Saturday, February 28, 2009

February 28, 2009


Bon maten tout moun! yes, I know I have not been writing much. I haven't really felt like I had anything to write about. It seems the longer I am here, the things I would marvel and be amazed at previously now seem everyday. I guess it's like the frog placed in the pot of water. You slowly raise the heat and the frog stays there, gradually accustomed to it, and will stay in water till....well, till you have frog soup. It seems life here, like anywhere else, grows on you. I no longer look at Haiti as a grand, exotic experiment in my life. It seems much more like, well, home. It certainly has it's share of inconveniences, but then again, so did living in Madison, Il. Here there are really some advantages. Life is run, just differently. There is not much hustle and bustle if you don't want it. Gary and Caroline have a more busy life because they are involved in the things like Saturday Bible school. They have to prepare for it every week. Then there are the teams that come in, scheduling, arranging, itinerating (?!?), all that stuff.


For me, life is slower. I am gradually getting more comfortable with the Creole. This morning Rose came in to get money to go buy food for the school for the next two weeks. She looked at me and started going on in Creole until she saw the look on my face. At the same time she smiled and laughed I was saying "DOUSMAN, TANPRI, DOUSMAN!" that means slower, please, slower! so she slowed it down and I got about half of it. I knew most of the words but those I don't know as well take the time to run around in my brain for a second going thru tradwi (translation) and I miss the next 3 words. It is improving, though.


A funny thing about life being slower, it gives me time to think more and actually life here seems to go so fast. Maybe it is because I don't spend as much time thinking about the garbage of life as much. I spend much more of my time thinking about people and God and pouki sa sa, why this or that. I can't believe February is over, it JUST STARTED YESTERDAY! I will be home in a few months and my plans are to work at the VA in a summer job that is coming available. Darcy is having a baby (anko=again!) and is taking the summer off. Funny thing how she has her babies in the summer all the time... :) I will get to work as contract labor for the VA and it will be a great blessing to me financially. I am hoping the business thing will still work out for me to do audiology work here, assuming I return full time.


I am thinking I will, but I do not assume circumstances and how things will happen. I think I am growing into something here, but maybe that is for God to use thru me back home, who knows? I know my view of the world and it's people has changed forever. Third world country has a meaning now it did not have before, and part of that is "home". The people here have their problems and issues but, who knew, so does everyone! I look at America and see the disintergration of a once great country brought on by greed, deceit, cultural collapse, selfishness, lying politicians AND a people who have learned to lie to themselves so well they believe it. Then I see the people here, who do the same just in different proportions. The advantage is they do it here with far fewer rules and regulations! :) Wayne, I am working on the video thing, really. But as you can tell, not quickly!


Drive careful everyone, I see there is snow again in the forecast.


Djebenis tout moun.

Friday, February 20, 2009

Friday February 20, 2009

it is Karnival! the whole town is dressed to kill, partying, music playing. I was told that the gov't gives out thousands of dollars to each town to finance the partying. It IS the event of the year. the parades and such are amazing in that these are the same folks that will tell you they are starving the next day. I guess every culture has it's priorities and it's party time and this is it for Haiti. The side Americans don't see are the voodou themes and such. They celebrate the death of Jesus in these parties. Their religion, but many folks who would tell you they are Christian participate in these things.


we had a video by G. Craige Lewis, I think the name was, for the older kids today. an in your face preacher who talks about teen dating and how the church has just fallen on it's face letting our young kids make so many mistakes. He makes a very interesting point. You have to have reached a certain age to drive, purchase cigarettes, alcohol, even spray paint and some chemicals in most states now. Why? because the law assumes you aren't mature enough to be able to safely use these products until a certain age. But kids can date when they are 13,14. They are setting themselves up for disasters. Heck, most adults can't handle relationships, why would you think a teen ager could??


went to the orphanage yesterday to visit the kids and pray. Alexsson is sick and it may be malaria. Gary got him some childs choloroquine and he is on it now,we are hoping he will recover quickly.


a few days ago we had missionary meetingat Bev/Al's/Barb's place. Chris and Leslie Rollings brought Olivia with them. and Olivia did what kids do, explore. She had her face plastered up against the screen for awhile and came away with this face. needless to say Bev has been cleaning her screens this week! all in the day of a life in Haiti.
Gary and Caroline will be in Port this Sunday speaking at a conference. The trip is long and hard and w/o any upside for myself, I am planning on staying right here. Maybe I can get a little extra peanut butter in me that day. I have become a peanut butter freak here. The Haitians love it, the kids eat it every day and I have it for breakfast about every day. And, I am losing weight doing it. SO, peanut butter for everyone! bye for now
Djebenis tout moun

