education

We fund primary school education, supplement staff salaries, subsidize secondary education, and…

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clinic

We support a permanent medical clinic, collaborate on a clean water project,…

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community health

We empower the communities we support to increase their education, health, and…

Learn More

economic development

We provide adult education, resources and local employment to support self-sufficiency.

Learn More

teams

Throughout the year we send medical teams to rural Northern Haiti to…

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Health Progress

useMothers in Terre Blanche gather regularly to learn about healthy eating habits and disease prevention for their children. Community volunteers teach lessons, demonstrate nutritious cooking, and provide encouragement.

Some of these activities are part of the Community Health Program, a group of community volunteers serving their neighbors and friends.

Over the past six months, much progress has been made in the area of community health for both children and adults.

PNEUMONIA

The rate of pneumonia in all ages has decreased from 19.4 to 14 percent. Children with pneumonia who received antibiotics increased from 79 to 89 percent.

TUBERCULOSIS

Ninety-four percent of patients who were suspected of having TB accepted a referral to get tested. Community education has increased people’s understanding of the symptoms of TB and how it is transmitted. More people are willing to visit friends and family members suffering from TB.

HIV

The number of mothers who understand the risk of transmitting HIV during pregnancy and delivery is now more than 83 percent. And 88 percent of mothers have had an HIV test. Throughout the community, 95 percent of people have heard about HIV prevention.

MALNUTRITION

Malnutrition among children is down from 28 to 23 percent with less than 2 percent of children being severely underweight.

BIRTHS

Seventy-one percent of births are attended by a clinic provider. This is remarkable for a community such as Terre Blanche.

THANK YOU

Thank you for supporting the Community Health Program, which is mobilizing, training and supporting local volunteers. Your financial help makes this program possible and ensures volunteers receive training for the work they do.

education

We fund primary school education, supplement staff salaries, subsidize secondary education, and…

Learn More

clinic

We support a permanent medical clinic, collaborate on a clean water project,…

Learn More

community health

We empower the communities we support to increase their education, health, and…

Learn More

economic development

We provide adult education, resources and local employment to support self-sufficiency.

Learn More

teams

Throughout the year we send medical teams to rural Northern Haiti to…

Learn More

New Gift Catalog

Gift CatalogIt’s that time of year again when we start thinking about gifts for friends and family. Our new Gift Catalog has been published and you can find it online. The catalog can be used to purchase gifts or make a year-end donation to the ongoing work in Haiti.

You can also download a print version of the Gift Catalog and Order Form.

Donations made through the Gift Catalog support teachers, students, medical programs, women’s trade school, and food for the community. Any donation amount makes a difference.

education

We fund primary school education, supplement staff salaries, subsidize secondary education, and…

Learn More

clinic

We support a permanent medical clinic, collaborate on a clean water project,…

Learn More

community health

We empower the communities we support to increase their education, health, and…

Learn More

economic development

We provide adult education, resources and local employment to support self-sufficiency.

Learn More

teams

Throughout the year we send medical teams to rural Northern Haiti to…

Learn More

Changes Over the Years

Linda2 12-09Celebrating our 10-year anniversary has given us a chance to reflect on the changes in Terre Blanche and the surrounding areas. It also gives us hope and excitement for the future. Join us for the changes ahead.

HEALTH

10 YEARS AGO, the only health care was provided by visiting medical teams four times a year.

TODAY, the Clinic of Hope is open year-round and staffed by Haitian medical professionals.

Haitian volunteers with the Community Health Program visit neighbors and host events to educate their communities and prevent health problems.

EDUCATION

10 YEARS AGO, the school was growing in size from the original 65 students in 1996.

TODAY, there are over 900 students, including secondary school.

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

10 YEARS AGO, there was no economic development aside from subsistence farming and days at the market.

TODAY, 55 women have graduated from the trade school while dozens of people participate in the micro-loan program.

Drip irrigation is being explored by farmers. Other community members are employed at the clinic and school.

CHURCH

The church has continued to grow, moving into a larger building and providing the community with hope.

education

We fund primary school education, supplement staff salaries, subsidize secondary education, and…

Learn More

clinic

We support a permanent medical clinic, collaborate on a clean water project,…

Learn More

community health

We empower the communities we support to increase their education, health, and…

Learn More

economic development

We provide adult education, resources and local employment to support self-sufficiency.

