Friday, August 6, 2010

World Orphans and Crisis Care Training International complete training in Haiti

We started our week by joining together with other ministries to assess the situation of orphans in Haiti, to find out how this horrible earthquake had affected children, to find out how the church in Haiti was responding, and to find out how we as ministries committed to the local church could come along side them in their efforts.

World Orphans developed an Orphan and Vulnerable Child (OVC) program designed to help churches implement a structured program -a holistic response - in a scalable manner.

We identified 10 Haitian churches to implement the program and found 10 churches in the U.S. willing to join the effort in the form of a church-to-church partnership.

Each church in Haiti agreed to care for 20 orphaned or vulnerable children in their community with the critical elements being education, food, medical care and trauma counseling.

We continued to work in partnership with organizations like Together for Adoption and Hope for Orphans as we began the training process, equipping churches to do what they were already doing in a better, more structured way.

Since then each Haitian church has formed a team of 3 to 4 OVC volunteers that are making this ministry happen. Each church has identified 20 orphans or vulnerable children in its community for the program and the schooling and feeding has begun.

Last week we continued the equipping portion of the program, again working in partnership, as we had all 10 pastors and their OVC teams together – about 60 people - for trauma counseling training. The idea being to equip the OVC team members that are forming relationships with the children, visiting them in the homes regularly, to better cope with the trauma and grief they are experiencing. We partnered with Crisis Care Training International – a ministry started by Dr. Phyllis Kilbourn who has over 40 years experience helping children in crisis – including 20 years as a cross cultural missionary in Liberia during the Liberian civil war.

Haiti 1


The training was tremendous and very well received by the teams; they only wish we could have done more training for more people in their churches. All in time. One of the most special moments was a closing exercise designed to help the team members and pastors work through their own grief. They wrote on a piece of paper their concerns or burdens, put the piece of paper in a balloon, blew it up and let it go in the wind from the roof of pastor Yvon’s church, releasing their grief to God, laying it at the foot of the cross, putting it behind them. While only a step in the healing process, it was very powerful, an honor to be a part of.

Haiti 2


We also secured regular medical treatment for all 200 children in the OVC program through a medical clinic run by a local Haitian church (1st Baptist Church of Pernier), in cooperation with medical professionals from the U.S. They will see the children to assess their current medical condition, establish a baseline and file, and provide any care/treatment needed. They will receive follow-up care as needed but not less than every 6 months. Each church will maintain medical records for the children. This initial treatment will be done over three Saturdays, starting last weekend. We’re also working on getting immunizations for all children that haven’t received those vital shots.

A special thanks to Greg Roberts of Church of the Cove who was sent by his church to live and serve in Haiti and who helped coordinate the medical care. Greg has a special heart for orphaned children and a commitment to the local church in Haiti that is refreshing.

We couldn’t have done any of this without the support of our U.S. church partners. We’re grateful for their partnerships and excited to see God work through these partnerships.

Great things are happening. Praise be to God.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

You Don’t Visit Haiti. Haiti Visits You.

Dan Cruver of Together for Adoption arrived back from Haiti with this thought "You Don’t Visit Haiti. Haiti Visits You."

You'll understand why when you see more of the photos of the Haitian children on his blog.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Give Me That Smile

From Brad Powell, Northridge Church

I just got back from a heartbreaking trip to Haiti. I have to tell you that, while the problems are enormous, there are no easy solutions. For me, this is extremely frustrating. And yet, in the midst of my frustration, I’m trying to remember a couple of vital truths.

Read more.

Monday, April 26, 2010

Haiti’s Restavek System and Preaching on Adoption to Haitian Pastors

From Dan Cruver, Together for Adoption

At the Haitian pastors conference (sponsored by HORT) on Wednesday (April 21) Jason Weber (Hope for Orphans) and I tag-teamed as we presented Scripture’s teaching on spiritual adoption and its implications for indigenous orphan care and Haiti’s current restavek system. Our talk to the Haitian pastors developed three headings:
1.  Creation/Fall
2.  Redemption (Israel/Jesus/church)
3.  Restoration (New Creation)