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

February 19, 2009

the days here are actually pretty cool right now. the locals still c/o it being so cool at night and so cold in the morning. Tyreo, one of the teen age boys in school, wore a hooded sweatshirt all day long today! It was 72 for the low this morning, very cool for this area, but we lived thru it. :)

I have been listening to a very interesting series of sermons by David Johnson from Church of the Open Door, in a little Minnesota town I can't remember now. found this from the Livesay's on their site about a year ago. wonderful speaker and teacher who went thru a series called "the way of the Rabbi" which lasted for 18 months. I have the cd's loaded on my computer and I listen to them regularly now. their web site is thedoor.org and I would recommend it to anyone seeking a different perspective.

the student that was released from school a few weeks ago has returned, in a way. He came several times literally begging to be re admitted and Gary finally told him he could return for one on one sessions with him for a short time to see if he would start working. He did not show up for a week afterwards but now has been back 3 or 4 times since. He took a math test today and failed I am told. And he failed miserably. this is the 3rd time thru the book and he literally refuses to do the work, while begging to get back in. He has done similar work in previous books but everytime you show him again how to do it, he misses something, or didn't read the instructions, or misunderstood what was asked or......... it is sad to see him desperately try to fail. Gary is giving him the same book again and our goal is to wait him out. We had a talk about this young man and neither of us want to wash our hands of him, this may be his only chance to change his life. he already has 2 cousins in prison in the states. We pray for him to just let go of whatever it is in him that controls him in such a way, and we hope for the best in his life.

can't wait to get taxes done ( not a hint Pat, just eager to get the return as you are!) I hope to get a decent return and spend it on frivilous things like....airfare, food, stuff like that! I have been in contact wtih the VA in St. Louis recently and all is proceeding for my return this summer to a good paying summer job. Thanks Julie, I owe you lunch this summer!

My son Luke let me know that there was a murder 2 houses away from my house in Madison. An older man was killed apparently after a bout of drinking with friends. I guess people are the same everywhere, and it is sad that so many end this way. Here you see often older people walking down the street, totally out of it. I am sure that they would be in care facilities in the states, but there are none here. They have no one to take care of them, dementia sets in or other mental/physical illnesses and they become outcasts. I know of a young lady in Port, Paige Livesay, who wants to come back to Haiti later in life after college and start a support system for people with physical and mental problems. what a vision for life, to spend your time helping those who truly can't help themselves. you can find out more about Paige and her "clan" at the livesay blogspot at livesayhaiti.blogspot.com.

tomorrow we go to the orphanage, I will get pictures of the kids. Bev wants us to have a group prayer meeting for the kids and the success of the orphanage, and we all think it is a great idea, so off we will go.

Lavalas, the political party of Aristide, has been rejected from participating in the upcoming election. We are hoping it doesn't result in a lot of violence. Caroline had a good point in that the UN is now in the country and she doubts they would try anything, since they now the the right to shoot back if anyone goes after them. Let's hope that is the case, though I fully expect demonstrations to occur.

I can't believe Feb is almost over. it seems like time here just vanishes into thin air.....maybe that is how time works nearer the equator. Hmm.. maybe I won't give up my day job to enter theoretical physics either. we will be planning our flight out this weekend likely, as at the end of Feb, there are only 3 months of school left. I guess I will survive! And a bit of bragging here. My son Aaron made the honor roll at SWIC. I am a very proud dad. You ROCK Aaron!! keep up the good work. we have company so I have to be social for awhile. will talk again soon.

Djebenis tout moun

Sunday, February 15, 2009

An article from "The Economist" magazine about problems and prospects in Haiti. not the most encouraging. Other news sources in Haiti are talking of the possibility of the Lavalas political party returning to power. This is the party of Jean Aristide, the president who was removed from office in 2004. His time as leader was.....not good, as I am told. His party was basically kicked of the ballot last week and they appealed the decision. The official report comes out on Monday as to whether they will be allowed back in the elections. In a demonstration Friday afternoon in Port au Prince, his supporters said if they are not allowed to run "there will be no election." This is the sort of rhetoric that just chills people who try to think ahead here, because it CAN happen. There are people already whom I know of that have said they will leave Haiti if Aristide and/or his cronies return to power.



