[Ailist] Latest news from Haiti Partners and John Engle

Christine Whitney Sanchez cwhitneysanchez at gmail.com
Tue Jan 19 08:17:17 PST 2010


Hi Noel,

What a wonderful possibility!  I've copied John Engle of Haiti  
Partners in the hope that he will be able to connect with you and CRS  
directly.

Love to you, our friends in S'pore and our Haitian friends from the  
snowy Arizona mountains,

Christine

Sent from my iPhone

On Jan 19, 2010, at 12:26 AM, Noel E K Tan <noel at go-trailblazer.com>  
wrote:

> Hi Christine,
> Thanks for sharing the news from Haiti Partners,
> I've passed on that email to a doctor friend of mine who runs a  
> relief group.  The group are planning to send some medical teams out  
> to Haiti.  CRS might contact Haiti Partners as they may need a  
> ground partner on location.  I'm leaving the relevant parties to get  
> in touch.
>
> Best,
>
> Noel E K Tan, MEd, MSc
> Principal
> Human Learning and OD Professional
> IAF Certified Professional Facilitator
> Trailblazer Associates International
> ---------------------------------------------------
> STRATEGISE - VITALISE - MOBILISE
> ---------------------------------------------------
> 14 Robinson Road
> Far East Finance Building
> #13-00 Singapore 048585
> H: 65-98002788
> T:  65-68584678
> LinkedIn:  Noel Tan
> Twitter:  NoelEKTan
> Facebook:  www.facebook.com/noel.tan
> Blog:  http://trailblazersignpost.wordpress.com/
> ---------------------------------------------------
>
> <iafmem.jpg>
>
>
> On Jan 17, 2010, at 2:40 AM, Christine Whitney Sanchez wrote:
>
>> From: Haiti Partners <info at haitipartners.org>
>> Date: January 16, 2010 11:34:46 AM GMT-07:00
>> To: Christine Whitney Sanchez <cwhitneysanchez at gmail.com>
>> Subject: Family and the Earthquake
>>
>>
>>
>> Dear Christine,
>>
>> My phone just rang at 1:00 a.m. It was one of the young men in the  
>> family we lived with for the first seven months when my wife and I  
>> first moved to Haiti. They're our adopted Haitian family (that is,  
>> they "adopted" us 7 years ago, and we're incredibly grateful). They  
>> taught us how to speak Creole and do life. The 3-year-old grand- 
>> daughter is our goddaughter. The other children we consider like  
>> nephews and nieces. Family of 12 in three generations. I see them  
>> all the time when I'm in Haiti. We talked for 9 minutes before  
>> their phone ran out of card or power last night. They're all okay,  
>> in a sense.
>>
>> A number of you have been asking about them because you know them  
>> from my recent book. I didn't want to write about them till now  
>> because we hadn't heard anything. Sick with worry. It was too much  
>> to write down what might or might not be.
>>
>> They're all unharmed. They're sleeping out on the dirt tonight,  
>> because the three small family homes are now piles of rubble. The  
>> small town of Dabon where they live is near the epicenter and is  
>> devastated, leveled. "Kent, you'd get lost if you tried to find  
>> your home here." An older woman I always visit and buy water from  
>> in town was killed. As the names flew by too fast over the iffy  
>> phone connection, I didn't recognize them all. Most of the names he  
>> said were alive, some dead.
>>
>> Then he said, "We don't have food or water." What do you mean? "No  
>> food or water." Same answer.
>>
>> I believe in the God who multiplied fish and loaves to feed the  
>> hungry. I believe in the God who says I'm always with you. And  
>> right now, it's achingly clear--heartbreakingly, angrily clear-- 
>> isn't it, that we who believe also believe in the God who is hidden  
>> sometimes, sometimes when we are most in need, to whom the Psalmist  
>> cried out, "How long, oh Lord, how long?"
>>
>> How long?
>>
>> Too long. There's no other answer right now. People are being  
>> rescued, but too many aren't, and 50,000 never will be. There will  
>> be other answers in the weeks and months ahead, but right now the  
>> only answer is too long.
>>
>> My Haiti Partners co-director John is making every effort to get  
>> out to this town of Dabon today, where we also have two elementary  
>> schools that have collapsed, though nobody died in the buildings as  
>> far as we know. John will hopefully see our family too.
>>
>> So I sit here not knowing what to do--just like you. At the same  
>> time, like you, I'm doing everything I can. Because that's what we  
>> have to do, that's what the God we believe in expects of us, even  
>> as we cry out for miracles.
>>
>> For the "everything we can do" part, first I want to thank you for  
>> the incredible outpouring of generosity in gifts and prayer. John  
>> (who has worked in Haiti for 20 years) is on the ground assessing  
>> our response that will include (a) responding to immediate,  
>> critical needs of food, water, shelter, and basic necessities and  
>> (b) the particular ways we will be mobilizing for the recovery and  
>> rebuilding efforts in the communities of Dabon (where two of our  
>> schools and other colleagues are), Cite Soleil (a slum in Port-au- 
>> Prince where we also have a school that has collapsed), and  
>> Marianman.
>>
>> Haiti Partners was already committed to Haiti--and we work all over  
>> the country--for years and years ahead. Now the plan is coming into  
>> place for the work in the days, weeks, and months ahead.
>>
>> Finally, I've been asked often, when working in Haiti and then  
>> during these past few days, how do you keep any hope? My answer,  
>> which is burrowed deep in my bones through the privilege of living  
>> with, being friends with, watching the courage of, and working  
>> alongside many Haitians, is that if they haven't given up hope, we  
>> have no right to. Today I saw on CNN Haitians walking the streets  
>> of Port-au-Prince singing hymns and praying.
>>
>> I sense that you haven't given up hope either. Thank you. We're  
>> people committed to be on the side of God's hope, even on seemingly  
>> hopeless days. We're people committed to be on the side of people  
>> in Haiti--not just right now, but for the longterm. Thank you for  
>> doing this together and for making the response of Haiti Partners  
>> possible.
>>
>> And thanks for letting me share so personally--even as we're  
>> working hard on many organizational details. We welcome your  
>> prayers for everyone, as so many people I've talked with today or  
>> heard about or read about have lost friends, husbands or wives,  
>> children, entire families. We welcome your prayers too for these  
>> particular communities and for (if I can indulge you) this adopted  
>> family of ours.
>>
>> Together grasping and working for hope,
>>
>> Kent (co-director)
>>
>> P.S. For regular updates or to help: http://www.haitipartners.org
>>
>> Donate
>>
>>
>>
>> Remove my name from all future email correspondence
>>
>> Address postal inquiries to:
>> Beyond Borders
>> PO Box 2132
>> Norristown, PA 19404-2132
>> Powered By
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> The Appreciative Inquiry Discussion List is hosted by the David  
>> Eccles School of Business at the University of Utah. Jack Brittain  
>> is the list administrator. For subscription information, go to:
>> http://mailman.business.utah.edu:8080/mailman/listinfo/ailist
>>
>

*
*
==========================================================
OSLIST at LISTSERV.BOISESTATE.EDU
------------------------------
To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your options,
view the archives of oslist at listserv.boisestate.edu:
http://listserv.boisestate.edu/archives/oslist.html

To learn about OpenSpaceEmailLists and OSLIST FAQs:
http://www.openspaceworld.org/oslist



More information about the OSList mailing list