Goddard’s Haiti Earthquake Blog

    January 19th, 2010

    Dear Friends & Colleagues,

    Thank you for your engagement around Goddard’s response to Haiti’s catastrophic earthquake and the country’s history of oppression that adds further dimension to this tragedy. We have started this community blog as a space in which to dialogue with each other about many aspects of Haiti’s situation and to further develop the college’s response. Goddard’s unique approach to learning and our own activist history oblige us to think critically about Haiti from multiple perspectives and to discover our most helpful work in the context of our mission “…to care for each other and the earth.”

    Mark

    Mark Schulman. President

    Benefit Dance

    February 22nd, 2010

    From Joseph Gainza:

    Haitian Benefit Dance:  Friday, March 5th, 2010 from 7:00-11:00 pm at Montpelier City Hall.  Come join us to help raise money for Haiti and hear three great bands at the same time: Bossman – a power-trio reggae band, the Dave Keller Band — funky, soulful original blues, and the Great Brook Blues Band – a 6-piece band playing a mix of blues, funk, and jazz.  Admission is $10/person — suggested donation.  All proceeds will go to the Haitian non-profit organization, Fonkoze, which is building the economic foundations for democracy in Haiti through micro-lending programs and other economic assistance.  Check them out at: www.fonkoze.org.  This event is sponsored by Central Vermont Friends of Haiti – of group of individuals in Central Vermont trying to do their part.  Come to the dance, do your part, and make a small difference. Please send this email to your friends, put a blurb on you Facebook page, and help us get the word out.  Thanks.  For more information contact, 522 2376 or email jgainza@vtlink.net.

     

    Community Center Art

    February 19th, 2010

    From Patty Younce:

    The Community Center is the temporary home for colorful Haitian paintings that were created by a Haitian collective of artists.  These artists worked with children on the streets of Haiti and gave free art lessons.  Their collaborative efforts in this process produced these paintings.  Bob Belenky, former Goddard faculty member and frequent outreach worker in Haiti, brought the paintings back to the states and to Vermont.   They are in the first floor lounge of the Community Center and can be purchased with all money going toward the Haitian Relief Efforts.  Contact Patricia Younce at extension 301 if you are interested in purchasing a painting.

    Partners In Health Info.

    February 9th, 2010

    From Suzanne Richman:

    Hello,
    I recently signed up to receive updates about earthquake relief efforts in Haiti from Partners In Health. I thought you would be interested. To sign up, visit:
    To learn more about Partners In Health, visit http://act.pih.org/learnmore

    Haiti History & Context Links from Manny O’Neil

    February 4th, 2010

    Staff member Manny O’Neil sent these links re. Noam Chomsky’s thought from 1994 during the coup in Haiti.  This work gives context and background to Haiti’s current situation:

    Noam Chomsky Article re. 1994 Coup in Haiti:

    http://www.chomsky.info/articles/20040309.htm

    Democracy Now re. 1994 in Haiti:

    http://www.democracynow.org/2004/3/17/haitis_history_noam_chomsky_traces_underpinnings


    Bob Belenky Haiti Link

    January 26th, 2010

    From Bobby Buchanan:

    Dear Friends,

    Former Goddard Dean and friend of the college Bob Belkenky has worked with groups in Haiti for decades.  He has posted links to organizations doing good work there, as well as an excellent series of articles that offer an historical and contemporary analysis of Haiti.

    http://web.mac.com/robertbelenky/The_Book_of_Bob/Earthquake%21.html

    Housing Needed

    January 26th, 2010

    Loona Brogan Says:
    January 22nd, 2010 at 5:20 pm edit

    We received this request for help from Moriah Moriarty in an email sent to the Academic Services mailbox yesterday:

    IMPORTANT: HOUSING NEEDED FOR HAITIAN ARTIST AND FAMILY IN SAN FRANCISCO

    A friend of mine, Djenane St-Juste, who is a native of Haiti and an accomplished choreographer and dancer is looking for housing starting immediately for her mother, Mambo Florencia Pierre, healer, renowned choreographer, dancer and co-artistic director of Institute De Danse Jaka in Haiti and brother for the next six months in San Francisco. Ideally, it would be a space large enough for four people (Djenane, her son, her mother and brother) and free of cost. They are currently fund-raising for money to pay for rent and food for the next months, so compensation is probable. Please pass this information on to all of your friends and family. I will update you on the upcoming fund-raising event in the next couple of days. Please contact me directly by email if you have suggestions or further information todance_monks@yahoo.com or 510-704-1403. THANK YOU.