The Americas
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Rebuilding Haiti
Weighed down by disasters
Feb 12th 2009 GONAÏVESFrom The Economist print edition
A modest success for the United Nations is threatened by nature and lassitude
AFP
THERE is a new lake outside Gonaïves, a town of 300,000 people and the fourth-largest in Haiti. It blocks the road south to the capital, Port-au-Prince. It formed last autumn when four storms, three of them hurricanes, swept over the poorest country in the Americas in the space of a month. The rain—a metre’s worth on one night alone—fell on saturated mountains, long since denuded of their forest cover, and swept down on to the coastal plain. It seemed a modest victory that only 793 people died, compared with 3,000 killed by Hurricane Jeanne in 2004.
Five months later, bulldozers have cleared the mud from the main streets of Gonaïves. Away from them, on countless side streets, pedestrians look down on rooftops on either side. The houses have been dug out by hand, and the dirt piled in mounds on the roadway.
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Only 20% of the town has been cleaned up, estimates Olivier Le Guillou of Action Contre la Faim, a French charity, which has paid 1,800 residents to help do the job. The damage was not confined to Gonaïves. Haiti’s agriculture minister reckons that 60% of the harvest was lost and 160,000 goats were killed, along with 60,000 pigs and 25,000 cows. In all, the storms have cost the country $900m, or 14.6% of GDP, according to a donor-funded government study. That is equivalent to 12 times the damage of Hurricane Katrina in the United States, and comes just four years after Jeanne wiped out 7% of Haiti’s GDP.
Nature is not the only force knocking Haiti back. Since Jean-Bertrand Aristide, a left-wing former Catholic priest, was overthrown by a rebellion in 2004, the country has been in the care of the United Nations. Some 7,000 UN soldiers and 2,000 police, mainly from Latin America, keep the peace. The UN mission has brought greater security: reported kidnappings fell from 722 in 2006 to 258 last year. A new UN-trained Haitian police force now has 9,000 officers. The streets of Port-au-Prince are visibly cleaner.
But this has not stimulated economic progress. Three-quarters of Haitians still live on less than $2 a day. Two in five children don’t go to school. A quarter of districts lack schools; where these exist, there are 78 pupils per teacher. In 2005, the maternal death rate rose to 630 for every 100,000 births, up from 457 in 1990. Though more than half of Haitians work in farming, they produce less than half the country’s food needs. Haiti’s agriculture is the least productive in the world, says Joel Boutroue of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). A hectare of rice paddy in Vietnam will produce 20 tonnes of rice a year, whereas a Haitian hectare yields just one tonne.
Trends in the outside world have added to Haiti’s home-grown woes. Last April the rise in food prices brought riots that toppled Jacques-Edouard Alexis, the prime minister. In January it was almost impossible to find a litre of petrol (though diesel was available). Rumour holds that Venezuela halted delivery of subsidised oil under Petrocaribe, a scheme which saved Haiti’s government alone at least $200m last year. Any boost that might have come from a law approved last year which grants Haiti’s textiles duty-free access to the United States has been more than nullified by the slowdown in remittances (down 20%) and exports because of the American recession. According to the Economist Intelligence Unit, our sister organisation, the economy will contract by 0.5% this year.
But some of the problems are the fault of Haiti’s politicians. René Preval, who was elected president in 2006 to widespread acclaim among Haitians and outsiders alike, now seems indecisive. It took him five months to form a new government after Mr Alexis went, and then many aid projects had to be renegotiated from scratch. Mr Preval has warned Haitians of a difficult year ahead.
“People want to see more than pessimism from a leader, they want to see proposals,” says Kesner Pharel, an economist and political analyst. The president is not the only one to blame. Hedi Annabi, the UN’s official in Haiti, recently criticised the country’s politicians for wasting time in “infinite debates” instead of “working for the essential needs of destitute Haitians”.
Corruption is deeply rooted. The family and friends of politicians and civil servants expect “to benefit from privilege”, says Gary Victor, a novelist. Money that was supposed to build better drains in Gonaïves after Hurricane Jeanne was siphoned off, says a UN official. There are plans to terrace the hills above the town, to plant shrubs and dig canals. But political lassitude means that this will not get done before the next hurricane season. The prisons remain an overcrowded horror, with four-fifths of the inmates yet to face trial.
The only business that seems to thrive is drug trafficking. The police chief in Port-de-Paix, in the north-west, was poisoned in January after several million dollars of cash seized from the uncle of a prominent drug-smuggler went missing. Guy Philippe, a former soldier who led the rebellion against Mr Aristide and whom the Americans accuse of drug-trafficking, says he will run for the Senate.
Next month aid donors will convene for a conference on Haiti, the first since the autumn of 2006. In response to the hurricanes they have doubled aid to $800m a year (half of this comes from the United States). That is on top of the UN mission’s $600m annual budget, and Venezuela’s fuel subsidy. Some things have been achieved in Haiti since 2004, but more should have been. “We spend a lot of money doing capacity building, but it is not clear that this has an impact,” says Mr Boutroue of UNDP. “Maybe we are just buying social peace—instability has just as much to do with the well-being of members of parliament as with a deepening of poverty.” It is surely time for outsiders to hold Mr Preval and the politicians to account.




