to their families.

In these pictures, there is Fr. Marc Claudy Magloire, who is director of the clean-up project. Fr. Magloire is the Associate Pastor of the Catholic Parish of Petit-Goâve, Haiti: Our Lady of the Assumption Parish. Fr. Magloire, accompanied by Odette Morency,OSSM, is distributing the stipend to the parents so that they can provide for their families.
 


We are grateful to the many generous individuals who have responded with compassion and care to the needs and cries of ours sisters and brothers in Haiti. Thank you for making this project possible by the donations sent!

Fr. Vidal Martínez,OSM

Mission Appeal DVD

posted Sep 14, 2010 2:51 AM by secular servite   [ updated Sep 14, 2010 2:55 AM ]

HUSH Opera - Benefit Concert Assumption Church, Chicago

posted Jul 14, 2010 5:18 PM by secular servite   [ updated Dec 10, 2010 10:10 AM ]

Haiti:"...people who have much more than I..."

posted Jul 14, 2010 5:15 PM by secular servite

We share this newsletter written by Fr. Medard Laz with you, because you have supported our efforts in reaching out to the needy in Haiti.  Thank you!  Fr. Laz has been working with Odette Morency,OSSM and her daughter, Carole, to do some fund-raising in support of Infant Jesus School.  Please read the information that he writes about the present conditions of Haiti.  Let us remember to pray always for the continual uplifting and renewal of our sisters and brothers in Haiti.
 
 
I confess that I like to channel surf all the TV stations during the evening national news programs. Tonight the top four stories that made all the channels were: The Gulf oil spill, the bombings in Uganda, the need to now check the cholesterol levels of our children due to child obesity, and the six-month anniversary of the January 12th earthquake in Haiti. The last two stories struck me as a dichotomy – Our children in the States are suffering from high cholesterol while the children in Haiti are lucky to find a mud cookie like I have sitting here next to my computer keyboard. The mud cookie sits here to remind me how good I really have it every day and how others struggle to put any kind of food in their mouths.
 
With today being the six-month anniversary of the 6.2 earthquake that hit Haiti on January 12th where 300,000 people died in 35 seconds, the newspapers and the media have run stories about what has happened since then. The stories uniformly admit that one and a half million people are living in tent cities or more especially – cities of bed sheets, tarps, and sticks. All report that the temperature under the tents, tarps, and sheets is 140 sweltering degrees. We are shown the strings of shacks built right down the center of a major road in Port au Prince.
 
Security is a major issue. There have been many rapes. Taking care of basic bodily functions is an ongoing concern. Although there have not been any widespread outbrakes of illness, there are still a lot of very sick people, young and old. But thanks to dedicated medical personnel from around the world, people who are really sick or who have lost limbs are mostly being cared for.
 
We learn that the government is still in disarray and has not come up with a comprehensive plan. A major problem is the rubble that is everywhere, rubble that is 100 times the amount of the Twin Towers collapse. Yet two million people are trying to survive in the midst of all the rubble.
 
When the heavy rains come as they so often do, the city takes on dimensions of biblical proportions. A million and a half people become helpless to the mud, the garbage, the insects, the odors, the diseases, and the rubble all around them. There is no escape. They are prisoners.
 
In my channel surfing with today’s evening news, I found a number of Haitians who touched a nerve. They said that it is only their faith that has kept them going. They are in a living hell with no one but God to go to and to lean on. Several commentators were amazed at how people had not lost hope, even though the cameras have been turned off for five months and most of the money pledged by the nations of the world has not arrived.
 
The people of Haiti are a remarkable people. As life gets tougher and tougher they turn more and more to God, not to escape reality, but to go beyond the harshness of life in front of them in order to reach Ultimate Reality.  
 
I will never forget my first trip to Haiti. I was at the airport in Port au Prince standing next to a young couple from West Palm Beach. As we were about to walk to board the plane back to Florida, the husband blurted out: “Before I came here, I thought I had so much. But after my week here, I’ve discovered that these people who have next to nothing materially, have so much more than I will ever have.”
 
Father Med Laz

Volunteers at Infant Jesus School - Servants of Mary Center

posted Apr 17, 2010 6:52 PM by secular servite   [ updated May 23, 2010 2:19 AM ]


Leaves

Photos by Rosie Soto - Volunteer
 Painting


Letter by Fr. Vidal Martinez - 04.06.10

Rosie Soto and Colleen Clutter, two young adults from Kissimmee, Florida went to Petit-Goave, Haiti during Holy Week: March 29-April 2, 2010. These are photos of what they saw and experienced. The most touching and moving are the photos of the children of Infant Jesus School, our little school in Petit-Goave, as they come together for meals, for fun, for art, for learning. We are grateful to Rosie and Colleen for caring enough to go to the aid of their sisters and brothers in their sorrow, their pain, and their loss as well as to celebrate with them the joy and peace of knowing Someone cares!

