• Masquerade

    The day has come: the first results of the presidential election in Haiti will be announced.

    Some of us had so much “HOPE” about these elections.  We always thought that after all the problems and disasters that hit Haiti these last months, the people in charge would be more conscious of our needs and what would work best for Haiti.

    But once again – if the elections on Nov 28 serve as any indication – we are to be disappointed. Once again they pulled Haiti back on the road of uncertainty.  While this might seem predictable, the majority of Haitians really want change and are ready to work for it. These elections were a big chance for us to prove that we are still a proud people.  It was our chance to prove that we have learned from the past and that we don’t want to restart doing the same mistakes. Unfortunately, we find ourselves in the same cycle of selfishness, greed and lack of consciousness, which perpetuates the same old power struggle.

    Today, December 7th, the CEP (Election council) will publish the results. The tension is very high in Port-au-Prince. The stress and fear of violence is increasing. The intimidation has started with gunshots last night and tires burning in Port-au-Prince. Regardless of the result, we will never find the peace that my young friends and I were expecting.  I am trying not to be pessimistic, but it’s a fact.  I am trying not to be angry, but my anger is overloaded. My shame of what they are making of the country is terrible.  I hoped that this election would support my peace of mind and that I would start really thinking about a bright future for my kids.  What I forgot was that the problem isn’t solvable by the elections – the problem is Haitians themselves. Our mentality is the thing to change. We don’t need any election for that.  We don’t need any money for that. No international observers or advisers are going to change our mentality for the better.

    Now what is going to happen? Today the CEP will publish the results of the last “Masquerade,” and then we’ll move deeper into the crisis.  A lot of my friends are cursing on 2010, saying that this year carries very bad luck for Haiti; earthquake, Hurricane, Cholera and they add the “Masquerade” they call election. But, if it hadn’t been for all those problems, all those disasters and emergency situations, would things be better now?  I DON ‘T THINK SO!  In this exceptional time, we are still fighting each other for power instead of fighting for the best of Haiti – what does that say about our mentality?

    The future of Haiti is uncertain.  It is truly dark.  I implore everyone not to forget Haiti in their thoughts and prayers, but I hope it will go beyond that and into activity – not money, but activity.  Focus on efforts of education and health, and drive your support and enthusiasm with whatever resources you have.

    My fight for the best of Haiti will never stop, and I hope your interest in its improvement is also enduring.  I’ll be 30 years old in two weeks and I don’t want my kids to spend another 30 years in that situation.  It’s my duty to fight and prepare a brighter future for them.  As you can see, i didn’t take the time to remind you of the actual situation here. Because i am pretty sure that the main words that will come to your mouth is: “HAITI AGAIN!”  My young friends and I, organizations like C2C and those focused on educational opportunities are working to make sure that the next big time you’ll pronounce an interjection about Haiti it will be happily: “HAITI FINALLY!”

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  • Happiness and Hopelessness

    When I started reading about the riots in Port-au-Prince this week, the first thing I thought was “finally.” I don’t think that’s totally irrational, so let’s dig into this a little: first of all, I think I felt relieved to see the world working and people reacting to stressors exactly like I anticipated they would. Previously, one of the things I found most unsettling about the situation in Port-au-Prince was the relative stability. The estimated 1.3 million people living in camps literally have almost nothing: very little government, few sources of income, scare educational opportunities, and often there they don’t even have their health or families. How were people not revolting?

    Certainly, there’s been plenty of small-scale violence in the camps as people became desperate in an uphill battle to survive (I’m thinking about what’s been coined as “survival sex” and the women who have no means of taking care of themselves or their children but to take on multiple “boyfriends” who “provide.” I’m putting a temporary ban on my use of air quotes; I default here when I’m feeling extra acerbic. Also, I don’t at all mean to undervalue the very real sexual violence facing unwitting women. The violence I saw absent was more systemic and manifested in public displays of social discontent.) But the idea that life was so bad and there was so little hope that there wasn’t even an incentive to revolt – i.e. there’s no responsible or empowered apparatus to respond to expressions of displeasure with the status quo – worried me. Hopelessness is not a starting point for reconstruction. It’s a wasteland. That people are acting out now, despite how disruptive violence can be to health delivery and the democratic process, suggests that they think someone’s listening and that there is a limit to what they can tolerate.

    The idea behind a new book by Derek Bok (The Politics of Happiness: What Government Can Learn from the New Research on Well-Being) is that we’re starting to understand what makes people happy and that some of it is malleable by government action. One of the key ideas is that better living standards bring only temporary improvements in happiness. After a while, people are about as happy or unhappy as they always have been. People do not anticipate that this will happen, so are constantly demanding more in the belief that more will make them happier, and are just as constantly disappointed. It seems that people feel their happiness more lastingly increase when it’s evaluated relative to other people around them. Recently, there was an interesting conversation on Huffington Post’s “Impact” blog about whether or not the developed world was imposing its standards of success and happiness on communities for whom these levels flew off their charts; basically, the idea that happiness and success valuation are calibrated to each environment, resource availability and opportunities. Maybe happiness really is just relative. But that’s a slippery slope.