Dan again:

The same stuff just goes on and on. And I now include the US in this junk. We have no moral right to preach to other countries about how badly they manage their business when the richest country in the world is $10-11 TRILLION dollars in debt. It seems that these problems come up every so often, I think God keeps giving us chances to return to Him and we just keep managing our own lives and messing it up. There are always political rumors and such here going on, basically because there is so little good information. Therefore you have to temper what you think about what you hear. It can change so soon. If the Lavalas party is allowed on the ballot for the elections in April and they achieve some measure of power in those elections, people will watch carefully. Kidnappings and murders were abundant in their time of power before as I am told and many lived here thru it, like Gary and Caroline. I was not here so I can't witness to it, just to what I am told about it. If the UN and/or the prevailing political powers here can't stop it from reoccurrence, I don't know how many want to go thru it again.

SO, they sun goes up and down and new day's are given to us. What we do with each day we have is the measure of how we follow in our discipleship, I think. We have missionary meeting today at Al and Bev's and Barb's place. I think it will be a good thing. It appeals to me to be in that environment and I will try and post pic's later on it. (yes I know, I have said that before. I REPENT of picture teasing! I will really......try. :) }

Djebenis tout moun.

Thursday, February 12, 2009


yes, I know I don't post enough, and I know when I do it's thinking deep stuff that no one wants to read. well, this is just where I have been for some time, so that's the way it is. Today we will talk about Joel.

Joel is the son of Joe, one of the workers at school. Joe is a great guy, very honest and a hard worker even if there isn't really much for him to do. He is kind of a gate guard when Marco can't be there, he makes copies in the office for Yvesner when he is busy, and run's errands into town for Gary for all sorts of things. Hmm, sounds like he is busier than I thought! anyway, Joe lives in Mac Donal, a little "suburb" if you will, of St. Marc. This is where the orphanage is with Bev and Al. Joe lives not a stones throw away from their house. don't have any pictures of it, but suffice to say, it isn't much of a house. Mac Donal is one of the poorer places to live, though they almost ALWAYS have electricity, can't figure that one out, but it is good for the folks there who don't have much else. It is very near the ocean; in fact the orphanage house is probably less than 30 yards from the water, so they get ocean breezes. Joe is learning English from being in school but has little education if any on his own. He grew up in a voodoo household and his family had many problems because of it. It is hard to share the reality of voodoo worship with others. I had to come here to see for myself and it is very hard to describe still for me. Anyway Joe talks of his son Joel a lot (when I can understand him; he lacks some teeth which makes it harder). Joel has had MANY problems at home and in school with behavour and just figuring out things. Jessica can relate, right Jess? Tantrums and uncontrolled fits for reasons that no one could really understand were pretty regular. Well, Joel has begun to "get it". He smiles now very often, laughs, plays with other kids w/o having to have HIS WAY all the time. Despite his problems, which have included seizures, Joel is lucky accordingto his father Joe. Joe said that Joel doesn't have to grow up in a voodoo household, he knows about God and he is very luck to know this. Joe doesn't talk much about his house and the voodoo, but just from what I have seen here (little compared to most others) it is a very NOT GOOD thing. Joe is very grateful for Joel and his ability to be free from that, and now that Joel is beginning to overcome some initial problems in life, he is a much happier little guy, making progress and even learning some things. So today's hero is Joel. I'll tell him in 10 years or so he was today's hero; I'm sure he will be impressed!
Maybe this will work for awhile for posting. I will find out what I can about the family life of the kids and share it best as I can. sounds like a plan to me. And to think it only took me most of the year to come up with that!! So educated...yet so far to go. :)
Djebenis tout moun

Saturday, February 7, 2009

February 7, 2009




very cool the last few mornings here, low's in the 73-74 range and many people here are just not ready for that. they wear blankets and anything they can. have seen several women wearing their skirts with jeans under them. I guess they take them off later in the day. I joke with the Haitians about the wonderful weather we are having and all I get are stares like I'm crazy. Kesmy is getting support around school to blame me for the weather since I like it so much. I remind him I am still his teacher for a few months and he smiles.




