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February 7, 2010

Haiti: “Nobody in Charge” (As Far As U.S. Is Concerned)

Rene Preval Palace.jpg

It’s like “Where’s Waldo?” — except the guy nobody can find is René Préval.

What’s almost impossible to tell from watching U.S. TV or domestic news sites is how much President Préval and the Haitian Government have been devastated as opposed to how much — given America’s consistently heavy hand in Haiti — U.S. media would have it be true.

The photo accompanied last Sunday’s NYT article, In Quake’s Wake, Haiti Faces Leadership Void. If you only read the first half of the piece, you’d think the quake turned Preval into an ineffectual mouse. Reading the second half, however, you’d get an almost opposite picture. Not only do they paint him as nimble enough to be working away at circumventing the constitution in a quest of a third-term, but they actually suggest he just might, in fact, be getting his arms around the recovery, despite overwhelming obstacles.

Notice, though, how much the photo makes Préval look reclusive, helpless and even clueless, tucked behind the gates of the Presidential Palace during that near-food riot two week ago?

Given this perception — that nobody’s really in charge “down there” — it’s no wonder that band of Christian fundamentalists thought they could just fly down to Haiti, collect themselves a truckload of children, and whisk them back to Idaho.

Silsby Hait.jpg

That story only makes the “nobody in charge” meme ironic, though.

That’s because the arrest of the “New Life Children’s Refuge” members actually created a rare photo-opportunity to observe that Haiti — obviously just a country of indigents standing in food lines being ministered to by the American military and the international community, right? — actually has a government, and — surprise! surprise! — a functioning criminal justice system, with actual courthouses still standing, to deal with these kooks.

(photo 1: Jean-Philippe Ksiazek/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images. photo 2: John Moore/Getty Images. caption: Laura Silsby, (C), the head of New Life Children’s Refuge leaves a court hearing with another member of her group, Charisa Coulter February 4, 2010 after being accused of child abduction and criminal association in Port au Prince, Haiti. Five women and five men are part of a church organization that attempted to cross into the Dominican Republic with 33 Haitian children.)

  • tinwoman

    Somebody from my sister’s church is planning on doing this right now. She has been promised an 11 year old Haitian boy if she can fly down to the Dominican Republic and get him. The boy’s mother is alive, but apparently his long term caretaker is his godmother, who is also alive. They are both being pressured to give him up by his father, who is 80 years old and has never lived with his mother, and a half-brother who is over 50. They want to give the boy “to a loving family”, which I guess means homeschooling religious fundamentalists in northern Michigan.
    The mother has refused to give the boy away to missionaries for years, but it seems the earthquake has finally weakened her resolve. It is tragic, and the woman who is planning on doing this is bubbling over with “isn’t it wonderful how Jesus works”, and “I’m so interested in foreign cultures! I once tutored a Chinese girl in ESL so I know I can do this!” All of these are details which this woman breathlessly posts as Facebook updates daily. She has no problem with finding out the mother is alive and unwilling to let him go–well, the earthquake came so now she’ll give him up! Praise the Lord, it’s nothing less than a miracle!
    I wish I could do something, say something, but I finally just let it go because it was getting my blood pressure up. Yeah, right, lady, Jesus sent an earthquake to Haiti so you could get a fun new exotic pet to show off in the church pew on Sundays. Hope the kid is bright enough to flee the loony bin when he is old enough without too many lasting ill effects. It will be fun for “cute little Haitian boy with funny sounding name” to learn that everybody he loved who died in the quake is rotting in Hell because they worshipped the devil, but God, of course, has a special plan for HIM.
    These people are all vultures with no comprehension of anything outside their little Midwestern church worldview. If they were truly well-meaning and wanted to foster children there are plenty of kids in the States who need it–some of them are even black! And have French sounding names! But nooooo…..little LaShandra from downtown Flint doesn’t do it for them. Gotta fly abroad and take kids. May they all rot in Haitian jail cells for a long, long time.

  • jtfromBC

    –you might enjoy this interview particular the opinions of Voodoo practitioners and those of their American Christian visitors:
    Wade Davis is an anthropologist, Explorer-In-Residence at National Geographic and the author of The Serpent and the Rainbow and Passage of Darkness – books that explore Haitian voodoo, magic and zombies. He also delivered the 2009 Massey Lectures here at the CBC. It was called The Wayfinders: Why Ancient Wisdom Matters in the Modern World. We talked to him to get a sense of what voodoo is beyond what you might see in a bad Hollywood movie
    http://www.cbc.ca/thecurrent/2010/201002/20100203.html

  • bystander

    That’s a great link, jtfromBC. Thanks.

  • http://keepittrill.blogspot.com/ Kit (Keep It Trill)

    Tinwoman said it all. Thank you.

  • jtfromBC

    I’m glad you found it informative

  • jtfromBC

    I’m glad you found it helpful

  • jtfromBC

    What do Six Families the US Army and Private Contractors have in common in Haiti
    http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31&Itemid=74&jumival=4777