Hurricane Recovery in Haiti

Summary

Help peasant communities recover from severe hurricane and flooding damage in rural Haiti. progress reportread updates from the field

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More Information About this Project

Project Needs and Beneficiaries

Recent hurricanes have pounded Haiti and destroyed many of the sustainable development projects that are run by peasant groups that partner with the Lambi Fund of Haiti. Our plans are to rebuild the destroyed projects and help communities recover from the hurricane. With your help, Lambi Fund will be able to replenish food and basic materials lost by Lambi Fund staff and peasant organizations.

Activities

Replenish food and household items.Replace seeds and farming tools so people can replant fast growing crops like beans, replace lost livestock, plant trees to control flooding, seed micro-enterprise funds, repair damaged water cisterns.

Funding Information

Total Funding Received to Date: $12,181
Remaining Goal to be Funded: $187,818
Total Funding Goal: $200,000

Additional Documentation

This project has provided additional documentation in a Microsoft Excel file (projdoc.xls).

Resources

Why this Project is Important

Potential Long Term Impact

Peasant families will get back on their feet quickly and become self-sufficient. After food, water and household items are replaced, they will be able to improve their livelihood when you help rebuild their sustainable development projects.

Project Message

“I have lost everything. The grain mill that Lambi Fund helped build is flooded.The corn brought to be milled washed away. A chicken coop built by Lambi is used as a shelter for 100 families."
- Vyolèn, Women's Assn. of Mapou Rollin, President

Who is Running This Project

Contact

Josette Perard
Haiti Director
94 Ave Lamartiniere
Port au Prince,
Haiti
509-245-9445
Email:

Project Sponsor

Lambi Fund of Haiti

Organization

Lambi Fund of Haiti Logo

Lambi Fund of Haiti
PO Box 18955
Washington, DC 20036
United States
202-833-3713
http://www.lambifund.org

Where this Project is Located

Country

This project is located in HaitiHaiti and can also be found under Disaster RecoveryDisaster Recovery.

For more information about Haiti, read the Human Development Report on Haiti or the Wikipedia entry for Haiti.

When this Project was Updated

Last Updated

This project was last updated on November 6, 2009.

Date Added to GlobalGiving

This project was added to the GlobalGiving project catalog on September 10, 2008

Latest Update from the Field

2nd update on hurricane impact

By Josette Perard - 2nd update on hurricane impact, September 10, 2008 04:21 PM

Yesterday, Port au Prince was in a state of panic. It was extremely windy and raining hard. Many houses no longer have roofs, trees are uprooted, light poles with electric lines are down… but this is nothing compared to the devastation which has struck other communities throughout the country.

The Minister of Education postponed the opening of classes until next week, but in light of the unanticipated problems brought by Hanna, we don’t know if they will not have to postpone it yet again (we have heard that there are two other hurricanes on their way)

No one is talking about schools right now; the focus is on the damage wrought by Gustav, Hanna and Ike. We are all thinking about how to begin tackling the problems which have suddenly disrupted our lives.

We are receiving calls from our partner organizations with horrible news about their communities.

The peasant organization in River Blanche (ODEPERIB) called to say that one member of the organization has died, the flooding is really severe, and many houses are destroyed. Some of the cisterns we have funded have sustained a lot of damage.

The Women’s Association of Mapou Rollin, just called and Vyolèn, the president of the organization, said that Hanna is even worse than Jeanne. Her house is completely destroyed and she has lost everything. The grain mill we helped build is completely flooded and the corn and millet brought by the market women to be milled just washed away. The chicken coop which we also helped build is being used as shelter by over 100 local families. No one has eaten anything since Monday.

Mme. Cedieu, a leader in the farmers’ organization of Gwomon (AGPGM), said that she lost everything -- her crops and her animals. She said that the land cultivated by AGPGM was devastated and all the plantain trees are down. Fortunately our experimental field of young plantain trees is still standing, as is our Center for Plantain Propagation. Not too many trees were destroyed but the irrigation pump will need to be repaired.

Tidjo (Lambi Fund Field Monitor for the North) and Margo (Lambi Fund Advisory Board member) called us this morning and told us that the waters are beginning to recede in Gonaives, and at Tidjo’s house as well. Tidjo has lost everything and there are now over 60 people seeking shelter on Tidjo’s rooftop. They have not had anything to eat in 3 days.

Once it stops raining we will try to go to Gonaives to bring some help to Tidjo and his family and to see in what way we can begin to help our partner organizations and their communities. Reaching Gonaives will be very hard, since a veritable lake now lies at the entrance of the city and all roads and bridges are wiped out.

Meanwhile, St Cyr (Lambi Fund Field Monitor for the South) has finally gotten news from home. He came to Port-au-Prince from Les Cayes to attend a staff meeting when he got news that his home and neighborhood were flooded. He was extremely distressed to hear that his family and their neighbors had to seek refuge on their roof top. He was told this morning the waters had receded. He too has lost everything. Although St Cyr has learned that there is no way to get to Les Cayes, because Miragoane has overflowed, he is now determined to get back to his family, and he will call us when he gets there.

We just received a call from ADZK, a large pig breeding project. They lost some pigs ... and the greenhouse lost some tree seedlings.

We have heard on the radio that Torbeck and Chantal are flooded. We are supporting projects throughout the area. We have not been able to reach any member of our partner organizations in Belfontèn but we heard on the radio that the area is in shambles.

The calls are trickling in we will keep you posted whenever we hear something.

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