Here is the bullet point outline of my part of the Creation/Fall heading:
  • The story of human history is God’s story of redemption. Yes, it’s our story, too, in that we are the ones being redeemed. But it’s God story in that he is the one who redeems. God is the one who initiates and accomplishes our redemption. We don’t initiate or accomplish anything in redemption’s story!
  • The story of redemption really began in time when God created all that is, and he did so, ultimately, in order to display his glory.
  • The climax of God’s creative work was the creation of man. In The Gospel of Luke’s genealogy of Jesus, Luke refers to Adam as a “son of God.” That’s not to say that Adam was divine or a god in any sense whatsoever. For Adam to be a “son of God” meant that he was graciously created to know the fatherly love and care of God,  to enjoy and participate in the love that God the Father eternally shared with his eternal Son.
  • By creating man, God amazingly enlarged the circle of his family so that man might be loved and cared for even as God loves his eternal Son. As far as God the Father was/is concerned, he would have no second class children. Adam was created to share in the fullness of love that God the Father has forever shared with his eternal Son.
  • But then the Fall happened. Man rebelled against the fatherly love and care of the God who created him in his image. As a result, man was cast out of the circle of God’s family. Suddenly, man found himself, not only outside the Garden of Eden, but outside God’s family of love. Tragicaly, man became an orphan of cosmic proportions.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

April 18-22 HORT Trip to Haiti

from Dan Cruver of Together for Adoption...

I have the privilege of joining the Haiti Orphan Relief Team (HORT) on their April 18-22 trip to Haiti. HORT is a cooperative effort of U.S. based ministries and disaster response experts that have joined together to respond to Haiti’s orphan crisis.

One of the major objectives of HORT is to provide U.S. churches with the opportunity to be a part of the solution to Haiti’s orphan crisis by coming alongside Haitian churches in church-to-church partnerships to initiate, strengthen and grow their outreach to orphans in their immediate communities. The Orphaned and Vulnerable Child Program (OVC) is one of the HORT initiatives established to help accomplish this major objective. Here’s what we’ll be doing on our April 18-22 trip to launch the OVC program with 10 Haitian churches:

Sunday, April 18th – Interview OVC candidate for position of in-country director and meet with Pastor Edner Jeanty to finalize Wednesday’s (April 21) training conference and to discuss accountability structure for OVC partner churches.

Monday, April 19th – Meet with Compassion International and other in-country network partners t0 coordinate additional OVC project churches.

Tuesday, April 20th – Visit 4-5 Port-au-Prince partner churches for team vision and partner role clarification.

Wednesday, April 21st – Hold training meeting for the leadership of 10 OVC partnership churches. Training will include:
  • Biblical teaching on spiritual adoption and its implication for orphan care (Jason Weber and Dan Cruver)
  • Why the local church should care for orphaned and vulnerable children
  • OVC program implementation
  • Church-to-church partnerships (expectations and roles)
  • A biblical look at the Restavec tradition in Haiti

My fellow teams members are: Scott Vair (World Orphans), Alan Hunt (World Orphans), Jason Weber (Hope for Orphans), Brad Powell (Northridge Church), and Michael Miller (Northridge Church).

Please pray for us and the Haitian pastors and orphans that we will serve while there. Our desire is to serve them wisely and faithfully in the name of Jesus. If you want brief trip updates while I’m in Haiti, you can follow me on Twitter.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Rood Awakening (Part Two)

Here's the second video about Rood. Can you imagine seeing your family crushed under this building?

Rood Awakening (Part Two) - Haiti Video Blog #11 from World Orphans on Vimeo.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Rood Awakening (Part One)

Here's a video from Haiti about a remarkable young boy, Rood, who was orphaned by the January earthquake. You'll be absolutely shocked and amazed by his story.

Come back for part two later tomorrow!


Rood Awakening (Part One) - Haiti Video Blog #10 from World Orphans on Vimeo.

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Love Your Neighbor (Haiti Video Blog – 7)

A pretty enduring image, to say the least. A church stood tall while the house next to it collapsed during the January 12th earthquake in Haiti. During our visit, this particular church was serving as a makeshift school and was filled with children as we entered. As one of our team interviewed the pastor, I made my way into the alley between the church and house. Like many of the crushed homes in Port-au-Prince, I was able to peer into the layers of everyday life – beds, pots and pans, board games, and a TV – all compacted down into ribbons of debris.

Two of the children who used to call it home were now in the church, occupying seats before a dilapidated blackboard. When they lost everything, the church was there for them, to answer the call to literally "Love your neighbor."

They are your neighbors. YOU can be there for them also.

Love Your Neighbor - Haiti Video Blog #7 from World Orphans on Vimeo.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Living on the Streets (Haiti Video Blog – 6)

The Haitian church here serves as a gathering place for hundreds of children, as well as a good number of adults, who continue to seek food, water, shelter, and hope while living on the streets.