    Mirah Moriarty, Director of DANCE MONKS

    D A N C E M O N K S
    http://www.dancemonks.com

    (I posted it as an “event” on my personal facebook page so I could “invite” everyone in my social network and have it appear on their walls… )

    1/30/09 Benefit – Los Angeles

    January 26th, 2010

    jen hofer Says:
    January 25th, 2010 at 12:00 am edit

    If you’re in the Los Angeles area January 30, please come to the benefit I helped organize:

    Please join us for a night of readings, music and dancing to raise
    money for medical aid to Haiti. We’ll have readings from Will
    Alexander, Gloria Alvarez, Tisa Bryant, Ben Ehrenreich, Percival Everett, Sesshu
    Foster, Veronica Gonzales, Jen Hofer, Doug Kearney, Chris Kraus,
    Maggie Nelson, Abel Salas; plus live music from Ceci
    Bastida and Domingo Siete and DJ sets from Glenn Red, Concise, and
    Gomez comes alive. It will all get started at 8pm this coming Saturday
    at Trópico de Nopal Gallery in Echo Park. All the money we raise will
    go to Partners in Health, which has been providing free medical care
    to Haiti’s poor for the last two decades. The details:

    Saturday January 30, 2010 at 8 p.m.
    Trópico de Nopal Gallery
    1665 Beverly Blvd.
    Los Angeles, CA 90026
    http://www.tropicodenopal.com
    $10 at the door (more if you can spare it!)

    If you won’t be able to join us Saturday, please consider donating
    directly to Partners in Health at http://www.standwithhaiti.org. And please
    do what you can to help us get the word out by forwarding this email
    as widely as possible. Hope to see you there.

    Local artist Arturo Romo designed a gorgeous flier for this event, but I can’t get it to paste into this blog. If anyone wants to see it, or wants to communicate with me about the benefit, feel free to contact me atjen.hofer@goddard.edu

    3/5/10 Benefit Dance, Montpelier

    January 26th, 2010

    Joseph Gainza Says:
    January 25th, 2010 at 6:35 pm edit

    There will be a benefit dance at Montpelier City Hall on Friday, March 5 at 7PM. Th Dave Keller Band and the Great Brook Blues Band will be playing. All proceeds to go to Haitian organizations in Haiti. More information: Jgainza@vtlink.net.

    An Alternative Viewpoint

    January 26th, 2010

    I feel it’s important to post this here, because it is unlikely to get much circulation in the US.  This is  originally from

    http://www.cuba.cu/gobierno/reflexiones/2010/ing/f230110i.html


    We Send Doctors, Not Soldiers

    by Fidel Castro Ruz

    In my Reflection of January 14, two days after the catastrophe in Haiti, which destroyed that neighboring sister nation, I wrote: “In the area of healthcare and others the Haitian people has received the cooperation of Cuba, even though this is a small and blockaded country. Approximately 400 doctors and healthcare workers are helping the Haitian people free of charge. Our doctors are working every day at 227 of the 237 communes of that country. On the other hand, no less than 400 young Haitians have been graduated as medical doctors in our country. They will now work alongside the reinforcement that traveled there yesterday to save lives in that critical situation. Thus, up to one thousand doctors and healthcare personnel can be mobilized without any special effort; and most are already there willing to cooperate with any other State that wishes to save Haitian lives and rehabilitate the injured.”

    “The head of our medical brigade has informed that ‘the situation is difficult but we are already saving lives.’”

    The Cuban health professionals have started to work nonstop, hour after hour, day and night, in the few facilities that remain standing, in tents, and out in the parks or open-air spaces, since the population feared new aftershocks.

    The situation was far more serious than was originally thought. Tens of thousands of injured were clamoring for help in the streets of Port-au-Prince; innumerable
    persons lay, dead or alive, under the rubble of clay or adobe used in the construction of the houses where the overwhelming majority of the population lived. Buildings, even the most solid, collapsed. Besides, it was necessary to track down, in the destroyed neighborhoods, the Haitian doctors who had graduated from the Latin American School of Medicine. Many of them were affected, either directly or indirectly, by the tragedy.

    Some UN officials were trapped in their dormitories and tens of lives were lost, including the lives of several chiefs of MINUSTAH, a UN contingent. The fate of hundreds of other members of its staff was unknown.

    Haiti’s Presidential Palace crumbled. Many public facilities, including several hospitals, were left in ruins.

    The catastrophe shocked the whole world, which was able to see what was going on through the images aired by the main international TV networks. Governments all
    over the world announced they would be sending rescue experts, food, medicines, equipment, and other resources.