Learn More

teams

Throughout the year we send medical teams to rural Northern Haiti to…

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Celebration Events

10 YearsOur partners in Haiti, Pastor Delamy and his wife Elvire, are visiting in the Northwest.

They will be here as Haiti Foundation of Hope celebrates 10 years working to meet the physical, emotional and spiritual needs of the people in the improverished and underserved rural communities of northern Haiti.

You’re invited to come and greet Pastor Delamy and Elvire and hear about the many changes in the past 10 years.

When & Where

MONDAY, SEPT. 21
6 to 8 p.m., program at 7 p.m. (light dinner)
Columbia Presbyterian Church
805 SE Columbia Ridge Drive
Vancouver, WA 98664

TUESDAY, SEPT. 22
6 to 8:30 p.m. (light refreshments)
Wix Insurance Agency
8037 SE Stark Street
Portland, OR 97215
Hosted by Carrie Kieselhorst & Janan Markee

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 23
6:30 to 8:30 p.m. (dessert)
Mosaic Church
1832 NE Cesar E Chavez Blvd.
Portland, OR 97212

SUNDAY, SEPT. 27
9 & 10:30 a.m.
Sunday School and Worship
First Baptist Church of Brownsville
27910 Seven Mile Lane
Brownsville, OR 97327

 

education

We fund primary school education, supplement staff salaries, subsidize secondary education, and…

Learn More

clinic

We support a permanent medical clinic, collaborate on a clean water project,…

Learn More

community health

We empower the communities we support to increase their education, health, and…

Learn More

economic development

We provide adult education, resources and local employment to support self-sufficiency.

Learn More

teams

Throughout the year we send medical teams to rural Northern Haiti to…

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We Heart Crazy Friends

heart photo2Written by Katie Thom, HFH board member:

I ♥ my crazy friends.

I ♥ this photo, for so many reasons.

…the bright, contrasting colors.
…the strong, focused gaze of this beautiful Haitian woman.
…the fact that it makes me sit a little straighter and forget my own sore muscles.
…the knowledge that this water is being carried to help feed over 900 school kids each day.

My definition of crazy:

Crazy is the distance that she used to have to walk with that full bucket before we had a working well in the schoolyard.

Crazy is that the original 65 kids who were fed a meal has grown to over 900 kids in the past 10 years.

Crazy is the fact that this team of ‘lunch ladies’ still uses the original corner room of the school to cook for 15x more kids.

Find out more about how you can be one of Terre Blanche’s crazy friends!

education

We fund primary school education, supplement staff salaries, subsidize secondary education, and…

Learn More

clinic

We support a permanent medical clinic, collaborate on a clean water project,…

Learn More

community health

We empower the communities we support to increase their education, health, and…

Learn More

economic development

We provide adult education, resources and local employment to support self-sufficiency.

Learn More

teams

Throughout the year we send medical teams to rural Northern Haiti to…

Learn More

Cafeteria Expansion

In the midst of celebrating 10 years of Haiti Foundation of Hope, we invite you to be a part of the next project. We are currently raising funds to expand the school cafeteria (often referred to as the canteen).

Over the past 10 years, in addition to education, the school in Terre Blanche has provided each student with a lunch. In a place where families struggle to have enough to eat, this ability to provide food each day is beyond words. The student body has outgrown its current cafeteria. Students must wait for dishes to be washed and seats to be emptied before sitting down for their meal. The cooks work without complaint in a hot and primitive kitchen. (We recently introduced a new cooking stove.)

Please consider donating to the cafeteria (canteen) project. Every meal served helps a student grow strong and healthy and stay focused on school work.

Painting of future cafeteria by Artist Lisl Rucket, 2011 team member.

Painting of the future cafeteria by Artist Lisl Rucket, 2011 team member.

education

We fund primary school education, supplement staff salaries, subsidize secondary education, and…

Learn More

clinic

We support a permanent medical clinic, collaborate on a clean water project,…

Learn More

community health

We empower the communities we support to increase their education, health, and…

Learn More

economic development

We provide adult education, resources and local employment to support self-sufficiency.

Learn More

teams

Throughout the year we send medical teams to rural Northern Haiti to…

Learn More

The Scarcity of Water

The water situation in Haiti is desperate. The river in Terre Blanche is completely dry, the second planting of crops have all been lost, and water is scarce. People have heard there is water in the wells at Terre Blanche and they are coming long distances with their donkeys and buckets.