YOU and your church can make a difference. Partner with Haitian churches like this to help the children that gather daily on their grounds.


Living on the Streets - Haiti Video Blog #6 from World Orphans on Vimeo.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Stand with Them (Haiti Video Blog – 5)

These two cuties are double orphans, clinging to life on the streets of Port-au-Prince with surviving relatives who are struggling to keep them. I met them at one of our partner churches – a church that was packed with 400 homeless children. When you stand beside a church like this, you stand by extended families who are desperately trying to care for children such as these.


Stand With Them - Haiti Video Blog #5 from World Orphans on Vimeo.

Friday, March 26, 2010

Caring for their Own - Video Blog #4

Whether it's supporting widows, aunties and grandmas to hold onto their extended family's orphaned children, providing free education for orphans like these, or providing family-style homes for children who have no other options, this church in Haiti really gets it.

Help us to help them care for their own!


Caring for Their Own - Haiti Video Blog #4 from World Orphans on Vimeo.

Friday, March 19, 2010

Haiti Orphan & Vulnerable Child Program Details

Thanks to all of you who have been following our stories from Haiti. The team has been busy since they arrived back in the states outlining exactly what the HORT response will be. The following information details the "Haiti Orphan & Vulnerable Child (OVC) Program".  (Download the PDF flyer.)

Orphaned in Haiti
The confirmed earthquake death toll in Haiti is now well over 200,000. With countless collapsed buildings still unmoved, that number will rise. That means there are thousands of orphans, children who lost one or both parents as a result of this catastrophe.

Placing children in orphanages has been the primary mechanism of orphan care in Haiti for some time. But these orphanages are now overwhelmed with children. But as the Haiti Orphan Relief Team (HORT) saw during their initial deployment in February, many of the children orphaned by the earthquake have been taken in by extended families, friends and neighbors. Orphans are being cared for in families!

The challenge before us is to support these families as they care for the orphans, preventing them from being abandoned as resources continue to be stretched thin and families struggle to make ends meet.

Through church-to-church partnerships the U.S. partner church will provide resources and support so that the Haitian church can implement an Orphan and Vulnerable Child (OVC) program.

Orphan and Vulnerable Child Program Details

Under the Haiti OVC program, each Haitian church will care for 20 orphans and vulnerable children by:
  • Forming an OVC committee of 4-5 church members
  • Providing education (most churches run private schools, 20 more students would require an additional teacher
  • Providing a meal for each of the children during the school day
  • Assigning committee members to visit each family every other week to provide ongoing support, encouragement and monitoring of the 20 families
  • Providing medical care as needed, including quarterly check-ups
  • Providing trauma counseling (as able and appropriate) to the orphans and families
  • Teaching the families the biblical example of adoption, that as we are co-heirs with Christ, so too these children are equals in their new families
World Orphans is providing management of these church-to-church partnerships and will work with various Haitian denominational structures, network partnerships and in-country staff to provide financial accountability. We will also work with other HORT partner ministries to leverage their core competencies such as biblical training, holistic care, and trauma counseling.

Through church-to-church partnership churches in Haiti will empower families to stay together. U.S. churches will petition God with the needs of these families, children and churches as He, in His goodness and grace, provides the comfort, care, restoration, and healing they desperately need. When the time is right, the U.S. church will be able to send short-term teams to serve with the church in Haiti as they lead the way in rebuilding their country.

Next Steps
To date 24 churches in Haiti have been identified for the Haiti OVC initiative. World Orphans is looking for U.S. churches that can partner with them, providing the $750 to $1000 a month they need to begin this important ministry (exact budget being finalized).

For more information on how your church can be a part of this tangible, ongoing restoration effort in Haiti, contact your existing World Orphans representative or fill out our contact form.

NOTE: One of our HORT member organizations, Loving Shepherd Ministries, is working to develop a response where individuals can support children not yet placed into families. Details will be forthcoming on their program in the next couple of weeks.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Walking Alongside Them - Video Blog #3

There are few images of Haiti that haunt me more than the body of a small child laying in the remains of what used to be an orphanage for disabled children. I still see her in my dreams. I could have literally reached out and touched her, removed her from her temporary tomb. Why hadn't somebody done that? Why was she just left there, like many others, to be a gruesome display of tragedy's indiscriminate toll? 

Below is the third video in our series from Haiti. The camera briefly shows part of the scene I described in my blog entry, We Walked with Authority. This is where I encountered the little girl who I now can't get out of my mind.


