Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Pictures are UP! www.smithsinhaiti2009.shutterfly.com

Dear friends,

We have discovered that the re-entry and assimilation process back into the U.S. is more challenging than we anticipated!  Disparities, little and big, keep popping up and making it 
hard to process all that we've experienced.  Both of us walked into the bathrooms in the Miami airport in amazement - Electricity!  Flushing toilets!  Water fountains!  On the drive home, we looked around and wondered why there were no people on the side of the road -- where were all the people?  The vendors squatting on the roadside?  The hundreds of thousands who spend their days in the streets because homes aren't big enough to fit everyone?  Haiti is a country where often people sleep in shifts, because there isn't room for everyone to lie down on the floor at the same time.  To us, I-40 seemed immense, desolate, lonely, and strangely sanitized.

I tried to go grocery shopping yesterday afternoon for a few "basics."  It took me over an hour just to get through the cereal and produce aisles.  How to choose apples when 15 different varieties are available?  Do I want "plain" granola, granola with nuts and no brown sugar, granola without nuts 
but with fruit bits, all-natural granola with nuts and fruit bits AND brown sugar?  The options were overwhelming.  We are so accustomed to having twenty different kids of Ziploc bags that we forget how precious it is to be able to store food at all.  

All that said, these small realities are looming large for us.  As we continue to process, we'll be sharing with you and updating our site.  For the moment, though, we've posted all our photos on a Shutterfly site which you can access at:

www.smithsinhaiti2009.shutterfly.com

We hope to post tags and descriptions of the photos (all 271 of them!) as soon as we can.

For now, we offer you our thanks for your prayers and our great joy at seeing a new side of God's good creation.

Peace, Bart & Katherine


Saturday, March 14, 2009

Back in Port-au-Prince!

Dear friends,

It's been longer than we anticipated since our last entry, but we have had a wonderful week. We arrived back in Port-au-Prince (or Petionville, where St. Joseph's is located) this morning after three days in Jacmel, on the southern coast, and in Fondwa. Jacmel is the site of Trinity House, another one of the homes for former street boys, and Lekol Sen Trinite, a day school which the Trinity House started for local children.  


After two days in Jacmel (which has beautiful coastline!), we headed up, up, up again into Fondwa.  Fondwa is a region way up high in the mountains (think Dramamine!) that houses rural communities. Family Health Ministries, located in Chapel Hill, has helped to build an orphanage, school, and guest house run by an order of sisters. 
The school, which is the only school that runs K-12 in the whole region, takes in almost 600 children.  
Some of the children walk up to four hours EACH WAY to get to school in the morning....and we're not talking about smooth roads. This is steep, high altitude on rough roads and slippery slopes. Early on, they discovered that the children were falling asleep - and in some cases actually fainting - when they got to school because they'd left their houses at 4am with no food. They have started feeding the children two meals a day, which is a really big deal in a country that is experiencing a massive food shortage on top of its already impoverished state. The nuns also run a feeding program for mothers whose infants are malnourished, teaching them about nutrition and providing them with formula and food.

We continue to be amazed at all that we see here. It is easy to feel overwhelmed by the complexity and diversity of challenges that the country faces, and to wonder how it might be possible for them to rise out of them. But then, often in small and beautiful ways, you see signs of great joy and hope: a newly planted grove of eucalyptus trees on a slope that had been completely deforested and burned (to sell the charcoal); drums and trumpets echoing across the cement homes late at night when the city is completely dark; a community of former street boys who have now taken up the mantle of leadership to help a generation of street boys who have come after them. Haiti has big dreams and is incredibly resourceful; we hope that our pictures (to come soon!) will give you a small glimpse of what we have experienced here.

Tomorrow we'll worship in the St. Joseph's chapel. The home has seven levels, the top two of which are a dance theater and a beautiful open-air chapel. It's an oasis of color and art in the midst of what is often a dusty cement jungle. In the afternoon, we'll brave the potholed roads and cement/diesel fumes that are thick in the air to head to a metalworking community just outside the city. The artwork of Haiti is extraordinary!

