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Tè Tremblé—The Haitian Earth Trembled
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - Tè tremblé is Haitian Creole for "earthquake." Its literal translation: "The earth trembled." After the massive earthquake that devastated Haiti, the stench of death is everywhere. At General Hospital, bodies had been stacked 4 feet high near the morgue. In the community house called Matthew 25, doctors laid out a plastic tablecloth to perform a kitchen-table amputation, aided by headlamps. The injured Haitian man in his 20s might be considered fortunate: He was among the minority of injured people getting medical attention. And, unlike many amputations being performed elsewhere in Haiti, the doctors who arrived Monday were using anesthesia they had brought.
While this grim amputation was happening, an unexpected delivery of food aid arrived. Matthew 25 House typically accommodates 35 guests. Now more than 1,000 are there, camped out in the adjoining soccer field. There has been much reporting on the concerns about possible riots and violence that aid distribution might provoke. We witnessed the polar opposite, because an established community group was empowered to distribute the food. People lined up and got their supplies, leaving undisturbed the difficult surgery being conducted nearby. This has been typical as we've traveled through the catastrophe: People with nothing-hungry, thirsty, seeking their loved ones, burying their dead, caring for their injured-have shown fortitude, civility and compassion despite their quiet desperation.
We went to the home of Myriam Merlet, the chief of staff of the Haitian Ministry of Women. She helped draw international attention to the use of rape as a political weapon and worked with playwright and activist Eve Ensler on the V-Day movement to help end violence against women. We found her house, indeed the entire surrounding community, destroyed. "We have just pulled her body out," they told us Sunday, five days after the earthquake. There is no telling when she died, or whether she might have been rescued. Her sister Eartha brought us to her fresh grave.
We ventured beyond Port-au-Prince, to the earthquake's epicenter, past Carrefour to Léogâne. A United Nations assessment put the level of destruction in Léogâne at 80 percent to 90 percent of structures destroyed, with no remaining government buildings. On the way, a young man hailed our car, saying: "Please, we see some helicopters overhead, but they don't stop here. We have no aid. We have no food."
One man covered in dust was using a mallet to break the cement that had entombed his grandfather. A father nearby had just dug out his 1-year-old baby, dead in his playpen. According to Agence France-Presse, the U.N. warned it cannot "extend their aid operation to outlying areas until security there can be confirmed." Traveling to Léogâne, we felt no threat; we only saw people in dire need of help. While we were in Léogâne, a missionary helicopter landed, then inexplicably lifted off again, and the crew began hurling loaves of bread to the ground. Young Haitian men grew incensed. One cried, tearing up the rolls and yelling, "We are not dogs for you to throw bones at!"
We spoke with the mayor of Léogâne, Alexis Santos, who seemed almost
helpless before the near-total destruction around him. I asked him, in
light of the unified front offered by the U.S. government, with
President Barack Obama naming former Presidents Bill Clinton and George
W. Bush to lead the U.S. response, what he thought about the offer of
Jean-Bertrand Aristide-the ousted former president of Haiti-to return
to Haiti from exile in South Africa to stand with Haitian President
Rene Preval, a united front to help the recovery. Santos, by no means
an Aristide supporter, told me he thought it would be a good idea.
Back at Matthew 25 House (named after the
biblical verse "Whatever you do for my least brothers and sisters, you
do for me"), I spoke with one of the surgeons. Dr. Jennifer Bruny, who
flew down with other doctors from Children's Hospital in Denver,
performed the amputation earlier. The nature of the disaster, with
thousands of crushing injuries, and the lack of care for so much time
make amputation one of the only means available now to save lives.
"This amputation should not have been necessary," she told me. "This
could have been easily treated earlier. These people needed help
sooner."
Denis Moynihan contributed research to this column.
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7 Comments so far
Show AllLook at whitey soldiers trembling themselves at the airport afraid to go out among all those black folk. Why they might riot! Actually demand some aid instead of all the fears of violence.
What a pathetic display of the mighty American war-machine. Afraid of a thirsty, hungry, shaken people. Turning away medical aid to land more soldiers instead of food and water.
Meanwhile the dying goes on...
