It has been a dizzying week with Susie returning to Aspen after two weeks in Haiti, coordinating logistics to get the security team in place for the arrival of major supplies this upcoming week, and some continuing questions regarding the fate of the 32 children at the abandoned baby unit.
We did receive some news in the past several days in our continuing attempts to track down the 32 children from the abandoned baby unit. We have now determined that the staff of the General Hospital has moved 30 of those children to another hospital. Two of the children are still missing. If there are so many corrupt trafficking issues in Haiti right now, there is no infrastructure to track children and many of the US agencies, including Mercy & Sharing, are trying to identify where all of their children went.
It is remarkable that things that we have been trying to bring to the attention of the public over the past 16 years are now becoming well known and publicized on television. For instance, the “restavek” children – the child slaves of Haiti. This has been a scandal for many years, and only now all are organizations finding out about the over 300,000 restaveaks – indentured servants in Haiti. In Focus did a program: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jhdttD70GEw from the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.
Likewise, evidence that we have witnessed and photographed over 15 years ago, such as mass graves and the use of end-loaders and trucks to carry and bury corpses is nothing new, but it is now attracting the attention of the international media. We pray that these efforts will shine the light on some of the darkest places in the world.
Mercy & Sharing, through donations from Feed the Hungry and Sun Electronics, is anticipating the arrival shortly, in the port of Saint Marc, over 120 tons of relief supplies. We have a security team in place ready to arrange delivery from the port to the Williamson project, once we navigate the vagaries of the Haitian customs system. Even before the earthquake, the system was corrupt, had rampant abuses, and we have on numerous occasions had food spoil while waiting to be cleared by customs. Mercy & Sharing does not pay bribes, and so in the past our shipments have often gone to the bottom of the list. We are also entitled with a number of other organizations who are in need of supplies, which we plan to distribute from the Williamson project.
As now being reported, adoptions are completely on hold, except for those who were already in the “pipeline” prior to the earthquake. Child trafficking is prevalent in Haiti, and under the auspices of preventing child trafficking, the Haitian Government has stopped all new adoptions.
We reported last week on two of our children who were in the pipeline and who were successful in departing Haiti to their new homes in Canada. We receive a very touching report from their adoptive parents and I am attaching some before and after photos of Jessie:

“On Saturday evening at 6:30 pm we received our call from Citizenship & Immigration Canada (CIC) that Jessie & Sarah were confirmed to be on the first flight out of Port-au-Prince carrying 24 orphan children from Haiti to Canada to be united with their forever families. Just after noon on Saturday we learned that Jessie was not able to bring her leg prosthesis from the orphanage, so we had to work fast to find a wheelchair for our expected trip to possibly Ottawa. Unfortunately every place that loans or rents out wheelchairs was closed either by the end of Friday or noon on Saturday. In a panic I called our wonderful neighbor Susan, who was busy at the ski hill with her twin boys birthday party, and she had a wheelchair delivered to her house by 6:30 pm Saturday (Susan lives next door to us) !!! Once we received the call from CIC, we managed to book flights to Ottawa for the next day (Sunday) for Mathew and I to meet Jessie and Sarah. The girls arrived in Ottawa at 6:30 am and Mathew (our 9-year-old son) and I arrived at 4:30 pm into Ottawa.
Mathew & I arrived at the Air Canada Presidential boardroom to find a CIC manager with Jessie & Sarah. Jessie was sleeping and Sarah had just woken from her nap. Sarah was exactly as I remembered her from two years ago, but she was pretty scared. Mathew sat in one of the chairs and the lady with her put Sarah on his lap . . . . that did it . . . Sarah relaxed almost immediately. I left everyone to go pick up our luggage and arrange a hotel for Sunday & Monday night. When I returned to the boardroom Jessie greeted me (on her knees) at the door with a huge Jessie smile and lots of hugs. She definitely remembered me and knew exactly why we were there. The CIC lady had told us that when the girls arrived in Canada Jessie was all excited about the snow. The Salvation Army had brought snowsuits for all the children, so they took Jessie outside to play in the snow. Apparently she was rolling in it and eating the snow . . . she loved it. As I understand it, Jessie was interviewed by CBC television on Sunday when she arrived and told the reporters she though it was cool – coming to Canada!
