
Caritas reached 1.5 million survivors in Haiti with emergency relief in the first three months after the earthquake.
Credits: Katie Orlinsky/Caritas
The fragility of Haiti, the poorest country in the Western hemisphere,
was all too clear. The earth convulsed and down tumbled the weak
homes, schools and hospitals. More than 230,000 people were killed
by the earthquake and over three million affected, in the slum-plagued
capital, Port-au-Prince, nearby towns like Jacmel and
Léogâne and elsewhere. The 12 January brought one of the biggest
disasters in recent times to the people of Haiti.
Caritas’s long-term presence meant it could respond to the
emergency right away. Caritas Haiti has a strong national network,
with 10 offices in dioceses across the country. Other Caritas
members like Catholic Relief Services from the USA and Caritas
Switzerland are well established in Haiti. Just across the border,
Caritas Dominican Republic helped quickly set up an emergency
relief pipeline.
Near neighbour Caritas Mexico immediately sent three nuns who
were qualified nurses and a search and rescue team who pulled
survivors from the rubble. When Enu Zizi was dug out alive a week
after the quake, she whispered “Je t'aime – I love you” to those who
lifted her from the rubble.
In a moving show of spreading solidarity, the largest ever number
of Caritas members, 63 in total, answered the call for funding and
technical support. From small to large, they gave generously.
Following a visit to Haiti soon after the earthquake, Caritas Latin
America and Caribbean Regional President, Bishop Fernando Bargalló
asked, “How can we as fellow regional members bring help for the
difficult journey ahead for Haitians and for Caritas Haiti? ”One answer
was to provide funds and support, which 15 Caritas members in the
region did, to stand together to allay the “acute pain and profound
compassion in Christ ”which Bishop Bargalló said he saw in the
tremendous distress and damage.
Within three months, Caritas had reached more than 1.5 million
survivors with plastic sheeting, food, clean water and medical help.
Suxe Bienvenue and her son had slept out in the open for eight days
until Caritas Italy gave her a tarpaulin to set up home in Léogâne’s
main square. Suxe had lost everything and had little to eat or drink.
“I keep whatever water I have and only drink a little before going to
bed,” she said.
It was extremely difficult to help everyone at once. Humanitarian
agencies faced one of the largest and most complex emergencies
they had ever been tested by. Fewer than 30 percent of Haitians had
had access to healthcare before the earthquake and a mere 17
percent had some sanitation. Experienced emergency responders
were shocked by how difficult it was to help the overwhelming
number of people affected.
“Even with 10 years of emergency experience as a doctor, I found
it particularly hard to identify those in greatest need in the first few
weeks…so many people had very, very big needs,” said Dr Joost
Butenop from Caritas Germany.
Haitians kept faith. “In the aftermath of the earthquake, the Haitian
people showed a great capacity for resilience and resistance,” said
Bishop Pierre Dumas, the President of Caritas Haiti. “We also saw the
resurgence of values, like solidarity, which we thought had long
gone. Haitians have shown that in a difficult situation, faced with
suffering, you mustn’t give up. You must stand up and strive
together.”
With 90 percent of Port-au-Prince’s schools destroyed and two
million children left with nowhere to go, Caritas responded to an
appeal by the Haitian government to prioritise education. Caritas
Canada (Development and Peace) supported religious communities
which ran schools, providing funds for hot meals, materials and
teachers’ salaries.
Irish Caritas member Trócaire set up safe places for children to
play in the tented camps which sprung up, encouraging learning
and therapies which helped them overcome their traumatic
experiences. At the Marie-Esther and Saint-Antoine schools in Portau-
Prince, 1,270 girls were helped out of stress-filled homes and back
into school: a proven and practical way of helping children return to
some form of normality. Ninth-grader Beverley Milford said, “It is truly
important for us to have a meal here, as many of our parents are
having difficulty finding food to feed their children.”