Haiti

Posted on Nov 4, 2010 | by Barbara Denman

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (BP)–An embattled Haiti is bracing for Tropical Storm Tomas, which is expected to strengthen into a hurricane before its projected hit Friday, Nov. 5.

In the 10 months since the Jan. 12 earthquake, Haitians have lived in fear of two potential threats, with more than 1.3 million homeless in unsanitary and unstable tent cities: disease and hurricanes in the tropical climate.

After a possible nationwide outbreak of cholera was contained to the city of St. Marc in October, now the hurricane is certain to bring destructive winds and flash flooding.

Those living in tent cities are most at risk. What the strong winds do not destroy, the floodwaters will, as thousands of tents line riverbanks and low-lying areas.

Florida and Southern Baptist disaster relief teams on the ground in Port-au-Prince are making preparations for the worst, said Eddie Blackmon, Haiti Rebuild coordinator for Southern Baptist Disaster Relief.

“We are sending two medical teams from Pensacola back to the U.S., getting our water supplies together in a safe place and filling up our vehicles with gas, much like we do when a hurricane is threatening Florida,” said Blackmon. Construction materials being used to rebuild homes also are being secured, he noted.

Although media reports suggest that the government is moving people out of the tent cities, Blackmon said he had driven through the tent cities in Port-au-Prince during the past two days and “seen no movement. My biggest concern is for the people in the tent cities.”

“There is really no place for them to go,” Blackmon added. “If there were, the government would have moved them before now.”

Fritz Wilson, incident commander of the Haiti earthquake response and Florida Baptist disaster relief director, reported that the convention has 17 tons of rice positioned in warehouses across Haiti, with pastors trained for making distributions if needed.

“We have our supplies and resources on the ground,” Wilson said.

“In God’s timing,” he said, “next week we are scheduled to take more than 4,000 Buckets of Hopes to Jeremie and Les Cayes,” towns in southwestern Haiti where the hurricane is likely to hit. Each bucket, packed by Southern Baptist hands, contains enough food to feed a Haitian family for more than a week.

Florida Baptists, working in partnership with the 1,000 churches of the Confraternite Missionaries Baptiste d’Haiti, have responded to eight disasters in the past 15 years

Florida Baptists shipped bottled water and water purification filters to St. Marc in late October to help stem the cholera outbreak in that city, located about 60 miles northwest of Port-au-Prince.

The supplies were sent after Fritz Albert, director of missions of Haiti’s Artibonne Baptist Association, issued a plea of help.

“Pastor Albert asked if there was anything we could do to help provide pure water for churches in the St. Marc area,” said Blackmon, who is stationed at the Florida Baptist Mission House in Port-au-Prince. “The outbreak has scared everyone in the area, making them afraid to drink any water.”

Cholera, a bacterial infection of the small intestines, can cause vomiting and diarrhea so severe it can kill victims from dehydration within days. The disease is spread through contaminated water, food and poor sanitation.

Volunteers from First Baptist and Hillcrest churches in Pensacola traveled to Haiti on Saturday, Oct. 30, with 30 water purification drip-type filters that can be installed on five-gallon buckets to help stem the lack of pure drinking water.

Additionally $30,000 was earmarked to purchase water in Port-au-Prince to be shipped to St. Marc.

Albert dispensed the water and purification filters to the churches for distribution to families in their communities.

Despite the outbreak, Florida Baptist Convention officials released a statement to their churches encouraging mission volunteers to continue with scheduled plans.

Blackmon reported that the Pensacola medical teams treated 800 patients during the week of Oct. 24-30 and another 600 patients before being sent home.
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Barbara Denman is director of communications for the Florida Baptist Convention.

Staff Writer, George Henson for the Texas Baptist Standard | Thursday, October 21st, 2010

DALLAS (ABP) — Helping a team of amputee soccer players get to their World Cup venue might not seem like disaster relief, but Dick Talley with Texas Baptist Men said that is exactly what it is.

“We see this as an extension of our disaster-relief ministry,” Talley said. “In Haiti, if you have [a choice between feeding] a dog and a handicapped person, you feed the dog because it has value.

“How do we change the way the people of Haiti look at an amputee or handicapped person? We’re trying to do that through sport. In the eyes of the people of Haiti, we are elevating the value of these people.”

Fred Sorrells of First Baptist Church in Kingsland, Texas, worked with handicapped people in Haiti even before the Jan. 12 earthquake there

Members of a Haitian amputee soccer team proudly display a shirt bearing both the Texas Baptist Men Disaster Relief insignia and their team logo. TBM will train the team members in water purification techniques and basic disaster relief before they return to Haiti.

swelled their numbers.

“In Haiti, to be disabled is to be castoff. The general feeling is, ‘Why don’t you just go off somewhere and die?’” he said.

Recognizing the importance of sports in Haiti, he began searching the Internet for a viable sport for people with disabilities and came across the World Amputee Soccer Association. As he began to inquire about it, Sorrells said, he essentially was told there was no way he could get a team together in time for the association’s World Cup.

Along about that time, Sorrells learned that Haiti’s national soccer team was in Texas, and he went there to see if he could enlist some help.

“I just showed up and asked if there were any Christians on the team and learned their captain was a very devout Christian,” he recalled.

