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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Team Reports

The February and March medical teams have returned home after spending time at the Clinic of Hope and workingalongside Haitian team members. Here are some highlights:

Final thoughts… The clinic work was extremely difficult for Haitian and American team members. Everyone agreed that we are seeing more difficult cases. Also, Terre Blanche is the driest anyone can remember. Please pray for rain so the spring crops can be planted and grow till harvest.

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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October Team Report

Clinic workers distribute food.

Our October team is back home after a busy 10 days in Haiti. Here are some highlights from their time working at the Clinic of Hope in Terre Blanche:

A final note from the team leaders: As usual, God blessed us with a very capable, hard-working medical team. The rapid development of partnership between the Haitians and the team, within a short period of 10 days, is truly a miracle that can only be appreciated when observed on site. The testimonials from both Haitians and Americans confirm how effectively this relationship has been in the past as well as during this October 2012. And yet, there is much that needs to be done. Although Sandy produced only minimal damage to the school and clinic compound, we need much help to deal with the major recurring problem of poor crops, drought, chronic hunger and starvation. Please pray for the Haiti Foundation of Hope board as it seeks solutions.

Haitian and American 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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Teams to Haiti

A volunteer medical team will travel later this month to Terre Blanche to work alongside Haitian workers at the Clinic of Hope. Teams in February and March saw over 2,000 patients, performed more than 50 minor surgeries, observed and managed eight newborn deliveries, and distributed beans and rice to every patient, with an extra amount of food for the poorest.

Learn more about teams to 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,…

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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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Clinic Annex is Complete

The clinic annex is completed and has a fresh coat of paint. The teams earlier this year worked to set up the inside and participated in a dedication service.

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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Returning Home

The October team to Haiti is back and team members are reflecting on their time working at the Clinic of Hope. Here are some highlights of the trip, written by the team leaders, Dr. Joe and Linda Markee:

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.

Learn More

teams

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

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Medical Conference

The medical conference hosted by the Haiti Foundation of Hope team working in Haiti this month was like rain for parched land, said one of the doctors who attended.

The one-day conference was organized by Haitian and American team members and featured presentations on pneumonia, skin infections, diarrhea, eye problems and anemia. The presentations were done by physicians from the Northwest and an ophthalmologist from Colorado.

Twenty-eight medical professionals, including doctors and nurses, attended the conference, which was held at the Clinic of Hope.

The conference was intended to encourage medical professionals in Haiti and give them additional information to help them in their work. This was the second medical conference held at the Clinic of Hope and more are being planned for the future.

Participants at the medical conference listen to Dr. Janan Markee.

Preparing food for the conference.

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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One Year and Nine Months Ago

Written by Carrie Petersen, a member of the medical team working in Haiti:

We arrived safely in Haiti today. After traveling for more than 20 hours, we ate a hearty meal and are now resting for tomorrow.

On the drive to our final destination today, we took a right turn onto a road that I’d never noticed before. We drove about 200 yards uphill to a spot where the ground leveled off. The ground was covered with small rocks, and green bushes were taking over the land. It was a memorial for the victims of the earthquake that struck Haiti on January 12, 2010. On that spot, under those rocks, thousands of earthquake victims had been buried – buried in one mass grave and without any markers. At the time it had been a burial of necessity.

Sometime after the earthquake and the burial, a memorial appeared on the site. There are no road signs or large statutes or even a permanent marker. But the visitor who turns down the unsuspecting road will see hundreds of black wooden crosses about two feet tall placed among the rocks. Some of the crosses are standing but most have fallen down – I suppose they have been knocked down by wind and rain and time. Among the crosses are wreathes and higher up on the hill stands a large cross draped with purple cloth.

I don’t know who is responsible for the memorial. I only know that it was a privilege to visit there today. To remember all of the lives that were lost one year and nine months ago today.

Before loading into the vehicles to continue our journey, we stopped to say a prayer. To summarize our prayer, which was all that needed to be said: God be with the survivors.

Postscript: Almost two years later, the effects of the earthquake are still visible here in Haiti. Today it was seen in a man with one leg standing on the side of the road in Port-au-Prince, a crumpled building that has yet to be rebuilt, and the thousands of makeshift shelters that have become homes to the homeless.

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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Fears Dissolve into Feeling at Home

Written by Lisl Ruckert, a member of the June 2011 team, and published in the Brownsville (Ore.) Times:

The country of Haiti has always been a place that is close to my heart, though my first opportunity to go there happened just two months ago. My dad has gone there on medical mission trips almost every year since before I was born. I grew up seeing pictures of the people and hearing stories about patients in the village clinic. I heard about how the Haitians, who live in extreme poverty, have a joy about them even in their harsh circumstances.