Gary and I were talking last night/this morning about the high school class and where it may be next year. It is so difficult to plan because you just don't know what is going on in the families with their plans, many times because they DON'T plan. With what I know about the kids in the class now, it could go from 6 to 2 next year, or we could have them all back and those who come during the year. It makes it difficult to plan for books for the kids, as you have to plan what books you need for what levels so they each have their individual books to go thru. But as with pretty much everything here, it works out for better or worse.




One of the other mid year additions we had has had a bad attitude lately, upset because people aren't "nice" to him and won't let him slide on stuff. I guess I have changed as a teacher here since Christmas break. I am not as concerned about being their friend but I have learned that being a teacher to them is more important. Therefore the whip has been cracked a few times. It seems kids are getting paddles regularly. Guess what? it works. those who think that paddling kids is violent and unusual punishment can disagree with me but it works. They learn they have to have SELF discipline to avoid bad things in life. Whuda thunk? the middle age boys are the biggest problem and they get paddled by far the most. But if you are consistent in what you allow and they then learn the rules and what they can and can't do, they adjust and behave. No apologies offered for the paddling here, it is not hurtful to them except for their pride and a momentary stinging in their rear end. And they spend more time in their books learning rather than goofing off. I think that is the job of a teacher, so I am embracing the paddle!! :) (as needed only of course) Oh, back to our troubled student. I have been making him do the routine of school as ordered and he came back with a score of 100 on a science test. when I gave it back to him I told him this is why I am doing this and he didn't say anything but he smiled that "ok, I guess I get it" smile. Hopefully he will see he can be more than adequate, that he can excel IF he wants to put forth the effort. Any parents relate to this? I thought so.




things happen here almost every day. I know times are harder in the States now but here people don't have the wherewithal to deal with big stuff. One of the staff, a very good guy, took in a homeless young woman into his mothers home during the hurricanes while he was in Port last fall. He couldn't leave her on the streets in the weather so he took her to his mothers house. well, long story short, the mother (against her son's advice) trusted her with a large sum of money and she vanished with it. so now he is responsible to make it up and he is pretty much going to have to lose all his savings and borrow more to help them. Culturally it is his responsibility, even though he told his mother not to do it. one of those things that come up like hospital visits, outbreaks of different diseases and such. Many things like ringworm, scabies, etc., go around here regularly due to lack of good sanitation and such. Kids get sick and get weak then need special care to recover.
I have been reading and praying about discipleship much recently. It seems a clarity has come to me I never had before about true discipleship to Jesus. It has changed me and I see the work of the Holy Spirit in me as I grow in this. I am thinking of blogging about discipleship but I also realize I know far less than I think I do. Discipleship has taken on a new form for me, a commitment that did not exist before in me. Prior to this time, I guess I thought being a Christiam MADE me a disciple, and I don't think that now. I know there are those who will have howl's of protest and that is good, we all need to listen to other points of view. As I see the results of this recent work in my life, I must say, though, it would take a lot to move me off my new view of discipleship. It seems Jesus said often we must take up our cross and bear it to the end, giving up everything to follow Him. In Luke 14, as Jesus spoke of the cost of being a disciple He states in verse 27, "anyone who does not carry his cross and follow me cannot be my disciple." Later He speaks of the king who must count the cost of going to battle with a superior force and states they king will sue for peace when he finds he cannot win. Then Jesus says in verse 33 "In the same way, any of you who does not give up everything he has cannot be my disciple."
so the battle begins. "no, that does not mean give up everything you have, it means just submit yourself to God, then He won't aske much of you anyway." I have heard this so much and it has always rang hollow to me. It seems to me Bonhoeffer and others were very correct in their view that true discipleship abounds in obedience, and those obedient abound in their discipleship. You really can't be succesful at one w/o the other. As I walk this path here in Haiti, it is not a heavy burden to me, which reinforces the statement Jesus made when He said "my yoke is light, my burden is easy". For others being here would be torture, but what others do would well be the same torture for me. But I have concluded that, just as David had to buy at personal cost the land for his sacrifice to God, I must purchase at personal cost the obedience I give to Him. As I do, fitfully and with many false steps, my life changes and I become something I have not been before. I think this is a good thing, and I have peace in it. I hope others can find their price of obedience and venture places they have never been before in their spirit and relationship with God. It appears to me to be well worth it. It appears to me to be the only real choice in life.
Djebenis tout moun




