The goal of our mission is to collect the information, networks and partnering organizations necessary for the initiation of an ongoing long-term to permanent campaign of direct solidarity, support and assistance which aims to directly connect grassroots Canadian organizations to their Haitian counterparts.
Due to the quality and impact of our work in Hurricane Katrina, we were asked by New Orleanians to assist, if possible, with the transportation of religious figures from Haiti to New Orleans. Once we began this work we realized an opportunity for direct on-the-ground involvement had presented itself.
Due to a sense of apprehension caused by the less than effective response of official relief organizations to Hurricane Katrina (more than a million dollars per person affected of relief money and still no rebuilt city), several Canadians and their communities contacted CCRP to inquire as to what might be the most effective means of helping with the relief effort. Because of the lack of solid, reliable information coming out of Haiti, we decided it best to put feet on the ground and physically find the contacts necessary for the creation of the ongoing, meaningful support relationships that both Canadian and Haitian grassroots organizations seek. We have made our connections, found our contacts and will arrive in Port au Prince on the 16th of Feb.
Aside from community based requests, we have been asked by the University Of Winnipeg Haiti Task Force, which formed as a response to the earthquake, to assist in the location and screening of Haitian students for potential transfer of studies to the University of Winnipeg which is organizing housing and community support for more than 30 French speaking Haitian civics students.
Finally, through myriad contacts with, and connections to community, corporate and state media, not to mention web based outlets, we hope to help the situation in Haiti remain active within the media long past the end of usual media cycles. The rebuilding of so much of a country will require the ongoing attention and participation of supportive communities the world over.
CCRP sets itself apart from other relief organizations not only by our scale but also by our direct person to person approach. By making direct contact with and staying directly in affected communities rather than bases and hotels, we are able not only to collect direct information on the needs and situations of the communities themselves but also to acquire direct local guidance so that future work is locally driven rather than imposed from the outside. We strongly believe that the activation of inherent local capacities and their complementation with outside solidarity and, whenever possible, resources will be key to the rebuilding in a sustainable, culturally appropriate manner.
Upon the completion of our initial week long information gathering, we will return to Canada for 6 weeks of organizing and fundraising work, following which we intend to return to Haiti for a longer, larger and more impacting term in which we will be able to bring to bear directly the resources of supportive Canadian communities which will assist Haitian civil organizations in reestablishing in a way conducive to the organizational and community flourishing necessary to achieve a future in which these communities, which are of such immense historical significance, can flourish.
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