    What worried me about the stability from pre-cholera Haiti was that people seemed anemic and completely beaten down by the limitations of their environment. I know the riots aren’t good. Obviously. But on a purely intellectual level, it gives me hope that they know they want better, that happiness can be something more than survival. Protest seems to be the most reasonable response to the situation. I may be trying too hard to find a silver lining and I’m sure that to some this will read like a stretch. Either way, here’s hoping it cools down in time for the elections on November 28.

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  • Simulating Disaster

    I am officially convinced that there is nothing we can’t virtually simulate. For anyone who wants a finger on the pulse of everything that’s interesting and worth talking about, bookmark good.is. As an example of what they’re working on, check out Inside Disaster, an interactive educational website about the Haiti earthquake and humanitarian work. When you get to the site, read about what they’re doing and then scroll down on the homepage til you see the button, “Survive. Report. Save Lives. Go Inside the Haiti Earthquake.” Then it’s like you’ve been vacuum-sucked through a wormhole and back to reading “choose your own adventure” books, only this time they’re virtual and animated and you’re seeing and hearing the repercussions of your decisions as either a survivor, journalist or humanitarian aid worker in Port-au-Prince on January 12, 2010.

    The simulation walks you through the critical hours after the earthquake, the decisions that each group of people faced, and the horrific images that became their world and that we saw on the front page of every print news publication for days afterward. The site’s not a total downer, I promise – mostly, it’s just incredibly interesting. It’s certainly graphic, but it’s main – and in many ways unprecedented – accomplishment is bridging not only geographical but experiential divides, and that’s an extraordinary proposition. Certainly, there’s no amount of virtual exposure that will ever get you or I anywhere near the real emotional, mental and physiological experience, but this is the closest we’ll ever get to empathy and I think it’s an exceptional stride.

    Additionally, the site accompanies a three-part documentary that follows the Red Cross’ response to the disaster. Insidedisaster.com says of themselves,

    The goal of the site is to help users explore the complexities of humanitarian work in the 21st century, as well as the specific challenges and experiences that arose from the aftermath of the Haiti quake.

    Like I said, I actually think it does more than this. In fact, I think the primary objective is a bit mislabeled – this doesn’t touch on a lot of what humanitarian work is: in short, a lot less exciting, efficient, and impactful than the images in the simulation. But now I’m digressing. Point is, this project offers an incredible look at the immediate aftermath of earthquake and has been skillfully put together. Spend some time with it, and let them know what you think.

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  • A Quiet Opening

    This is our fourth operational day, which after a year of planning, feels huge. Liz and I were joking last week that we’ve been throwing “launch” parties for the pilot clinic for about a year (see: C2C at the Institute of Contemporary Art, November 16, 2009), and last week the clinic opened with neither pomp nor circumstance. Truth be told, we’d been working with ICC/Grace Children’s and MSH on an inauguration event to celebrate the resurgence of the hospital as a fully functional healthcare provider in Port-au-Prince. The invitation list included several heads of Haitian ministries (e.g. of health, foreign affairs, finance) and the entire diplomatic corps. Unfortunately, John Steinbeck might as well have coined the phrase “the best laid schemes of mice and men go oft awry” specifically for Port-au-Prince, and after a cholera outbreak and promises of Hurricane Tomas’ deluge, the ceremony was called off. And so the C2C clinic opened quietly. But hey – I’ll take an open clinic any way it wants to come.

    We’ve so far seen a daily average of about forty-five women and their babies, and reports from C2C’s Project Coordinator, Handy Tibert, at Grace Children’s Hospital suggest that everyone’s adapting to the space very well, and vice versa. The clinic was committed as maternal care center, and is staffed by two gynecologists, a midwife and two nurses. The pharmacy space should be fully functional by the end of today and the head laboratory technician continues to transition services into the C2C lab. This is all coordinated in conjunction with the C2C program staff but decisions are made and “actioned” by the leadership of Grace Children’s Hospital. This partnership relationship has been interesting. It’s new for GCH to have a partner as hands-on as C2C: the way we explain ourselves seems almost entirely novel in this environment – we aren’t donors, we’re partners; we don’t do anything for GCH, rather we do everything with them. This isn’t a typical aid relationship, but then again, we aren’t your typical aid organization.

    C2C is committed to expanding access to critical primary care for maternal and pediatric populations, and the clinic is our vehicle. However, we don’t believe it’s enough to provide “access” simply via the facility. We don’t drop a clinic down, dust off our hands, and say “you’re welcome.” Far from it. In fact, having been in the trenches the past few months, I’d actually say that it isn’t until we drop a clinic that the real work begins. Once the clinic is set up and we begin evaluating the systems it absorbs (e.g. medical record keeping, pharmaceutical inventory management, efficiency/comprehensiveness of lab diagnostics), we start making recommendations for improvements. C2C’s entire bent is monitoring and evaluating the quality of the services patients receive at our facilities. This may only be our pilot, but eventually we want the C2C moniker branded with quality standards – marketing both to patient and partner NGO populations.

