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Friday, March 12, 2010

We have a fundraiser coming up this Sunday.


We have a fundraiser coming up this Sunday.

Mathias Kom and the Burning Hell, one of the best bands there is, will be playing alongside Wax Mannequin from Hamilton. The vampires from Winnipeg will set the stage. This is largely because of the efforts of one David Dobbs and the goodwill of Mathias. We are tickled pink.

http://www.myspace.com/mathiaskom
The Burning Hell is the best thing since sliced bread. Mathias has played with his band in our houses , written songs for us, and is one of the folks behind the ukeleles for peace. http://www.ukulelesforpeace.com/

http://www.waxmannequin.com/
Wax mannequin has a terrific voice and the people I know with good taste seem to like him a lot and so do a lot of critical music writer types.

http://www.myspace.com/vampireslikeyou
It's fuzzy rock and roll music which cant be bad, but this is really its own cup of tea.

It happens this Sunday, which is the 14th of March at the Lo pub, which is on Ellice Ave just east of the University of Winnipeg. It costs 8 bucks which is a steal for any one of those 3 bands. We are hopin' it will cover the end of the cost of the last trip and then we can get to work on what's next.

Medical Volunteers

Some days ago a group of a dozen medical students offered their services. The precise wording, in french was as follows "Mon frere Bonne nouvelle j ai trouver une dizaine d etudiants en medecine qui sont qui sont prets a etre volontaire dans notre organisation. Faites de ton mieux pour trouver desmedicaments......"

We plan to deploy these people in the following manner-

Firstly, we hope to have them write a guide to survival of the rainy season without adequate shelter. Since there are over a million homeless in the area and drainage and sanitation are precrious in many parts of Port Au Prince. It is important to ensure that people have access to the information necessary to be able to do what they can with what is available to them in order to avoid outbreaks of rainy season diseases such as Malaria and Typhoid.

Secondly, we are attempting a bottom up deployment of these medical students to the most vulnerable neighbourhoods in the affected area. Our Director of Haitian operations has found a guide and will shortly be entering the Cite-Soleil and Bel-Air neighbourhoods in order to better assess how these med students might be brought to bear. The reason for this approach is as follows:
Diseases often take hold in areas with poorer servicing thus those areas should be concentrated on, especially with a preventative approach, so to be able to avoid any disease becoming an outbreak.

We understand that an initial preventative approach in an area and time of increased need will necessitate the practice of some hands on medicine, and although we do not condone the practice of medicine by those not licensed to practice it, we would like to keep our near-doctors equipped to be able to help as they can and as they find need by applying the skills they have. Here is what a request list from our near-doctors looks like. It is in French, but if you are the sort of person who may be able to put us in contact with such equipment and medicines, you likely do not need the list translated.



Medications- anti hypertenseur,anti biotic,anti parasitaires,anti fongiques
cutanes, analgesiques, anti viraux, anti fongiques gynecologiques, anti angoreux, anti
ulcereux, anti cecretoires gastriques, anti acides, anti emetiques, anti diarrheiques, anti depresseurs,
anti epileptiques, anti asthmatique,anti tussifs,anti diabetiques oraux, vitamines, anti septques externes.....
Materiels- Stetoscopes, sphygmomanometrie, Oxymetre de pouls, thermometre, Pen light, otoscope

Introducing our first Haitian Staff



We are pleased to finally get around to announcing the first of our Haitian staff, the people who will be determining the nature and direction of CCRP activities in Haiti. Aside from the below, we have people helping in logistics, transportation, communications and outreach.

Thierry Cadet- Director of Haitian Operations. Thierry was a management student at Ecole Superior de Technologie before it was destroyed. He was our primary guide on our first trip to Haiti and provided us with everything and everybody we needed at all times. Since we left Haiti, he has been recruiting medical volunteers, finding land and houses for community use, distributing supplies/food and scouting out future activities on behalf of CCRP. He will likely assume a place on our board of directors next month.

Theodore (Lolo) Beaubrun- Networking co-ordinator. Lolo is a Port au Prince community leader and musician. He is a member of the band Boukman Eksperyans. From wikipedia- "The band was at the height of its popularity in 1991 when the presidency of Jean Bertrand Aristide was overthrown in a military coup d'etat. Like many other artists and performers, Boukman Eksperyans fled the country to live in exile. During their time abroad, the band performed and spoke out against the military dictatorship of Raoul Cédras. In 1994, after Aristide was restored to power, the band returned to Haiti, where they continued to play concerts, record albums, and perform at the Carnival celebrations".

RELIGION







Aside from the large relief organizations, there is significant missionary presence which has appeared in Port Au Prince since the earthquake. Some of the groups mean well and are doing good work, some are attempting what is clearly some sort of food for faith evangelizing mission. We saw them in the streets on our way into the city from a Port Au Prince bus terminal in the middle of the night.

We were able to identify a couple of these persons affiliations and have found them to relate closely to persons having made disparaging remarks about Haitian cultural and religious traditions. From our work in Haiti we have learned that these traditions may be observed in some way or other, by the majority of the Haitian population. As this became more apparent, so too did the value of these practices to the people who practice them.

As an organization, CCRP is not in accordance with any of these attacks in any way. This unfortunate vulgarity lays bare the motivations of far too many relief workers in Haiti. Any attempt tie aid to what is essentially an attack on local cultural traditions smacks of Machiavellian fraud. Now, it is not as though Haiti is being overrun by white missionaries, but food for faith has attached to it strings. These strings can reach into the economic, and legal realm in ways that can affect the lives of Haitians in a profoundly negative manner,

This underscores our assertion that a self-reliant, locally lead approach to rebuilding the parts of Haiti damaged or removed by January's earthquake is the only feasible manner in which to achieve meaningful, sustainable solutions to the challenges Haiti now faces following such a disaster.