But the video is one of hope also, and speaks of the dozens of Haitian churches being visited, as well as our desire to partner US churches with them . . . for the sake of many little girls who did indeed make it out, but without their parents.

*** WARNING: Graphic content. Some viewers may find some of the images disturbing or upsetting. ***


Walking Alongside Them - Haiti Video Blog #3 from World Orphans on Vimeo.

Friday, March 12, 2010

Grief, Resiliency, and Hope - Video Blog #2

This new video gives good general overview of the current state of affairs in this disaster-stricken country.

The vantage point for this video was the rooftop of the house Paul Myhill described in his post, Peering into Tin Cans. We hope you are moved by the grief, resiliency and hope of the Haitian people.

NOTE: This video contains a few shots that may be too graphic for some viewers.



Haiti Blog 2 from World Orphans on Vimeo.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Radio Interview w/ Paul Myhill

Last week Paul Myhill, president of World Orphans, was interviewed by a local radio station about the recent trip to Haiti.

Host Charles Oster asked some great questions. You can read a transcript of the interview on Paul's blog.

Monday, March 8, 2010

School of Rubble - Video Blog #1

While the initial Haiti Orphan Relief Team (HORT) assessment group was in Port-au-Prince and surrounding areas recently, the World Orphans members of the team shot daily video blogs. Unfortunately our Internet connection in Haiti was less-than-desirable and we were unable to upload the videos while in country. So for the next ten days or so we'll be posting some of those videos. They'll give you a "moving" experience of what we saw there, in the aftermath of the worst natural disaster any nation has seen in recent history.

As you view the whole series of videos, you'll see some pretty unsettling stuff.

But you'll also see the hope and resiliency of the people and the churches that stand ready to help.

Check back each day and forward to friends. Please don't forget about Haiti. These are the images of today, the suffering of the present. Even though it has long left our news reports here in the U.S., the people are left waiting . . . and hoping, for YOU to help.

Here is the first one:


Haiti Orphan Relief Team (HORT) from World Orphans on Vimeo.

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Final Trip Update: Their Own Words

Our team has made its way home…leaving our hearts in Haiti. As we return to our cul-de-sacs and lattes, it will be hard to find the words to explain what we have witnessed. Many of us are well-traveled in indigenous countries, but to see the poorest of the poor loose all the little they had is difficult to comprehend.  Amidst this devastation, the faith of the Haitian people surpasses all human understanding. Without the Haitian Christian church, thousands more children would be dying now. The pastors we met cannot hold on to hope or life for these children for long without the outstretched arms of sisters and brothers in Christ.

All told, HORT visited more than 50 churches, a dozen orphanages and spoke to 170 pastors.  But of all the words of all those visits, a few scribbled words of a child may have touched me the most.

One day as we were leaving a small, primitive church, the orphans who had gathered there for shelter and care stuffed these little notes in my pockets.



I asked the pastor what these were…he said they are the children’s prayer requests.

On these tiny scraps, these children had written their hopes and dreams for help from America. Tearfully, I tucked them into my pocket, intending to have them translated later. But somehow I could never bring myself to do it. The specifics of their words matter little compared to the faith that they represent. Just knowing that these little prayers went up to heaven by way of my pocket was overwhelming.

God can meet these requests…through you. In the upcoming weeks we will be posting profiles here of some of these churches that are caring for children in Haiti. Pray for your church to come alongside a Haitian church so that these children, and their prayerful words, can be redeemed to God’s glory.  Contact HORT today.

Jodi Tucker for HORT

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Day 10 - They Found His Son

Today we began the day with great anticipation and pride that we might reach our targeted number of 50 churches visited.  However, we fell short of this goal with a gut-wrenching development.

One of the pastors we have been talking with all week, Pastor Moise, has been busy serving orphans in his community. Astonishingly, he has been doing this while his 8-year-old son has been missing since the quake six weeks ago. No one knew for sure of the boy’s location when the quake hit, and there was hope that he had gone off somewhere. Today, as we approached our goal of visiting this 50th church, Pastor Moises’ associate called to say that he regreted he would be unable to keep our appointment.  Remains of his son had been found in the rubble of his school.

Here we were, focused on “accomplishing” our target of putting the 50th church on the map, and God calls our pride up short with a stomach punch that reminds us yet again of the depth of this tragedy. Individual lives, not numbers, are what matters. 