But I had never seen any of these things firsthand until I was finally able to go myself in June, five days after my graduation from high school. And what a perfect way to end that chapter of my life and move to a whole new chapter.

I was unsure about what lay ahead of me in the ten days I would be in Haiti. I neglected to study any Creole (the Haitian language) before the trip, and once I finally arrived in Haiti with our team I had my doubts about whether I should be there at all. Not only would I be unable to communicate, but I had no medical skills.

I knew I would be extremely out of my comfort zone in numerous ways. As we drove north from Port-au-Prince to Terre Blanche, the mountain village where the clinic is located, I felt very small and useless. I looked into the eyes of people as we drove by, and they looked at me, and I felt very far away. There was nothing I could do to make a difference in their lives. At least, not by myself.

As the first few days came and went, however, my fears dissolved and I learned to look less to myself and more towards the people whom I came to serve. The first fear, lack of communication, was easily solved by a wonderful group of translators in the clinic. I also learned that more can be said through a silent smile or a loving touch than through my few broken Creole phrases. I had many uncertainties about working in a medical clinic as well, but I had some of the best experiences of my life with the patients.

To give a little background, Haiti Foundation of Hope (which partners with Medical Teams International) sends teams to Terre Blanche two or three times a year. The team members, some of them doctors and nurses, work in the clinic during the week. The week I was there we saw around 1,200 Haitian patients. Each patient receives their prescription from a doctor along with a bag of rice and beans. I worked as an aide for various doctors when I worked in the clinic, and I saw amazing things each day. I was able to witness two births of beautiful and healthy babies. Both mothers planned to walk home about three hours after giving birth! I also had the opportunity to help with ultrasounds, and I even got to use it myself on patients the last day. I saw some children who were so off the charts malnourished that they looked half their age.

But the highlight of my work in the clinic was something that I would have never believed I would enjoy. An elderly man came in with an infected wound on the bottom of his foot. The flesh was open and the wound went down pretty deep. I was assigned to take him outside to clean and bandage the wound. Normally something like this would turn my stomach, but all I felt was joy at being able to help this old man. As I washed his foot he smiled at me, and I knew that my doubts about not being able to help these people were groundless, and that by showing the love of God, who Himself washed people’s feet, was what I was here to do.

The Haitians, who wear their hearts on their sleeves and their hardship on their faces, are said to be a people without hope. And the country of Haiti is certainly in need of hope. But I also saw the hope that Haitians carry with them: longsuffering, patience, and a God-given joy. As a result, I changed from feeling separated from the Haitians, to feeling like they were a long lost family and that I was at home.

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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Hope Enough for All

By Peter Daniel, June 2011 team

Here at Haiti Foundation of Hope, I feel like I’m part of a family. The solidarity espoused by Haitian and American leadership is remarkable.

My first visit was in February of 2008: curious about what was going on in Terre Blanche, I had come to visit for two days but ended up staying a full week translating for a medical team.

When it became possible to join another team this summer, I leaped at the opportunity. My first-year medical school training was itching for context and clinical application, and, boy, did I get my fair share!

The experience deepened my sense of vocation and reminded me why I am privileged to be in medical school. It’s tiring, but hearing Ji-ji quietly tell mom, “li gou,” or “it tastes good,” while receiving a 5 mL/min oral rehydration treatment for cholera … well, it made me smile.

Haiti Foundation of Hope quotes, “Lespwa fe viv,” a Haitian proverb that loosely translates, “Hope gives life.” In God’s economy, hope is a valuable currency. It appreciates much, and though easily shared it is not easily spent.

I go to Terre Blanche to be and to hold God’s hands. I go to heal and be healed, to be reminded that beneath my seeming self- sufficiency, I guard spiritual vulnerabilities not unlike the physical hardships of my Haitian brothers and sisters. In Terre Blanche, peoples’ names sound different and safe because God, who is love, is at work. Truly I tell you, there is hope enough for us all.

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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Team Arrives Safely

Our June medical team has arrived safely in Haiti, where they will be working at the Clinic of Hope, treating patients alongside Haitian clinic staff. Today, the team set up clinic and began seeing patients. Team members will visit a local church on Sunday.

Thank you to everyone who is providing team support from home. Please continue to keep the team members in your thoughts and prayers.

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