American Friends Service Committee http://www.afsc.org/
American Red Cross: http://www.redcross.org/
Artists for Peace and Justice: http://www.artistsforpeaceandjustice.com/
NetHope: http://www.nethope.org/
Lambi Fund for Haiti: http://www.lambifund.org/
Save the Children: http://www.savethechildren.org/
World Vision International: http://wvi.org/wvi/wviweb.nsf
Care: http://www.care.org/index.asp
MercyCorps: http://www.mercycorps.org/
Partners in Health: http://twitter.com/PIH_org
Unicef: http://www.unicef.org/
Doctors Without Borders: http://doctorswithoutborders.org/
Parners in Health: http://www.standwithhaiti.org/haiti
Ofram: http://www.oxfam.org/en/pressroom/pressrelease/2010-01-13/large-earthquake-haiti
RN Response Network: https://secure.ga1.org/05/rnrn_relief_fund
National Nurses United has launched a relief effort to send over 7,000 registered nurses to Haiti. There's just one problem: the cost of sending them. Please donate today at www.SendaNurse.org. Every dollar you donate goes toward the resources nurses need to care for the survivors of this tragedy.
Pass it on.
Gary
News coverage of Haiti moved me to write this poem: "BROKEN"
--------------------------
BROKEN
We can’t stop earthquakes,
But we can stop bombing.
Little girls’ broken bodies
Don’t know the difference.
--------------------------
Haiti is huge human tragedy made personal, brought home to us by media focus on heroic and heartbreaking rescue efforts of individual innocent children.
It rivets our attention. It stirs our sense of shared humanity and compassion. It moves us ...to action.
The United States is spending millions to save these children, all the while it is spending millions to kill other innocent children.
How would your sense of shared humanity and compassion be stirred to watch frantic families digging through rubble with their bare hands to rescue their children buried in a drone missile attack, or a mother shrieking, carrying her glazed-eyed child who just had his feet blown off by a cluster bomblet?
What if you watched THAT every night, hours on end, day after day? How many days, months, years have we been bombing in Iraq, Afghanistan and God knows where else? Not one of us could stand it.
There is a reason our media doesn’t show us these stories: we would all be out in the streets, clogging the gears of government, DEMANDING an end to this carnage in our name. But we don’t, and our silence is our secret complicity in this killing.
From the nightly news you wouldn’t even know that we are war. Out of sight, out of mind.
I have to think we like it that way.
I don’t.
But don’t feel chastised, or God forbid, offended: I don’t feel morally superior either.
When I could be running to my rooftop screaming bloody murder, all I do is write a little poem:
BROKEN
We can’t stop earthquakes,
But we can stop bombing.
Little girls’ broken bodies
Don’t know the difference.
Thank-you Amy, for your giving us your eyes, ears and heart to report the real Haiti disaster - ahd showing us how different a place it is than the MSM's anternating between sugar-coated self-congradulation, scare-mongering, and strident militarist-nationalist nonsense.
If I read or see another "orphans arriving in Pittsburgh" story I'm going to puke.
If you haven't already watched today's show -- Democracy Now! -- Amy reports from Haiti. In addition to interviewing and touring the area with a doctor from Partners in Health, she also inteviews Kim Ives, author/publisher of Haiti Liberte.
In addition, Anjali Kamat interviews Scott Horton about the torture/deaths/suicides/murders of three prisoners at Guantanamo on June 9, 2006.
Go to:
www.democracynow.org
Amy is awesome.
Good-hearted, generous Americans should ask where all their hard-earned cash-only donations are going. According to one SF talk-radio host, the cash is apparently going to big oil, big pharma, and other big corporations to pay for rescue gas, rescue medicine, and charter flights. Why aren't these corporations donating their goods and services? And how about all those cruise-ship companies running tours to Haiti as if nothing happened? How many supplies could these huge vessels bring in...and how many injured could they take out? How clueless, cruel, selfish and Nero-like is that? Are corporations so greedy that they have lost all sense of decency, compassion and responsibility? Why aren't the MSM calling for corporate donations along with their solicitations from depression-strapped Americans? Why is it only the average Joe that's being asked to give to this vital rescue effort? It's sickening. The people everywhere deserve some answers. K
Heck of a job Hillary