Earlier in the day across town, Pastor Joseph had showed us a rubble pile that used to serve orphans next to his church. With tears in his eyes, he told us that one of the 75 children in their care had been interred in the pile. The church has no access to heavy equipment and cannot reach the child’s body.


Pastor Joseph shows us the house where a child in his care remains interred.

Yet another reminder that this heartache is still new and far from finished for the people of Haiti.

So, rather than focusing on numbers or our accomplishments, let us tell you about the individuals with HORT that have been doing this work for the last two weeks. Our initial deployment team represents numerous ministries. We have laid the groundwork for what will be tens of HORT partnerships this year, involving hundreds of people.  Will you be part of one? We pray you will.

Here are just some of the fine people who made HORT possible:


Aaron Bensko, volunteer photographer and videographer, documented all our progress with awesome photos.
Alan Hunt interviewed countless pastors and also found time to entertain the children.

 
Beautiful Evanson, one of our drivers, hopes to be a cardiologist one day...there are only three in all of Haiti.


Commander John Roberts has kept us on task and on mission with his amazing leadership skills.


David Leventhal had all the answers for every technical problem.


Dr. Byron Schick kept us safe and attended to our medical questions.


Jen Gash was a whiz at coordinating our logisitics.


Jodi Jackson Tucker served as information and supply officer.


Mishlay, our awesome household helper, chopped fresh coconut for us one morning.


Pastor Diula Previlon, born in Haiti, served faithfully as a translator and cultural adviser.



Pastor Theo Sandburg, the youngest member of the team, was a great spiritual leader for all of us.


Paul Myhill put the resources of his organization behind this endeavor.


Scott Vair worked day and night planning all our meetings and manuevers.


The eleven members of our initial deployment team.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Day 9 - 44 Churches, 44 Chances

In just nine days, HORT has visited 44 churches in Port Au Prince and Saint Marc.
 
 

Already poor by American standards, these churches now carry on with children sleeping on their grounds, lack of food and water, buildings that took years to build laying in ruins, and congregations riddled with earthquake deaths.

One thing they are not short on is faith - the kind of faith that would inspire any Christian. Last night at 2:30 a.m. as our team tried to recover from the third aftershock in 24 hours, the village below us broke into spontaneous worship, and the strains of “Nothing but the Blood of Jesus” in French rose up to our rooftop camp.

The only thing missing here is YOU. Your church, your partnership, your support. Our work here is not done and we believe we will map 50 potential partners before we come home.  But none of this has purpose unless the American church steps up to come alongside these churches to rescue children. 

As you look at these photos, think what your church can do.  Remember your church’s intact building, air conditioning, carpet, cushioned seats, sound systems and laughing children. Now imagine worshipping amongst rubble in a tent city with children that are hungry, scared and homeless. Remember how much your church has already, and consider what a blessing it would be to be part of God’s redemptive plan for these children. Remember James 1:27. Make a choice to help in Haiti. Your joy on earth will be surpassed only by your reward in heaven. For more information on church-to-church partnerships, fill out this form and HORT will contact you.

Born in a tent camp eight days ago.


We were amazed at how politely these children shared on piece of candy, until we realized they also share this one mattress each night!


The pastors wife caring for these children fears they will all be sick when the rains come.


Her name is Lovely.


Alan Hunt prays with a Pastor whose church has crumbled.

  
Children in a tent city because their orphanage collapsed.

Monday, February 22, 2010

Day 8 - "He is an Orphan Like Me"

Today was a long day for the Haiti Orphan Relief Team.  It began at 4:30 a.m. when we were awakened by a 4.7 quake aftershock.  As there is no electricity here now, we fumbled in the darkness to run from our rooms on the second story of the house.  All week we have been talking to people, especially children, who are too afraid to sleep inside since the quake that killed 200,000.  We had wondered to ourselves,”Why don’t they just go inside the remaining structures? Why must they camp in the open?” This morning, God gave us a glimpse of the terror they have experienced. Suddenly, we have a whole new level of empathy for what these children have experienced.

Unable to return to sleep, we packed up our gear and headed out to the area of Saint Marc, about a two-hour drive north of Port Au Prince.  St. Marc is a coastal town that has swelled with tens of thousands of people that have come from PAP since the quake. We know that the churches in this area were already at capacity caring for local children, and wanted to see how we could help them receive the orphans of the quake.

Life, the old way and the new way, Saint Marc.

By dividing our team, we were able to visit 12 churches and hear the hearts of the pastors.  It is so humbling to see how these men of God serve in the simplest of circumstances.