If you have not made a donation to help our sisters and brothers in Haiti, you can send your donation to:Haiti Relief Fund
Servants of Mary
3121 W. Jackson Blvd.
Chicago, IL 60612
Attn: Fr. Vidal Martinez,OSM
Make checks out to: Servants of Mary.


God bless you! Christ is truly risen, Alleluia!!
Fr. Vidal Martinez,OSM

Lessons learned in Haiti: From the mouths of babes

posted Feb 25, 2010 8:34 PM by secular servite   [ updated Mar 10, 2010 10:55 PM ]

March 8,2010
by Mercy Sr. Karen Schneider

A group of children at the L'Ouverture Cleary
School near Port-au-Prince, March 2.
Commentary

I was fortunate enough to be in Haiti twice, once just three days after the earthquake and a second time during the third week post earthquake. My mind is filled with unforgettable experiences, but I want the children of Haiti to speak for themselves, so I will tell you their stories. Each one holds an important lesson for me and, quite possibly, for you, as well. Each child has a unique perception ... about life ... about Haiti’s political reality ... about faith ... about family ... about acceptance and most of all, about hope.

Pushon, 12-years-old, was one of the first children I met when I arrived on January 15th; three days after the earthquake had devastated Haiti. I was in Port-au-Prince, starting work in a makeshift hospital, set up in huge tents on the airport field. Pushon’s left leg was horribly crushed and held the odor of rotting flesh. Flies were gathering around the open wounds, bones were sticking out everywhere and the flesh was completely gone from the medial aspect of his lower leg. That leg looked like a picture from one of those anatomy books which shows muscles and vessels and bones, but it just wasn’t as neat as a picture. It was obvious we would have to amputate or he would die.

Pushon panicked when we told him. “No, no, no,” he begged, “I can wiggle my toes. See”, as he pointed to his toes. “You have a bad infection,” we explained, “You’re getting a fever. You will die soon if we do not cut off your leg.” He thought a full minute; a minute is a long time to wait for a 12 yr old to answer. He wet his lips before he spoke his mind. “My father needs me”, he said. “My mother is dead. My sisters are dead. My father needs me.”

Pushon knew what it meant to be an amputee in Haiti: unable to ride his bike, he would no longer be able to go to school or church. Children with deformities, moreover, were often shunned in school. Whether he did or didn’t go to school he would most likely never be able to get a job. In a country where that has an 80% unemployment rate, why would anyone hire a one-legged man when there were so many men with both legs?

At age 12 Pushon completely understood the social issues of his country.

He envisioned a future spent on the street begging, homeless, hungry, and dirty. There would be no Special Olympics for him, no school with handicapped access, no Rights of Disability Act passed by his Congress. He would need crutches for the rest of his life. He had never seen an artificial leg; he would never ride his bike again. Gone were his dreams of becoming a doctor.

And yet he chose to live, not for himself, but because his father needed him. Abandoning his personal aspirations, the boy had asked himself, “What will my father do if I die?” He had seen the pain in his father’s face after losing the rest of his family to the earthquake. Pushon chose to have the surgery, thereby giving the most that he could give --his leg-- so that his father could have hope! Pushon taught me a lesson of love.

On Jan. 17, five days after the earthquake struck, thirteen-year-old Barbara arrived with a dirty rag covering her face, revealing only her left eye, which had severe swelling and deformity. Most physicians and nurses have one thing that gets to them. For me it’s facial deformities. I simply hate them. I steeled myself as I removed the rag. Barbara’s good eye was looking right at me and I didn’t want her to see me cringe. Inside a voice was screaming, “Look at this deformity!” I could see flesh hanging and some bone showing. Half her nose was missing and deep beyond the bone there were visible signs of the inner workings of the sinuses. I heard air rush in and out, and there was a lot of pus and a horrible smell.

I remember she is thirteen, and the whole time she is talking and talking, once in a while taking a deep breath when something I did hurt her as I attempted to clear away the pus to get a better look. I can understand a little Creole and she is talking about how her faith in God has helped her. “I knew God would never abandon me, “she says. “When I saw my mother and grandmother dead I knew God would take care of me. I had been wandering the streets for days and then God helped me find you. From the moment the earth started shaking, I felt God inside of me. I knew God would take care of me. When I saw my mother dead I knew that I had to rely on God more.”

Barbara would need major reconstructive and plastic surgery. When I explained that we would need to get her to the USA, she cried with joy in English, “Oh thanks you Jesu ... I knew you helps me!”

This is a thirteen-year-old whose mother was dead; whose grandmother was dead, who had no house, no food and no face, and all she could do was thank Jesus! Barbara taught me to have the faith of a child in all situations.

