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Our Ethical Obligations to Haiti
What to say about a disaster as horrific as the earthquake in Haiti? An earthquake that destroyed Lisbon in the 18th century led Voltaire to satirize Leibniz's claim that "this is the best of all possible worlds." Unexpected, agonizing death on a mass scale inevitably evokes questions as to the meaning of life, human beings' place in the cosmos, and even the power and justice of God.
Vast natural disasters also bring out the best and the worst of the mass media. The scale of disaster is conveyed with an immediacy that evokes immediate empathy for populations and cultures often treated as inferior.
The same media, however, both perhaps out of its own anxieties or commercial and governmental expectations, persistently convey the impression that "we are in charge here." Our values, practices and institutions will ease suffering and put the victims on the road to a new order. Thus alongside the footage of desperate suffering we see heroic images of massive aircraft carriers and Coast Guard ships steaming toward Haiti. Little mention attends the role that Cuba, Venezuela and even China played early on.
Though some early reports pictured Haitians digging others out of the rubble, there was no discussion of the positive role of broader Haitian culture. Mark Schuller, professor of African American Studies at York College, City University of New York points out "Haiti has a thriving tradition of youn-ede-lot (one helping the other) and konbit (collective work groups)."
U.S. media often seemed intent on ugly stereotypes of Haitians. On the Saturday after the quake, an NBC "Today" show anchor, absent any strong evidence, asked a World Vision spokesman if he was concerned about Haitians rioting if food was distributed before orderly distribution systems had been established by the military. He responded that in his experience that was not a concern. Yet as the World Vision spokesman responded, NBC flashed a few seconds of murky background footage of jostling in a relief line. No context or commentary was given. No one asked if withholding water and food out of distrust of Haitians might increase desperation and lead to the very behavior that was feared. Nor did anyone ask if Haitians had any reasons - historic or current - to distrust their rescuers.
During many natural disasters, media commentary seems designed as much to prepare us for the notion that absent a top down order provided by U.S. authorities there is no alternative but chaotic disorder. In the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, the media reported as facts crimes and violence in the Superdome. Most were later discredited. Newspaper photos captioned whites in search of food as "foraging," while similar pictures of African-Americans were captioned as "looting."
Haiti, we are told, is the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere. This simple intransitive verb hides context, the history, of how Haiti has from its inception been imagined as dangerous and thus consigned to the very poverty for which it is criticized. Born of a successful slave revolt against both their masters and their colonial oppressor, the nation has long been reviled by much of the West.
Following the themes with which Christian slaveholders berated slaves, New York Times columnist David Brooks has provided a more polite version of Pat Robertson's crude effort to blame Haiti's plight on a pact with the devil. Haiti, says Brooks, "suffers from a complex web of progress-resistant cultural influences. There is the influence of the voodoo religion, which spreads the message that life is capricious and planning futile. There are high levels of social mistrust."
Apart from whether Brooks understands indigenous faiths and whether a religion that acknowledges the capriciousness of life may have merit, Brooks omits a century of U.S. domination of Haiti. U.S.-backed dictators
stole vast sums. Haitians today labor for 28 cents an hour under U.S. trade policies and an undemocratic government imposed by the U.S. and the United Nations. Did this history slow its economic progress or foster distrust of authority?
Though some NGOs have exacerbated Haiti's problems, others offer positive assistance. Schuller highlights several, including Partners in Health co-founded by anthropologist Paul Farmer, to which my family has contributed. Their long-term effort involves training Haitian medical professionals and working with the community. Please consider donations to this or any of the comparable efforts Schuller documents here.
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5 Comments so far
Show AllNo. let's not follow the wisdom of NGOs that actually have experience with disasters, instead we follow the pundits' lead and send in the marines! They'll straighten thing out among those unruly black folk.
Bah. The racism is so evident here how can even the Fawning Corporate Media remain clueless?
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
That's it? Donate to charity? What's wrong with demanding that the UN, US, France, and Canada get the Hell out of of Haiti, since it is their 'aid' that has thrown the properly elected President Aristide into exile and left the impoverished people with only an imperialist imposed puppet over them in this time of need?
As all the media attention focuses on sending aid to the Haitians, ever stop to ask where the money is all going? A San Francisco radio talk-show host asked that very same question and wondered why only cash donations are being requested. He wonders why these appeals target only the people who can least afford it; the strapped American public, in midst of pulling themselves out of a depression. He wonders why major corporations are not stepping up with donations. Why, he asks, do we have to pay Exxon-Mobil, Shell, British Petroleum, and the rest of the profit-bloated oil companies for gas and oil needed by transport planes and ships involved in the rescue. Why do the Red Cross and other volunteer rescue outfits have to pay airlines for charter flights etc.? Why aren't these companies donating planes as part of their contribution to the desperate rescue effort? Why aren't big pharma corporations providing free medicines to treat the victims? All corporate donations are tax deductible anyway. You can answer these questions all the same way...greed and contempt. Why are only working families asked to pony up two-hundred plus million dollars while these greedy, heartless, corporations donate nothing? The good and generous people of America at least deserve an answer before they continue to blindly respond to the MSM crawls at the bottom of their TV screens soliciting money. Why aren't the media asking corporations for significant donations? Where is their sense of decency and responsibility? I, the talk show host who had the guts to ask, and millions of Americans who have donated would like answers from big media and big oil and big pharma and big...corporate America. I believe we all deserve an answer, or better yet, some significant donations from corporate America to the suffering people of Haiti. K
a link to huff post list - many are pledges - it will be interesting to see what gets delivered when.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/01/15/haiti-relief-corporate-do_n_424710.html
Sets in stark relief the dynamics of corporate and military priorities. oh for the day when green means something other than a dollar bill
Again, I repeat that Haitians, particularly the ones who have left Port-au-Prince, should use this opportunity to declare a new Haiti (with a new constitution). If they did this, things in New Haiti or North Haiti or whatever could not possibly be any worse than they have been until now: a gigantic slum overseen by a puppet, killer regime run by Washington and the international corporations.
As just one specific example where improvement can come (time for more is totally lacking at the moment) in the Preval dictatorship, how much money was provided for the Health Ministry? Basically nothing, assuming there was a Health Ministry in existence at all. How about a Health Ministry in a New Haiti or a North Haiti that actually provides real assistance to people.
Why is it that the only Haitian Government operation up and running to any degree after the quake was the police force? You already know the answer: the Preval government was nothing more than a stooge for the US and the corporations and was clearly an enemy of the people of Haiti.
http://www.unity-progress.blogspot.com
(I'll catch up with new posts within a week.)