    In accordance with the position publicly announced by Cuba, medical staff from different countries — namely Spain, Mexico, and Colombia, among others — worked
    very hard alongside our doctors at the facilities they had improvised. Organizations such as PAHO, friendly countries like Venezuela, and other nations supplied medicines and other resources. The impeccable behavior of Cuban professionals and their leaders, who chose to remain out of the limelight, was absolutely void of chauvinism.

    Cuba, just as it had done under similar circumstances, when Hurricane Katrina caused huge devastation in the city of New Orleans and the lives of thousands of American citizens were in danger, offered to send a full medical brigade to cooperate with the people of the United States, a country that, as is well known, has vast resources. At that moment what was needed were trained and well-equipped doctors to save lives. Given New Orleans’ geographic location, more than one thousand doctors of the “Henry Reeve” contingent mobilized and readied to leave for that city at any time of the day or the night, carrying with them the necessary medicines and equipment. It never crossed
    our mind that the President of that nation would reject the offer and let a number of Americans who could have been saved die. The mistake made by that government
    was perhaps due to the inability to understand that the people of Cuba do not see in the American people an enemy; they do not blame them for the aggressions our
    homeland has suffered.

    Nor was that government capable of understanding that our country does not need to beg for favors or forgiveness of those who, for half a century now, have been trying, to no avail, to bring us to our knees.

    Our country, also in the case of Haiti, immediately responded to the US authorities’ requests to fly over the eastern part of Cuba as well as other facilities they needed to deliver assistance, as quickly as possible, to the American and Haitian citizens who had
    been affected by the earthquake.

    Such have been the principles characterizing the ethical behavior of our people. Together with its impartiality and firmness, these have been the ever-present features of our foreign policy. And this is known only too well by whoever have been our adversaries in the international arena.

    Cuba will firmly stand by the opinion that the tragedy that has taken place in Haiti, the poorest nation in the Western hemisphere, is a challenge to the richest
    and more powerful countries of the world.

    Haiti is a net product of the colonial, capitalist, and imperialist system imposed on the world. Haiti’s slavery and subsequent poverty were imposed from abroad. That terrible earthquake occurred after the Copenhagen Summit, where the most elemental rights of
    192 UN member States were trampled upon.

    In the aftermath of the tragedy, a competition has been unleashed in Haiti to hastily and illegally adopt boys and girls. UNICEF has been forced to adopt preventive measures against the uprooting of many children that will deprive their close relatives of their rights.

    There are more than one hundred thousand dead victims. A large number of citizens have lost their arms or legs, or have suffered fractures requiring rehabilitation that would enable them to work or manage their lives on their own.

    Eighty percent of the country needs to be rebuilt. Haiti requires an economy that is developed enough to meet its needs according to its productive capacity. The reconstruction of Europe or Japan, which was based on the productive capacity and the technical level of the population, was a relatively simple task compared to the effort that needs to be made in Haiti. There, as well as in most of Africa and elsewhere in the Third
    World, it is indispensable to create the conditions for a sustainable development. In only forty years’ time, humanity will be made of more than nine billion
    inhabitants, and it is faced right now with the challenge of a climate change that scientists accept as an inescapable reality.

    In the midst of the Haitian tragedy, without anybody knowing how and why, thousands of US marines, 82nd Airborne Division troops, and other military forces
    have occupied Haiti. Worse still is the fact that neither the United Nations Organization nor the US government has offered an explanation to the world’s public opinion about this deployment of troops.

    Several governments have complained that their aircraft have not been allowed to land in order to deliver the human and technical resources that have been sent to Haiti.

    Some countries, for their part, have announced they would be sending an additional number of troops and military equipment. In my view, such actions will complicate and create chaos in international cooperation, which is already in itself complex. It is
    necessary to seriously discuss this issue. The UN should be entrusted with the leading role it deserves in these delicate matters.

    Our country is accomplishing a strictly humanitarian mission. To the extent that it is possible, it will contribute the human and material resources at its disposal. The will of our people, who take pride in their medical doctors and workers who cooperate to provide vital services, is strong and will rise to the occasion.

    Any significant opportunity for cooperation that is offered to our country will not be rejected, but its acceptance will be entirely dependent on the importance and significance of the assistance that is requested from the human resources of our homeland.

    It is only fair to state that, up until this moment, our modest aircraft and the important human resources that Cuba has made available to the Haitian people have arrived at their destination without any difficulty whatsoever.

    We send doctors, not soldiers!

    Firma Fidel Castro Ruz January 23, 2010

    Sales to Benefit Haiti

    January 26th, 2010

    Goddard’s own Suzannah Mulliken is donating money from the sales of her beautiful handmade items to Doctor’s Without Borders/ Medecins Sans Frontieres. You can view and purchase them at her Etsy shop here.