Praise God that Bart and I have both stayed very healthy so far. Other than major allergy issues from all the dust and cement powder, our bodies have been "regular" (hint, hint) and very content. It's amazing how good a simple meal of beans and rice tastes after a long day, and how un-picky you suddenly become when there are no options! That said, we have been spoiled by our hosts. For families which often have little to eat, they have given us their best and truly incorporated us into the family....croissants and fruit and coffee for breakfast, and rice and beans (and chicken) at dinner. Yum. Next time we write we'll have to tell you all about our prayer partners, who have been like little brothers while we're here. You can see a picture of them in one of the entries below!

Okay, it's time to head to bed and give back this borrowed computer. We head back to the States on Monday so we'll keep you posted. THANK YOU thank you for your prayers and for journeying with us!

Peace, Katherine

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Safe and Sound!

Dear friends and family,

We have arrived safely in Haiti.  Our flights yesterday went very smoothly.  We spent the afternoon traveling up to St. Joseph's Home in Petionville for a welcome from the home's founder, Michael Geilenfeld.  We then rode up the mountains into a small town called
 Fermanthe, which is where Wings of Hope is located.  After a very dusty and bumpy ride up, it was wonderful to be greeted with open arms and cool glasses of water.  
The children here, who all have mental or physical disabilities, are lively and loving and full of laughter.  Here is a picture of me with Steve, my prayer partner (and such a hoot!)  The staff at Wings like to say that Steve doesn't know how to follow directions.  In the States, we'd say that "he marches to the beat of his own drum."  He kept me on my toes and always laughing!



Wings of Hope is located on the side of a beautiful mountain overlooking a long valley which leads into the ocean.   This is the view from the balcony of the dormitory.

This will be short as I am writing on the home director's computer (very graciously!) But, since we're not sure whether we'll have internet access anywhere else, wanted to let you know we're doing great.

Tomorrow morning we leave at 6am to go into Cite Soleil, one of the largest slums in the world, located near the water in Port-au-Prince.  We'll be attending church where Leon and Jacky Dorleans serve as pastors and run a school and clinic.  In the afternoon we'll head back to St. Joseph's for instruction with Michael and evening worship.

Haiti is full of colors, sights, and sounds. With big open windows and few walls, we hear the dogs barking, roosters crowing, and pigs snorting in the valleys outside.  We slept great last night but I'm sure will be grateful to have earplugs with us!

Love to you all, and thanks for your prayers....
Katherine & Bart

Thursday, March 5, 2009

All our bags are packed...

...we're ready to go!

Please pray for us, for our fellow travelers, for the family and friends that we leave behind, for those who will be watching over our house and work while we're gone, and for all those whom we'll encounter while we're there.

Peace,
Katherine & Bart

Sunday, March 1, 2009

The Final Countdown

The week is here!!!

We spent this afternoon with our traveling partners packing *32* 18-gallon Rubbermaid bins FULL of supplies for our trip -- praise God for the support of friends, family, churches, and even strangers!  We have bins full of formula, bins full of toiletries, bins full of clothing and toys, bins full of towels, sheets, and blankets.  We have bins full of medical supplies - latex gloves, antimicrobial swabs, medicines and first aid care, and bins of crafts to make with all the children we'll meet.  THANK YOU to all of you who sent supplies, who contributed funding to purchase supplies, and who prayed over this whole process!!

We leave Friday morning for the airport at 3:30am in time to meet our group at 4am.  It's going to be an early morning so we're hoping for good, sound sleep this week despite all the anxiety and anticipation!  In addition to reading ~100+ DYA summer program applications, I have to finish midterms this week, and Bart is trying to cover as much work as possible to make up for his 10-day absence, so we have a lot to accomplish before we leave.  We want to be able to be fully present and focused once we board that plane for Port-au-Prince!  

We know that the St. Joseph's home has internet access, but we're not sure how accessible it will be (or how often) while we're there, so it may be that our photos will have to wait until we return to the States.  We appreciate your patience!

Christ's peace,
Katherine