By Jan. 18, six days post earthquake, the food we had been promised had not yet arrived and hunger was spreading. As a medical team we’d been advised to bring enough food and water for three days, but by this time I had exhausted the peanut butter and granola bars I had brought.

I was attending to James, 17, who had a concrete wall fall on him. It crushed his pelvis, sending a metal bar through his upper leg, through his privates, and into the other leg. Bedridden, James wasn’t going anywhere, so I asked him to guard my duffle bag that held all my expensive “doctor instruments,” worth thousands of dollars. He took the job very seriously and when he was sleeping, he would put his arm through the straps.

I had almost forgotten that I had a ziplock bag of nuts, raisins, and chocolate chips in the duffle bag. When I remembered and retrieved the food, James was starring right at me. I hadn’t eaten anything in 12 hours and I was hungry. This boy hadn’t eaten anything in days. Still, this was the only food I had left and I had to keep working 20-22 hours a day. No one knew when the promised food would arrive. James was watching me. I took out a handful of nuts and handed them to him. He immediately turned to the person in the next cot and gave half his nuts away; that child turned to the person next to her and gave half her nuts away, and so this went on, down about 6 cots, until the last person got just a few nuts.

Haiti is a country that knows hunger. In fact, it is one of the hungriest countries on earth. James taught me how to share.

On Jan. 20, eight days post earthquake, I treated four-year-old Sande, one of the lucky ones. Her mother was alive and Sande only had a fractured leg. Once the fracture was reduced and put into a cast she had tons of energy. When the shipments of crutches and walkers began to arrive, we found a small walker for her. There was lots of foot traffic and noise in the tents and Sande being only 4 years old was tiny, and adorable with her tiny walker and pink cast, We taught her how to say, “Hey you!” and as she walked around she would yell, “Hey you!” which translated into “I am coming through…get out of my way”. As the days went on, the tents became more crowded and noisier and no one could hear Sande’s “Hey you," so she would get the attention of those in her way by giving the road blocker a gentle punch in the back of the leg!

Sande taught me that when you are little you sometimes need to give a gentle punch to get what you need.

On Feb. 8, 22 days after the earthquake, Nahomie arrived. The 12-year-old had a crushed leg. She was evacuated to the northern region of Haiti where some of us were now tending the wounded. Her leg was amputated. The child was missing her mother who was miles away in Port au Prince

Nahomie was the patient who would hold the stump of her leg and cry the most. Every time she cried, I would give her a dose of morphine to settle her down and allow her to sleep. The passage of time didn’t slow her crying. I thought, It’s two weeks past surgery. She must be dealing with phantom pain.” Then one day as she was crying I put my hands around her face and she reached for me. I sat on her cot and she put her head on my lap, wrapped her arms around me, held me tight, the crying stopped, I held her and she went to sleep. It was then that I got it ... she needed human touch. Her mother was far away and her leg had been cut off. She didn’t need morphine; she needed someone to sit with her and hold her. From then on, I did a lot of holding.

Nahomie taught me to forget the drugs ... and remember the person!!

On Feb. 17, 36 days post earthquake, a U.S. military helicopter brought 11-year-old Peterson to our hospital in the north of Haiti. He had a fractured femur with an external fixation, metal rods sticking out of his leg. Peterson was one of our orphans. He didn’t know if any family member had survived. Every day he would ask for a phone and call his mother. No answer. Still, he kept trying several times a day. Then one day he called his mother again and -- she answered! The boy shouted, “Ma Ma” and cried with joy. We cried and cheered!! She was injured but alive. The house they had lived in had collapsed and she was rescued and taken for medical care. She asked a relative to search for her cell phone in the rubble of what had been their home. She knew it was the only way she could find her four children -- all of whom were on their way home from school when the earthquake struck. Her children all knew her cell phone number.

Peterson taught me: Don’t give up too soon.

These are the stories of just six whose lives were changed by the earthquake. Each, in turn, has changed my life. I am a different person because I met them.

This is a keynote address by Mercy Sr. Karen Schneider, a pediatrician and instructor at Johns Hopkins, delivered Feb. 24 at Loyola University Maryland, in Baltimore for a Haiti benefit/fund raising event.

Parish Church of Petit-Goave, Notre Dame de l'Assomption

posted Feb 25, 2010 8:22 PM by secular servite   [ updated Feb 25, 2010 8:37 PM ]

                                                                                  the roses 2010
   The Catholic Parish of Petit-Goave crumbled under the force of the earthquake on January 12, 2010.  Fr. Boniface is the Pastor.  His two Associates are: Frs. Luc Philogene and Magloire.  Besides the main parish church, many of the country chapels under the pastoral care of the parish staff were also destroyed by the earthquake. 
   The parishioners gather in the playground of the School of the Sisters, Daughters of Wisdom (Ecole des Soeurs), for Sunday Masses. 
 
Fr. Vidal Martinez,OSM

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