At each location, we try to explain to the children why we are there, and that many children in America are praying for them.

On the way home, the long ride enabled us to get to know our fantastic interpreter, Smit, 27, who has been with us all week. Smit is a very agreeable young man who has learned the routine of our church visits, and has been a great help communicating with our partners.  When he is not interpreting, Smit usually rides “shotgun” in the back of our truck, but today due to a series of circumstances that left us changing vehicles, he rode inside with us.


 Smit, to the left of Alan Hunt, listens carefully as he interprets one of our pastors meetings.

We told Smit we were considering moving our sleeping arrangements outside tonight due to the aftershock. “I sleep in a tent” he said matter-of-factly. Soon, we learned Smit’s house was destroyed in the quake. He lost his mother years ago and did not know his father. “I guess you could say I am an orphan.” We felt shame as we realized we had been using Smit to talk to others about orphans all week, and never inquired about his circumstances. 

He went on to say “I work as an interpreter to support myself and help others.  There is a boy, Daniel, who has been staying with me in my tent since a few days after the quake. I found him on the streets with nowhere to go. When I finish this job this week, I hope to buy him some clothes. He is an orphan like me.” 


Kethlene is 18 and teaches at one of the tin churches we visited today.



Little Dauna stole our hearts.



There are many ways to communicate across a language barrier.



This beautiful lady, Dorheus, cares for 57 children daily, and does it joyfully and with God's love.

Blog Posts from The Team

Paul Myhill, World Orphans

Inside the Rubble and Outside the Doors - I walked the perimeter of Rood's apartment building and came across a lone girl in pink and braids who stood in front of the remains of another portico. A metal grated door was heavily-bowed out as the mass of the second story had crashed down upon it. Nine year-old Valentina pointed at the door and quietly said "famille." Read more.

Aftershock -  I was awoken early this morning by the whole house shaking and a deep low rumble that sounded as if the underworld was growling. Read more.

David Leventhal, Hope for Orphans

There was no light in his eyes - When I got out of the vehicle I was immediately drawn to one little boy with a dusty button down shirt that was missing the middle button.  I went over and knelt down to get eye to eye with him.  In the best French I could muster I told him my name was David. My heart broke when he finally looked me directly in the eye.  There was nothing there – no spark….no light. Read more.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Day 7 - His Compassions Never Fail

As today is Sunday, our team had the honor and privilege of worshipping at the church of our host pastor, Gerald Bataille. This church has only walls, and several hundred people, including the pastor and his family, have been camping there since the quake. Pastor Bataille and his family have been serving orphaned and vulnerable children since 1988, and have raised over 100 children. Twenty seven of these have completed university.

Pastor Bataille prepares to preach this morning.

After the service, we were able to visit one of the homes operated by the Batailles, and see the preparations to serve many more children when arrangements can be made.

Later in the day, we also went out Carrefour, the epicenter area of the quake, to hold a follow-up meeting with one of our key partners, Pastor Fritz. 


Scott Vair listens as Pastor Fritz tells of the destruction of his home.

Pastor Bataille based his sermon this morning on Lamentations 3:1-23.  These words took on a whole new meaning for us as we realized that the people of Haiti are living this scripture.  The pastor’s message to them:  do not despair…the goodness of God is never finished.  For today, HORT will let these photos, and this scripture, speak for our team.

Lamentations 3:1-23

I am the man who has seen affliction
       by the rod of his wrath.

 2 He has driven me away and made me walk 
       in darkness rather than light;

 3 indeed, he has turned his hand against me
       again and again, all day long.

 4 He has made my skin and my flesh grow old
       and has broken my bones.

 5 He has besieged me and surrounded me
       with bitterness and hardship.

 6 He has made me dwell in darkness
       like those long dead.

 7 He has walled me in so I cannot escape;
       he has weighed me down with chains.

 8 Even when I call out or cry for help,
       he shuts out my prayer.

 9 He has barred my way with blocks of stone;
       he has made my paths crooked.

 10 Like a bear lying in wait,
       like a lion in hiding,

 11 he dragged me from the path and mangled me
       and left me without help.