We took a cab to the hotel. All the trees outside the hotel had Christmas lights on them, which got Jessie pretty excited. All around she was pretty happy and smiley where Sarah was quite and watching and staying close to Mathew. On the advise of a friend, the girls had baths right away and then I put a scabies treatment cream on both of them from the neck down and got them ready for bed. Next morning they had to be showered off and lotioned. Once that was out of the way it was off to breakfast and shopping at Wal-Mart for new runners for both girls and pants for Sarah. They brought pants from the orphanage for Sarah and I had bought some that were all size 5 or 6 but Sarah was swimming in them. At Wal-Mart Sarah’s pant size we found was 3 !!! And I had just last month put away all of Whitney’s size 3 pants (which I will now have to recover) as Whitney is now in size 5 pants. Jessie seems healthy enough, however, Sarah has had diarrhea since her arrival and she is so skinny. Our friend had suggested I give them dewormer, which I did on Sunday night, however, I think Sarah’s problems will need alot more attention. Our Canadian government is providing full medical coverage for all the orphan children, which will be in place until the provincial medical coverage kicks in.
We returned home last night at 7:00 pm. I had parked at the airport so that Curt would not need to come and get us. Whitney (our 4 year old daughter with Down syndrome) had just finished her dinner when we arrived and she was totally surprised to see Jessie & Sarah come into the house. Whitney got out of her highchair and greeted the girls and followed them everywhere as they explored the house and many of her very interesting toys. Whitney was talking away to Jessie in her Whitney talk (which we cannot understand) and Jessie was looking at her trying to figure out what she was saying. Curt left our two big dogs outside and the girls saw Rocky and Bella looking in at us not long before they went to bed. Sarah was quite scared and Jessie was curious. I explained to Jessie that the next day they would meet the dogs (should be very interesting). Thank you all for first, taking good care of Jessie & Sarah while in the orphanage, and second for helping us to bring them home to Canada. Please feel free to pass along this information to some of your Mercy & Sharing staff or volunteers who may wish an update on Jessie & Sarah.”
Once again we want to thank everyone for their donations in support. We are not taking volunteers to Haiti until the conditions change substantially. We have received an overwhelming number of requests to volunteer in Haiti, and unfortunately simple logistics in that country are in or mislead difficult, a typical volunteered needs a translator, transportation (which requires a vehicle, a driver and fuel supplies), security, and accommodations – all of which are in extremely limited supply. Thus we are still asking people to make donations online. Go to www.haitichildren.com/donation/ to help.
We also request prayers that God will guide the international community to impose new requirements on the Haitian government or to establish a protectorate in order for redevelopment of the country to take place. The United States sent over $175 million to Haiti last year, and frankly we could tell very little difference, the country is extremely corrupt and we are, like other nongovernmental organizations working in Haiti, always competing with the government for funding. Of course the funding that goes through Mercy & Sharing is not diluted, as our Board of Directors and Co-Founders contribute more than 100% of the administrative and overhead costs, thus assuring that outside the donations will go 100% of the projects in Haiti. This is not the case when funding goes to the Government!



As many of you may know, we built one project in Cite de Soliel, and recently had to relocate the children to another temporary facility while we were having repair work done. Our project did not suffer as much damage in Cite Soliel as the other projects, and we had the roof inspected by some of the US team and the rebar is rusted, and that particular roof is concrete, so we have decided that it is not safe to have the children inside that building. We are exploring possibly putting a new roof on the building and replacing it with the type of roof that we use at Williamson, which uses wooden trusses and a tin roof so you do not have the weight of a concrete roof and the potential it that may collapse. The temporary project that we were using was also damaged, it is not fallen down, but it is also not safe.
The rest of the day was spent trying to arrange logistics to replace the US team, get security forces out to Williamson, and to coordinate additional relief supplies. We ran out of the diesel fuel that we received yesterday, but the US team was successful, after several hours of searching, in buying about 100 gallons of diesel fuel on the black market.
While we have approximately 100 tons of relief supplies on the way to Williamson, we are grappling with how we are going to unload the goods. Ordinarily we would simply remove the containers and leave the containers there and hence secure all of the goods. However, we have no equipment to remove the containers from the trucks, and bringing in locals to help unload is only going to draw attention to the extremely valuable commodities in this upside down world of Haiti, because everyone in the community will know where the food is located and we are going to create security problems. This is the reason why we are going to have to send in a security team, and get them armed so that they can protect the children and the food. I know that may be hard to understand living in the comfort that we have, but when people are starving, water is scarce, and the local people have their own families and children to think about, things frequently get out of control.