Team Captain Pierre Bruny immediately was interested. Upon his return to Haiti, Bruny began visiting hospitals to invite amputees to try out for the team.

Texas Baptist Men Executive Director Leo Smith (2nd from right) enjoys time with (left to right) Dick Talley of TBM, Fred Sorrells of First Baptist Church in Kingsland, a Haitian pastor and the soccer team captain.

After several days of tryouts, the Haitian national amputee soccer team was selected Aug. 14.

The next major hurdle involved securing birth certificates, passports and visas in a country were so many records had been destroyed, but eventually all were obtained.

Texas Baptist Men paid for the air transport of the team from Haiti to Dallas. FC Dallas, the city’s professional soccer team, put them up in hotel accommodations and provided meals and transportation.

Local media reported on the team, and donations began to come in, but still the team did not have the funds necessary to fly to Crespo, Argentina, for the World Cup where they would play teams from Argentina, Japan, France and Ukraine in their opening pool. In all, 14 teams are competing for the title.

Texas Baptist Men agreed to step in again when the team did not have the money for the flight.

“People are starting to donate, but not fast enough to get them to Argentina, so we are guaranteeing the tickets, and then we will reimburse as the money becomes available,” Talley said.

But he was quick to not take all the credit for the team’s getting the opportunity to play. While TBM had handled this hurdle, others had helped at other points along the way.

“There are several groups that are helping, we’re just a spoke in the wheel,” Talley said.

Sorrells said he expects TBM to be fully reimbursed.

Members of an amputee soccer team from Haiti practice in Frisco before journeying to international competition in Argentina.

“We’re doing it as a step of faith that people will hear about this team and make a donation. We really believe we’ll be able to pay every penny of what they’ve given us back,” he said.

In amputee soccer, players can only use a non-amputated limb to strike the ball. Field players must be missing some portion of a leg, and goalies must be missing some portion of an arm.

“Because some may only be missing a hand or foot while others may have lost much more of the limb, only the whole arm or leg can be used to touch the ball,” Sorrells explained.

Field players use crutches that wrap around their forearms for their mobility. For more information and video of the game, see here. There also are opportunities to contribute on the site.

“We know we are the David among the Goliaths, because we have not played an official game yet,” he said.

Sorrells’ organization, International Institute of Sport, focuses on helping the handicapped be as involved in athletic competition as they wish. He particularly is involved in the Paralympic Games and Veterans Wheelchair Games.

Sorrells believes the Great Commission is not only in Matthew 28. It also is in Luke 14:21-23: “The servant came back and reported this to his master. Then the owner of the house became angry and ordered his servant, ‘Go out quickly into the streets and alleys of the town and bring in the poor, the crippled, the blind and the lame.’ ‘Sir,’ the servant said, ‘what you ordered has been done, but there is still room.’ Then the master told his servant, ‘Go out to the roads and country lanes and make them come in, so that my house will be full.’”

“That’s what I’m trying to do — help the poor, crippled, blind and lame to know Jesus Christ,” Sorrells said.

Seven of the Haitian amputee team now are Christians. Once their World Cup experience is completed, Talley said they will be trained in water purification so that they can help in future disaster-relief efforts.

“The first casualty of a disaster is hope,” Talley said. “They’re going to be able to tell other earthquake survivors that there is hope, that there is life after an earthquake, and they are proof of it.”

New fellowships will ‘preserve the harvest’ of new Christians.

Interview by Sarah Eekhoff Zylstra | posted 10/18/2010 09:40AM

Craig Culbreth, the director of partnership missions for the Florida Baptist Convention, has been visiting Haiti for the past 12 years and working with the country’s more than 1,000 Baptist churches. After his most recent visit, Culbreth spoke with reporter Sarah Eekhoff Zylstra about his work.

  • Countless churches lost property in the January earthquake.  How many new churches have been started since January 12?

Since January, 215 brand-new Baptist churches have been started. None of these churches meet in a building. I wouldn’t even call them

Many churches were destroyed by the January earthquake that hit Haiti.

tents. There are no walls. A piece of plastic has been put up over wood or frames to get them out of the sun and rain.

  • What are the long-term prospects for these congregations?

Very good. Our plan involves Bible training, working with established pastors for encouragement, and small salary supplements for pastors. We believe everything rises and falls on leadership.

  • Why should planting new churches be a priority over housing or education?

You have to be on similar tracks that run together. You have to provide for them spiritually, or we’ve become just another relief agency.

  • Has there been a net gain in Baptist churches?

Yes. We had 891 before the earthquake, and now we have about 1,105.

  • Were many people in these congregations previously active in a church?

No, just the opposite, in fact. We are finding many new converts from the earthquake experience. We have records of 162,314 conversions since the earthquake. We believe our new churches are made up of these converts. We are after a relationship with Jesus Christ, not a nation that has religious people.

  • What are the differences between these new churches and the ones that existed before the quake?

All are under plastic tarps versus fixed buildings and full of new believers, so all are eager to learn. Their pastors are leaning heavily on God for everything. The pastors have no American supporters, which is not so bad.

  • How do church-planting methods change in times of disaster?

The church-planting movement in Haiti is a result of the harvest of believers. We did not seek to start church plants to reach people, but to start churches to preserve the harvest. Big difference. During a disaster, we push for people to come to Christ. When that happens, we seek to start a church with new believers.

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