    We’re in the early, early stages of second site development, and making certain that the emphasis we put on being hands-on around quality assurance is front and center in our preliminary conversations. There’s a sweet spot between micromanaging and donating, and we’re honing in on it. In the meanwhile, check out a few photos taken by Handy’s phone. Not great quality, and we’ll have to get him to take a break from setting up the lab to capture a few real shots.

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  • C2C Opens Clinic, Cancels Trip

    In response to news of Hurricane Tomas, we’ve received a number of inquiries about the safety of C2C’s President and Chairman of the Board, who had planned to be in Port-au-Prince this week to monitor the newly open clinic (a clinic update to follow). I want to thank everyone for their concern – late Tuesday night the trip was canceled, so Liz and Keith are safely in Massachusetts.

    The 1.3 million people virtually trapped in tent camps in Port-au-Prince, however, are significantly less-safe. Yesterday, the Haitian government made what some (I) might call an absurd public announcement to evacuate tent shelters and find secure housing. I mean no disrespect by this, but if it had been possible, wouldn’t many people have left the IDP camps months ago? I mean, it’s almost insulting, “We haven’t been able to provide an alternative, but we’ve figured out that tents aren’t a good long-term or hurricane-term solution and we advise that you get out of dodge.” Every man for himself, eh?

    Because of the city’s poor drainage, streets strewn with rubble, and lack of trees or vegetation, flash floods could hit and rush through the dense tent camps. Also, cholera is a water-borne bacterial disease: poor drainage and sanitation plus a deluge of rain (estimated between 10″-15″) will complicate efforts to control the spread of the disease.

    In sum, Liz and Keith have postponed their trip, and Haitians: look for high ground. A quick note on this: shipping containers make excellent housing structures. Check out Haiti Green Home.

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  • Voodoo and Modernity

    Last week, C2C President Liz Sheehan and I were down in Port-au-Prince for meetings with partners at MSH, AmeriCares, and Grace Children’s Hospital. We’re rounding the bend of this marathon quest to open the first clinic, and with patients only a few days away – and an inauguration celebration planned for November 4th with guests including US Ambassador Kenneth Merten – we wanted to make sure everything was geared up.

    Per usual, this was a great trip. Given all the back and forth we’ve been doing the past few months, I’m always pleased to see the lessons from one trip building upon the last. Each week I’m in Haiti I discover some new layer of complexity that temporarily confuses my Haitian world order until suddenly it snaps the landscape into focus and everything starts making a little more sense. For example, last week I was writing up patient exit surveys so that we can start digging at the heart of the “qualitative experience” in the C2C clinic, and one of my questions is “where else do you go for health information/care” and two of the options are “dokte fey” and “hougan”: an herbalist and male voodoo priest. Speculating about the frequency with which we’ll see either of those two answers pop up, I started talking to Handy Tibert, C2C’s Project Coordinator in Port-au-Prince, about Voodoo, which I’d previously associated with dolls and baby-eating ousted despots (See: Jean-Bertrand Aristide). This is a bit of what I learned (amplified by the incontrovertible source, Wikipedia):

    Voodoo is everywhere. Haitians say that their country is about 80% Catholic, 20% Protestant and 100% Voodoo. Haitian voodoo’s what’s known as a syncretic religion: a religion that sought to reconcile opposing truths and faiths simply by combining them. Ask a Haitian for a photo of the voodoo lwa (deity) “Black Danbala” and she’ll show you a man I would call Moses. Ask for St. Peter and she’ll show you Legba. This makes sense: most Haitians’ ancestors were Africans brought to Hispanola with their own beliefs and were forced to adopt the Roman Catholicism of their slavers. The human goal of survival begets compromise; ergo Haitian Voodoo.

    My interest with Voodoo is its pervasiveness. Everyone believes in its power; and some of it’s pretty dark. But mostly, it teaches people to think twice before being evil (again, except if you’re Aristide). Also, according to Handy, the person who’s right always wins the day; you’re only vulnerable if you’ve actually wronged someone. I mean, isn’t that the Catholic mantra? Religion’s a fascinating force, and I’m always curious about how it effects people’s perceptions of health and personal efficacy around its maintenance.

    I worked in a community in Mozambique last year where some Christian missionaries were teaching poor Mozambicans that deep faith would cure their blindness, malaria, hunger, handicaps, etc. I wonder what voodoo’s panacea is? It’s no wonder that alternative, faith-based “medicines” enter communities lacking access to “Western” medical services with extraordinary power. So actually, I suppose what I’m curious about is how to get the two to work together. In communities where we start seeing the introduction of more modern care (I don’t know if that or Western are the terms I want to use here. Not concerned about being PC but accuracy…) how can we involve traditional healers in a way that’s respectful of the clout they have to generate support for modern interventions?

    I’m not sure this will be something we see much of in Port-au-Prince, where modern medicine has an ample track record, and I need to do a lot more research into what Mambos and Hougans (female and male voodoo priests) actually teach about the cause and consequence of illness. Anyway, through these patient experience surveys, it will be interesting to learn about how they synthesize recommendations from traditional healers with the care they receive from C2C’s clinic.

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