Please pray for rain.

Pastor Delamy says, “We used to spread the light of Christ through the church, clinic, and community health, but now we are spreading light through the wells!”

Recently, about 30 people lined up very early with their buckets and donkeys. Pastor Delamy says he has never seen anything like this. There are four wells in Terre Blanche and we praise the Lord for these!

People lined up at the well outside the church in Terre Blanche.

People lined up at the well outside the church in Terre Blanche.

education

We fund primary school education, supplement staff salaries, subsidize secondary education, and…

Learn More

clinic

We support a permanent medical clinic, collaborate on a clean water project,…

Learn More

community health

We empower the communities we support to increase their education, health, and…

Learn More

economic development

We provide adult education, resources and local employment to support self-sufficiency.

Learn More

teams

Throughout the year we send medical teams to rural Northern Haiti to…

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Vision Come to Life

Written by Beth Sethi, an HFH board member:

Green trees now cover part of school and clinic yard, where there was once only dirt and dust.

Trees now cover part of school and clinic yards, where there was once only dirt and dust.

Prior to the earthquake of 2010, Haiti was no stranger to natural disasters. In the decade leading up to that devastating event, a succession of hurricanes rocked this vulnerable island nation year after year. Following Hurricane Jeanne in 2004, I traveled to Haiti for my work at a Portland-based non-profit. During the week I spent traveling Haiti and visiting various hospitals and clinics, I made a brief 2-hour stop in the village of Terre Blanche. A medical team led by Dr. Joe and Linda Markee (founders of HFH), had recently worked for several weeks in this community. There I met, for the first time, Pastor Delamy Bazilme, now Haiti Foundation of Hope’s partner in Haiti.

Pastor Delamy, my colleague, and I stood in the courtyard of the local church and elementary school, two of the original ministries founded and led by Pastor Delamy. The courtyard was barren, with only dry rocks and a few shrubs. A broken down well pump stood in the middle. The elementary school was serving many students but was cramped with twice as many students per classroom as there were seats. As we looked up into the hills surrounding the school/church compound they were dry, with whatever crops there were flattened by the recent hurricane.

Delamy passionately shared the lofty vision God had given him to build on what he had started. An expanded elementary school. Trees to provide shade and food. A larger church. A secondary school. A working well. A clinic staffed by Haitians to provide medical care. A thriving community of people serving each other and the Lord. A hope for the future. We cried. We prayed together. We encouraged Pastor Delamy to follow his vision, knowing the Lord could make what seemed impossible possible. My colleague and I got in our vehicle and drove away, full of conflicted thoughts: inspired by such a faithful leader but questioning the viability of doing so much with so little.

As it turned out, God had planted the same vision in the hearts of Dr. Joe and Linda Markee. Soon after my time in Haiti Dr. Joe and Linda founded Haiti Foundation of Hope, with the sole purpose to support and encourage Pastor Delamy in his vision. Last year I returned, for the first time in a decade, to Terre Blanche. In that same courtyard I now stood in awe of the expansive trees providing shade and play space for children. From a working well flows clean water. Sitting on a concrete step outside the lunchroom are tippy-taps, large buckets of water children use to wash their hands before they eat, dramatically reducing childhood diarrhea. There is a larger elementary school and a two-story high school – the only high school for many miles. Behind the elementary school stands the clinic, serving thousands of patients yearly and staffed year-round by Haitian providers. What was the small church ten years ago is now the kindergarten and a much larger church has been built a short walk away.

Staff from of the Clinic of Hope look at a newborn during a meeting for mothers at Mme. Mishu's home.

Staff from of the Clinic of Hope look at a newborn during a meeting for mothers at Mme. Mishu’s home.

Walking a short dirt path beyond the church to Mme. Mishu’s home, a local mothers’ group meets twice per week to support one another in raising healthy children, part of the community health program. Behind the clinic I visited the test garden, where a low-tech irrigation drip system has been introduced to local farmers to address irrigation issues. Farmers of those fields in the hills buy seeds with loans from a micro-loan program. And that thriving, caring community of people serving the Lord and each other that Delamy had dreamed of.

The road surrounding the school/clinic compound had just been paved with rocks at the initiative of a local student leadership group – funded and implemented fully by the students. The students’ work is proof that the vision God gave Delamy, the Markees, and all of us involved with Haiti Foundation of Hope is shared by the next generation of local leaders. It was an honor to pray with Pastor Delamy ten years ago and it was an honor to return a decade later and marvel at what God has done. Happy anniversary Haiti Foundation of Hope!