Thursday, February 5, 2009

February 5, 2009

not the best day. we finally lost Kenson. He just refused to do the work, making errors he knows how not to make in math, refusing to take instruction or encouragment. Gary finally tried to send him out to work with Antonio to mop and sweep in an attempt to get his attention and he walked out of school. He just wasn't going to let anyone have any authority over him, he WILL run his life and isn't concerned about the consequences. His aunt came down to school within a few hours and basically pleaded with us to take him back, but Kenson has made it impossible. I pray he will find a way to learn life is more than having your own way and refusing to improve yourself in any way. I fear he will wind up hurt or in jail, but those are the choices he has made. Coincidentally, we received another high school student to take his place today. Literally, Kenson left and Jeph took his desk. He seems more agreeable and appears to want to learn, at least initially.

it is hard to realize how much these kids go thru, being tossed around from family to family, country to country, totally different school systems and all. Then the family wants the school to fix all the problems they have created. We have several students who are liable for the same outcome as Kenson unfortunately. They seem to be getting it though, and maybe seeing one of their "comrade in arms" leave school and knowing he will not be allowed back in will set them straight in some way, or at least get their attention. Today is a day when we know we can't fix everything and can't make everyone's life turn out better. Maybe this is a necessary step for Kenson, and hopefully it will avoid those steps for others who see it.

on the up side, I started working with the ESL class with Daniel and Kevin. D/K wanted someone who is a native english speaker to converse with them to gauge their progress. Some did pretty well, others who are first time english learners obviously struggled some, but all seem willing and eager to learn. I will be going down to their class at least once a week to just talk with them and help them learn more english. A good thing I hope.

it was very cool this morning, probably the coolest morning at any time in Haiti. mid 70's, breezy, cloudy, very much like fall weather in the midwest. Haitians were walking around with jackets, blankets, whatever they could find to keep warm. I, on the other hand, was very comfortable! Hope all is well back in the midwest, I know weather has been bad recently. One of the other missionaries here said he has been here so long now, he doesn't think he could endure a midwest winter, he is from western Missouri. I am beginning to believe him! take care to everyone.

Djebenis tout moun

almost forgot. a SHOUT OUT for Mindy Foster, my favorite missionary fund raiser! Mindy had an idea for fund raising for me and did an AWESOME job, raising almost $900, which is deeply appreciated. Hey Mindy, I owe you a dinner whenI get back ok? (not a $900 dinner though ok?) :) and many thanks for those who send their money each month, I can't do this w/o you. Thanks so much for the support of my church in helping with my bills at home and those who go above and beyone in supporting me here. You are part of this, know that. you are reaching the world thru what you do to help me stay here. thanks so much.

February 5, 2009

well, it looks like there will be audiology in Haiti. not sure when it will work out but at least part time to pay my bills. say the ent doc yesterday who really is more of an opthamalogist, but she does some ent stuff. she was very encouraging and is willing to basically help me set up the whole thing, schedule me pt's and all I have to do is come in and see them. the rest will take some setting up so i don't expect it to be up and running next week, but by end of year very likely. it seems very unreal to me, to be setting up a business in Haiti when I avoided it all those years in the states. I guess this was the plan! Port is a HORRIBLE place to drive in, that part does not encourage me. it is like the longest line in the world where everyone just constantly cuts in front of everyone else and cuts everyone else off and drives both ways on both sides of the road at all times. I hope I can find a way to avoid the worst of the traffic stuff later when this starts working. of course I will need a car to wish I could avoid the traffic I'm in, but that is for another day. very cool and breezy this morning, everyone will be starting slow today. take care in the midwest.

Djebenis tout moun

Monday, February 2, 2009

February 1, 2009

heard a Haitian prayer meeting going on outside our backdoor, video isn't much but thought you might appreciate the singing. It really is cool to hear them sing at prayer. hope it loads