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…

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economic development

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

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teams

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Smiling Graduates

Trade School Skills

WHY ARE THESE WOMEN SMILING?

They have just completed a three-year intensive course of study at the Women’s Trade School in Terre Blanche.

Among other things, this includes learning to sew with a machine and by hand. And while this may sound like a not-too-difficult task, many of these women have never had a pair of scissors in their hands.

Additionally, they learn to design and make patterns, cook nutritious meals, care for themselves and small children, and decorate and host formal events like wedding receptions. Proper manners and techniques such as getting grease out of a mechanic’s clothing are also part of their curriculum.

The final testing to pass the course and receive a national certificate takes five days because it involves writing and practical testing.

WHAT IS UNIQUE ABOUT THIS CLASS?

The most recent graduating class had some of the oldest women to complete the Trade School in Terre Blanche. Two women were in their 50’s, and one of these women (age 56) has seven children and 16 grandchildren. Imagine the impact she will have on her family – to see a Haitian woman go back to school for three years and continue to learn!

WHAT WAS THEIR GRADUATION GIFT?

Twenty women graduated in this class and each graduate received their own tool for life – a treadle sewing machine. This was made possible by the generosity of the partners (donors) of Haiti Foundation of Hope. Thank you!

WHAT IS NEXT FOR THESE WOMEN?

Many people ask if these women will have employment. Looking around the schoolyard in Terre Blanche, one can see job opportunities locally. There are nearly 1,000 students in the Terre Blanche school (pre-school to secondary school) and they all need uniforms. Students all over Haiti wear uniforms to school.

Your donations to Haiti Foundation of Hope make it possible for these young students to have fabric but parents must pay for the uniforms to be sewn. And these trade school graduates are just the people to help.

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…

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economic development

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

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teams

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

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Graduating with Style

We celebrated another group of graduates from the Women’s Trade School last month in Terre Blanche. Over the past 10 years, 46 women have completed the three-year program.

One of our volunteer medical teams was in Terre Blanche to attend the ceremony and celebrate with the graduates and their families and friends.

During their studies, the students learned skills such as sewing (they made their graduation gowns), childhood development, cooking and etiquette.

After passing a national exam, the graduates now have a certificate and skills that will help them care for and support their families.

One of the students who is still in the program is Brezil Ann Rose. She started a trade school program 31 years ago but never finished because she was busy raising her children.

One day, she was passing through Terre Blanche and a friend told her about the Women’s Trade School, in which the friend was enrolled. Brezil wasted no time getting herself enrolled and for the first time in almost three decades it looks like she might graduate from a trade school after all.

Brezil said that while she plans to sell some of the items she’ll make after graduating, a large reason she attends the trade school is to provide a better life for her family.

Sarah Jeglum, HFH team member, contributed to this article.

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…

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economic development

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

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teams

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

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The Things I Saw

By Carrie Petersen, team member just returned home from Haiti:

Translator Jean and volunteer Molly evaluate a patient at the eye clinic.

The plan was to blog my way through a week of volunteering in Haiti. But life in Haiti requires flexibility, and this past week, that meant living without the internet. I was able to post one update before the internet came to a grinding halt.

I made a couple more attempts to connect to the world wide web before I shut it all down and breathed a sigh of relief. While it meant that I couldn’t do any online work for Haiti Foundation of Hope, the broken internet also meant that I had an entire week of no personal or work emails, no instant messages, no news alerts, and no social media.

It meant that I had one whole week to be present. To see the three dimensional world around me. To sit without staring at a screen. And this is what I saw:

Nine graduates receiving their certificates after three years of training at the women’s trade school.

A village celebrating International Women’s Day with singing, dancing, laughter and encouragement.

Volunteers on their first trip to Haiti stepping up to teach English lessons all on their own.

A nurse making a house call to treat a toddler whose armed was burned by hot food.

Patients who could see for the first time in years after successful cataract surgery.

A graduate of the women's trade school receives her certificate.

A one-year-old girl weighing only 13 pounds but immensely loved by her father who brought her to the clinic.

Children eating healthy school lunches.

Medical staff missing out on sleep to treat patients throughout the night.

Translators whose care for the patients at the clinic was beyond measure.

Tears of gratitude.

Students studying physics into the night under the only light in the school courtyard.

Mothers of malnourished children learning from their neighbor how to cook healthy meals.

I saw love.

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…

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economic development

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

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teams

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

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The First 48 Hours

By Carrie Petersen, team member currently in Haiti:

The first 48 hours in Haiti:

I’ve been to Terre Blanche more than half a dozen times. But I can’t remember the last time I saw so much dust. Terre Blanche, the name of the village where we’ll be working this week, translates to “white earth.” Everything here – trees, rocks, houses, even pigs along the roadside – have the same dull dusty color. There are no crops. It’s been too dry. The wind is blowing, which provides relief from the hot temperatures but is also the culprit for the layer of dust surrounding us.

The bright spots in the village are the smiles on people’s faces and the turquoise paint that accents the clinic building. Haiti Foundation of Hope has been working with community members to test a drip irrigation system.

The test garden is behind the clinic and the results have been nothing short of amazing. There are papaya and banana trees, tomatoes, watermelon and okra. HFH brought down 25 drip irrigation systems to share with community members. Once the training is complete and the systems are distributed, we hope gardens will come to life in this often dry land.