 12 He drew his bow
       and made me the target for his arrows.

 13 He pierced my heart
       with arrows from his quiver.

 14 I became the laughingstock of all my people;
       they mock me in song all day long.

 15 He has filled me with bitter herbs
       and sated me with gall.

 16 He has broken my teeth with gravel;
       he has trampled me in the dust.

 17 I have been deprived of peace;
       I have forgotten what prosperity is.

 18 So I say, "My splendor is gone
       and all that I had hoped from the LORD."

 19 I remember my affliction and my wandering,
       the bitterness and the gall.

 20 I well remember them,
       and my soul is downcast within me.

 21 Yet this I call to mind
       and therefore I have hope:

 22 Because of the LORD's great love we are not consumed,
       for his compassions never fail.

 23 They are new every morning;
       great is your faithfulness.


Imagine a child living here,


Jen Gash of Sweet Sleep listens as Junior Bataille decribes the beds needed for these children at his orphanage.


A baby naps in the courtyard of tent village at a church.


These three orphans, cousins, could not seem to smile despite our efforts to amuse them.

More Blog Posts from the Team

David Leventhal, Hope for Orphans
The gospel is the foundation of orphan care… - As I worked through my thoughts & reflected on a couple of passages I realize the best place to start & finish was at the very cornerstone of all we believe.  I distilled it down into two main points: The gospel is the basis for WHY we care for orphans and the gospel is the model for HOW we care for orphans. Read more.

Haiti Update: Visiting HCRM Orphanage & GAiN - HCRM was designed to care for about 50 kids and right now they’ve got well over 100.  As is the case in nearly every orphanage functioning over capacity  the conditions there are really bad & basic necessities are lacking. Read more.


Paul Myhill, World Orphans

Broken - There are many shattered things in this struggling country. But the broken things are dealing with much instability and pain also. God uses brokenness. He'll use it to draw Haiti closer to Him. Read more.

The Winds Blew and the Ground Shook - Davidson was out playing with friends when his house came down on his mommy and daddy. A sad, quiet boy, he appears to still be in a state of shellshock. I got his story while standing in the dividing space between the church and a house next door, a house that had collapsed in at multiple angles. As I looked past Davidson's downcast eyes, I could see the crushed master bedroom behind him and imagined his parents in a similar room as the walls and ceiling quickly closed in. Read more.

The Weight Upon Them - In the eye of such power and such volumes of flying, grinding concrete, you can't choose between running and finding your loved ones.You don't have time to make such painful choices. Survivor's guilt is another part of the pain that endures here. Read more.

Jen Gash, Sweet Sleep

photos and thoughts from haiti - I passed a group of Haitians this morning dressed in white walking down the street singing praises and thanking God. Hands down the most moving thing I've ever seen. Read more.

Some perspective.... - I recently received a message from someone saying they were glad I was here in Haiti. Their next sentence was, "Is it really as bad as the news makes it look?" I replied back that it wasn't as bad as the news is making it. It's worse. Read more.

Friday update -  We divided into three teams today to meet with pastors in differenet regions whose churches were involved in caring for orphans before last month's earthquake. I'll just share a little of that experience with you.... Read more.

Scott Vair, World Orphans

All I could do is weep, and pray - I sat in an orphanage built for 48 that now has over 120 children as those that are uncared for as a result of this earthquake continue to seek shelter. Read more.

Being Away - His wife and children, however, were here. He had no way of knowing if they were dead or alive. Read more. 

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Day 6 Update - 128 Orphans, 18 Widows

Today was a very strategic day as we participated in a conference of over 100 pastors who are part of the Global Aid Network, (GAiN) a ministry of Campus Crusade for Christ. Like much of Haiti, the conference center has been moved outdoors. Exhausted looking pastors came through rubble-ridden streets, dressed in shirts and ties, to sit on benches under a tarp tent in the sweltering heat and learn how to better serve their congregations amidst this unimaginable tragedy.

 The call of James 1:27

David Leventhal of Hope for Orphans and Paul Myhill of World Orphans encouraged the pastors to remember God’s command to care for the widow and orphan, especially now. We shared our purpose with HORT, to bring the American church alongside the Haitian church, to care for orphaned children.

At the conclusion of the meeting, the pastors ended their session by raising their voices in “How Great Thou Art”, amidst the destruction, death and need.  Then, over forty remained behind to see if they might be able to be partnered with a church in the U.S. so they can do more to help children in their congregations.

As we gathered their contact information for follow-up, a weary man sat near me silently.  He was clutching a tattered notebook and kept looking over a list inside.  It appeared to be a numbered list of names and I asked our translator if the pastor would be so kind as to tell me what the list represented.

 It begins with their names.

He said “I am trying to count them all. So far, we have 128 orphans, 18 widows.” Sometimes, it’s the little things, like 146 names on a dusty sheet of paper, which really take our breath away as we seek to respond to this tragedy.