“Now to Him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to His power that is at work within us” Ephesians 3:20

education

We fund primary school education, supplement staff salaries, subsidize secondary education, and…

Learn More

clinic

We support a permanent medical clinic, collaborate on a clean water project,…

Learn More

community health

We empower the communities we support to increase their education, health, and…

Learn More

economic development

We provide adult education, resources and local employment to support self-sufficiency.

Learn More

teams

Throughout the year we send medical teams to rural Northern Haiti to…

Learn More

Micro-Loans, Drip Irrigation and More

Written by Ron Kinley, a member of the June team and an HFH board member:

I have just returned from another successful trip to Haiti. As always it was a wonderful adventure. I was able to see several gardens that resulted from the agriculture and drip irrigation training that took place in April. Seeds are expensive to obtain in Haiti so another team member brought in packets of seeds provided by Hope Seeds. Each packet contains seeds for 10 different vegetables – all specific to the climate in Haiti. I gave packets to three individuals. My prayer is that each will be successful using the drip irrigation kits in growing their gardens. It will involve carrying 5-gallon buckets of water twice a day from a hand pump located some distance away.

From left: Libonet with seed packets, interpreter Kerly, Ron, Haitian agronomist John Robert, and HFH board member Steve Bressler.

Making garden notes: (from left) Libonet with seed packets, interpreter Kerly, Ron, Haitian agronomist John Robert, and HFH board member Steve Bressler.

During the 10-day visit we had three micro-loan meetings. The first was a gathering of borrowers telling their stories. That was inspiring. Many are moving up the economic ladder by doing more creative businesses resulting in better profits. In Creole the term for profit is benefit. One man bought a gas powered generator with an inverter to recharge cell phones. Another woman buys used clothing that she resizes to fit Haitians. Another is now making liquid laundry soap and shampoo. An interesting comment from a local leader is how Haitians see livestock as a savings account. Buying an animal to raise and increase its value is also a safer way to preserve money than hiding it somewhere at home.

Micro-loan committee meeting.

Micro-loan committee meeting.

I am encouraged that the micro-loan committee is performing its role effectively. When I asked about any loan defaults they told me how they are continuing to follow up on the few delinquent loans – 10 out of 157 or 93.5% repayment rate. This is right in line with worldwide micro-loan experience. There are 45 people waiting for a loan but unable to receive one due to the limited amount of money available. When I asked about challenges they are facing as a committee the number one response was having to limit the size of loans in order to serve more borrowers. Based on the encouraging progress and good management by the local committee I believe it is important to raise an additional $20,000 for new loans. That would enable not only additional loans for those not yet served but also provide for larger loans for those who are growing their businesses.

If you believe like I do that this is an effective method of lifting Haitians out of dire poverty I hope you will think seriously about the part you could play in helping Haitians help themselves.

Your part in this work is what makes it all possible.  I am greatly heartened by the results we are seeing and believe God is using your prayers and gifts to improve lives and to enrich us as we allow Him to use us for his purposes. Thank you for being a part of this vital work.

Donate to Economic Development.

 

education

We fund primary school education, supplement staff salaries, subsidize secondary education, and…

Learn More

clinic

We support a permanent medical clinic, collaborate on a clean water project,…

Learn More

community health

We empower the communities we support to increase their education, health, and…

Learn More

economic development

We provide adult education, resources and local employment to support self-sufficiency.

Learn More

teams

Throughout the year we send medical teams to rural Northern Haiti to…

Learn More

Student Test Results Are In

IMG_1178In Haiti, at the end of each school year, students completing 6th and 12th grades take national exams. The results are in for our Terre Blanche students:

We are so proud of these motivated and hard-working students! We are thankful for a staff of dedicated and caring teachers and administrators who encourage and educate these students.

We also thank you for supporting the school and making education a reality for the children in Terre Blanche. These children are the first generation to go to school in this community.

Almost 1,000 students attend pre-kindergarten, primary and secondary school. Every student receives a lunch, which for many is their only meal of the day.

Consider giving a financial donation to support the students, teachers and school in Terre Blanche. Just $15 per month (pre-k and primary) and $25 per month (secondary) will provide an education. And what a joy to see the results!

Classroom merge

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