Clinic hasn’t started but we’ve already had two patients. The first was an elderly woman with stomach pains who arrived during the night. A handful of team members, who had a sleepless red-eye flight the night before, took turns during the night to treat her. By morning, the decision was made to drive her to a hospital for further treatment.

The second patient was a young girl in need of stitches on her knee. You won’t see more love from a team than when a screaming child faces a doctor with a needle. Once patched up, she was on her way home in her dad’s arms.

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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The Best is Love

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,…

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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Impact of Micro-Loans

By Ron Kinley, HFH board member

Dieucilien, chairman of the Micro-loan Committee, and his new motorcycle used for traveling to meet with small business owners.

One of the ways that Haiti Foundation of Hope supports people living in rural northern Haiti is through a micro-loan program and I am happy to report that the total amount now being used for these micro-loans is more than $23,000.

A fun detail from my last trip to Haiti is something that Pastor Delamy, one of our Haitian partners, told us. He was expressing how pleased he was with the impact of the micro-loans in the villages. For example, offerings in the local church have increased as a result of the many small businesses started with micro-loans and the financial lessons the business owners are learning through the micro-loan training.

You can be pleased with the effect your gifts are having in an area that is considered to be the poorest of the poor in Haiti. Your generosity is making it possible for many families to rise out of that situation. It is encouraging to see firsthand how God uses his people to help others. You play a critical role in making a long-term difference in the lives of people who lack basic resources. Thank you for your prayers and gifts.

Above is a picture of Dieucilien, the chairman of our Micro-loan Committee, and his new motorcycle. He is the principal of the elementary school in Dubedou, a village near Terre Blanche. The money to purchase the motorcycle was provided by friends who knew of the need and the value of this “tool” for his work. Motorcycles are a primary means of transportation in Haiti. Dieucilien is now able to travel to the several villages where the micro-loan borrowers live.

You will notice that he does have a helmet and he does wear it. You will also notice how stony the ground is. That is why he purchased an off-road type of bike. Most of the roads in rural Haiti are rocky and rutted and full of large potholes.

Your interest and participation in this work is greatly appreciated. We covet your ongoing prayers for the multiple projects that are part of Haiti Foundation of Hope. You can donate online to the micro-loan program and give hope to small business owners in Haiti.

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,…

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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Raising Hope: Snapshots

The Haiti Foundation of Hope board members and friends returned from eight days in Terre Blanche. Since HFH’s inception in 2005, there have been many changes in this remote area. In recent years the activities here have focused on four major areas:

The HFH board determined it was time for all members to be up to speed with the current activities in each program in Terre Blanche as we plan for the future. To assist the board in this endeavor, three guests were invited to join the board with expertise in agriculture, business and fundraising. Time was taken to listen as well as to ask questions of our Haitian partners and then pray together. Much was learned and encouragement was shared both ways.

The team.

Snapshots of what we did:

Cared for a severely burned baby.

Team member and baby.

Observed the training of hand washing, which is leading to improved health.

Saw the over-crowding in the secondary school classrooms. Solutions need to be discussed.

A few team members worked with Haitians to install a solar pump for the new well next to the clinic. For many years water for the compound was carried by hand from a well ¼ mile downhill. Now there is water in the kitchen, drinking water for the 1,000 students, hand washing water, water in the clinic, water for the employees and the cisterns are full. There is much joy around the compound!

With all this new information, the work of planning for the future begins.  Thank you for your support during this exciting and rewarding time!

Linda and Joe Markee, October 2013 team members

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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Raising Hope: Micro-loans

Every trip to Haiti is exciting and gratifying.  The gratifying part is learning so much each time.  The micro-loan program is thriving with the use of the new training materials put into use two years ago.  It is paying dividends in more successful small businesses and greatly improved repayments.

I sat in on a loan session while visiting last month. I saw that each member of an accountability group cosigns each loan.  Whoever is getting a loan signs an agreement showing all the details of the loan and each of the other four members of the small group also signs the loan agreement.  This process greatly strengthens the sense of responsibility of everyone involved.  All of you who have contributed to this micro-loan fund can feel very confident in the successful use of your gifts that make these loans possible.

We are getting close to the $7,500 target for a new round of loans.  We only need another $935 to achieve the goal.  Thank you for your support.  The borrowers in Terre Blanche, Dubedou and Finel are very grateful for the opportunity you have given them to  work towards self-sufficiency.

Ron Kinley, October 2013 team member

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,…

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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Raising Hope: School Books

It costs about $4,000 each year to ensure students at the school in Terre Blanche have the textbooks they need. This is a cost that is beyond the resources of the students’ families. It’s through the generosity of supporters like you that these kids have the basic tools for learning.

Dave Zollner, October 2013 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…

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Raising Hope: Gratitude

It has been three weeks since our return from Haiti and not a day has passed that I have not given thought to the many experiences from the trip.

The most powerful memories for me were of spending time with our Haitian partners talking and learning from one another. Even though this was my fifth trip to Haiti, I felt as though this visit was the most unique because it allowed for more time to simply be together and deepen our relationships.

During our time in Haiti we also had the opportunity to spend time with the school children and see how healthy they are as a result of the school lunch program. It is so heartwarming to watch them partake of the food with such gratitude and joy.

I want to offer my sincere thanks to those who chose to give to this part of the “Raising Hope” campaign. Your generous contributions are literally saving lives and contributing to a more healthy and vibrant future generation in Haiti.

With gratitude,

Larry Moore, October 2013 team member and HFH Board Chairman

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