128 orphans, 18 widows

Later we spent time trying to obtain the necessary gasoline to run our generator and pump water for our team. After one week here, many of us are praising God to have fresh water to do simple tasks, like laundry.



It is hard to describe what it means when millions of children are living on the sidewalks and hillsides with no water or shelter. All of life, even washing and bathing, goes on in plain sight.

Jodi Tucker for HORT

Friday, February 19, 2010

Day 5 Update - They Laugh No More

Today the Haiti Orphan Relief Team spent the day visiting 8 new church partners, learning details of their situation, and creating profiles of their capability and needs so we can find U.S. churches to come alongside them. The situation in these churches would humble anyone who can call an American church home.

Pastors are stretched to the limit trying to care for the orphans and vulnerable children in their congregations since the quake. One pastor has sold his car to buy food for the children. Another was asked “What would you need from a U.S. church in order to take in the orphans in your congregation?”

With great trepidation and humility, he looked at us and said “Could we possibly have three or four hundred dollars?”

Pastor Gaston lost his son in the earthquake and yet he perseveres, trying to serve the living children in his midst. The wall of his church is being held up by the wall of his home next door.  The family, as well as several orphans in their care, is sleeping in tents and on the concrete floor of the church.

Pastor Gaston's church

Everywhere we went, beautiful children had assembled in the churches to sing us songs, believing we brought hope. 

Baptiste Bethanie Church had 450 children waiting inside his church.  About 30 minutes into our meeting, we asked the pastor “How many of these children are homeless?”

He looked at us incredulously and said, ”All of them. I thought you understood that.” 

This toddler one of 450 homeless children we met today at Baptiste Bethanie Church.

Another five-year-old little girl told us her story like this:  “My daddy was talking to a neighbor when the house began to shake. I went outside but he did not see me. He ran into the house calling my name, and it fell on him.” Stories like this were repeated to us all day.

Wisely, the youth pastor of a church that has existed since 1967 asked if we could consider providing counseling services to the children as part of the proposed church partnership.  This is very important, he said, because he has known these children all their lives, and “they laugh no more.”


Jodi Tucker for HORT

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Day 4 - Without Jesus, I Would Die

We knew we would come face to face with children who had lost everything, but some stories defy human understanding. 



Today our team traveled to Haiti Children’s Rescue Mission in the mountains above PAP, where we witnessed the strength and dignity of a boy named Rood.


With extraordinary bravery, Rood told us that the quake killed 11 members of his family, including his parents, all his siblings, and some cousins who were visiting the family. Rood said he was at the kitchen table “watching my mother feed the baby” when the quake hit.  As they tried to run, the ceiling collapsed on them. 

Rood was buried, face to face with his deceased mother.  With his arm pinned, he was unable to move. Falling in and out of consciousness, he saw his dead siblings “get big” as their bodies bloated. 

Three days later neighbors digging through the rubble found him, but the only way to free him was to amputate his arm. 

When we asked how he copes, he told us “without Jesus, I would die.”

Rood is now in the care of Pastor Jean Nicholas and his wife. Their orphanage that normally serves 50 orphans, has been overrun with an additional 70 children since the quake. Exhausted staff are outnumbered by skinny, smiling kids. The new children have no beds, and many still sleep in the concrete courtyard, afraid to go inside since the quake.

Lists catalog the children by photo and what little information can be discerned.


Pastor Nicholas met with us to discuss our church partnership opportunity. His church is still standing, but he lost his personal home that took 15 years to build. We hope to find a U.S church partner to come alongside Pastor Nicholas soon. (If you'd like more information, contact us.)

We also connected to six new church partners through the Global Orphan Project. Trace Thurlby inspired us with his perspective on the importance of consulting with nationals as we build long term solutions in Haiti.  For example, putting photos of missing children up on web seems like a good idea to Americans, but few Haitians have internet access. All the more reason the church is the right solution at this time. “We can share the love of Christ…people in Haiti are turning to Jesus” said Trace.


Alan Hunt and Trace Thurlby of Global Orphan Project

Finally, our meeting with Global Aid Network (GAiN) brought much fruit.  Esperandieu Pierre, National Director for Campus Crusade for Christ, and Director of Haiti Disaster Response, is including us at a pre-scheduled conference of 100 pastors from across the region.  Our team will present the church-to-church solution being facilitated by HORT.


Jodi Tucker for HORT