Tuition was $200 a year, a tidy sum for the land tillers, tradesmen and teachers that populate nearby farming communities. In a hard country where any edge helps, parents made the sacrifice to give their children a fighting chance. Like most schools in Haiti — where public services were wanting even before last week’s massive earthquake — Evangelical Baptist was private.
It was also uninsured.
One of the hundreds of schools destroyed or badly damaged when the earth shook, it is now emblematic of a disaster that took 2,189 lives and counting and so much more.
It robbed communities across Haiti’s largely rural south of their futures: their schools and hospitals — which, in Haiti, can take serious politicking and decades to secure. Their churches and temples — Catholic, Protestant, Vodou — which so often provided for people when the government didn’t. The quake damaged power plants, bridges and roads, compromising electric grids and transit. The water supplies for countless communities are contaminated, in some, locals say, because of corpses upstream.
“It will cost millions to rebuild our school, and we do not have it,” said the Rev. Calixte Dorval, Evangelical Baptist’s 65-year-old rector, as he walked past a stray piece of roof. “The government doesn’t have it. Our only hope is foreign assistance, and we don’t know what will come. Without it, none of our schools will ever be rebuilt. And Haiti will always be a country stuck behind the bus, late and left behind.”
Even as Haitians bury their dead, rescue operations continue and bands of desperate victims raid aid trucks. A country of endless crises led by an interim government stepping in for an assassinated president once again faces the arduous task of rebuilding.
In the Western Hemisphere’s poorest nation — one worn down by repeated natural and man-made disasters — the list of broken infrastructure and housing is an omen of new hardship ahead. In the rural southern peninsula, which is already cut off from the capital by the violent gangs that control the roads, tens of thousands of homes and buildings are in ruins.
Among them: 24 health-care facilities, including four that were obliterated and some that serve as the only hospital within a several hour drive. At least 287 private and public schools were damaged or destroyed. A key bridge in Jérémie is buckling, threatening to isolate thousands. Sections of road — including a recently paved highway that took more than a decade to build — have been split, chunks of them broken off.
Just as it did in 2010 after a more deadly earthquake — and in 2016, when Hurricane Matthew pummeled the same southern communities stricken by the quake now — Haiti is looking to the international community for help.
But that hasn’t worked out well in the past.
Last week’s quake reopened old wounds from the 2010 temblor that struck closer to the densely populated capital and killed more than 220,000 people. Over $13 billion in aid was allocated by international agencies to respond to the disaster. But mismanagement, a disconnect with local reality and lack of organization led to mistakes that the Haitian government, international agencies and NGOs say they can’t afford to commit again.
Allegations emerged that some aid groups raised money on the back of Haitian suffering while using relatively little of the funds on the ground. In 2016, the United Nations acknowledged its peacekeepers played a role in a post-quake cholera epidemic. In 2018, the charity Oxfam admitted that staff members had engaged in “sexual misconduct” with vulnerable earthquake victims.
Joel Charny, a longtime humanitarian aid worker, described the international response in 2010 as “monstrous.”
“There was just so little respect and understanding of the Haitian people,” he said.
To avoid the mistakes of the past, the Haitian government is now requesting that aid flow through it, and aid groups say they are improving coordination to avoid overlap and address critical needs. But Haiti was already in the midst of a humanitarian crisis before the quake, and aid groups remain concerned about meeting needs in a country that now has so many.
“While humanitarians are focusing on the immediate life saving response, longer term solutions to development deficits need to be addressed to support Haiti to build back better,” said Christian Cricboom, Haiti director for the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
The Haitian government criticized international aid groups for widespread distribution of tents in 2010 — saying it led to sprawling tent cities that remained for years. Controversially, officials are asking aid organizations to refrain from large scale tent handouts now — a request aid agencies say they back.
“How are we supposed to stay dry after our houses collapsed?” said Sylvia Herculus, 38, pointing to the bedsheets she strung up in a square in the hard hit city of L’Asile, 10 miles from the epicenter. Hundreds of residents who lost their homes are now squatting in the square, which has the feel of a refugee camp.
Not far from Herculus, a disabled man sat in the open in his underwear and a tank top, a sanitation bucket next to him. He struggled with palsied hands to shield his exposed body with a thin towel.
“We need tents!” Herculus said. “They say they will rebuild quickly. But we know they won’t.”
One of the biggest rebuilding challenges is tthe loss of countless churches and temples that offered social safety nets for rural people largely abandoned by the state. In Camp-Perrin, the Kay Manbo Yolande Vodou Temple would distribute rice to the needy in the mornings. Now, the building is a rubble heap on the side of National Road 7, a scenic highway, now damaged, that runs through soaring mountains covered in lush jungle canopy.
Its priestess, Jeanne Yolande Vital, a pillar of the community, was crushed inside, along with the kitchen and restaurant that fed the community.
“My mother was the shoulders of this community; it depended on her,” said Derelie Davilmar, 38, Vital’s daughter. “She gave food, medicines. What the people needed. There is no way to replace her. The community will suffer.”
Senicile Massius, 39, mayor of a nearby devastated town, Marceline, fretted for its future after “hardly a single school” was left standing.
“We still have 10 schools that were damaged by Hurricane Matthew that never reopened,” she said. “We cannot let that happen now. Too many schools have been destroyed. But how will we rebuild?”
Even as Haitians confront tremendous grief, many are looking at the future with fear.
Edline Joesil, a teacher, lost her husband in the earthquake. He died at a funeral, when the church caved in. He was also a teacher.
Now a single mother of three and her house destroyed by the quake, Joesil said she is most afraid for her three children’s education.
Two weeks before school was set to start, their classrooms and school supplies are under rubble.
“It was my husband’s dream to educate them,” she said. “But now I have lost everything and they have no schools left to attend. I am lost.”
Bruno Maes, UNICEF’s representative in Haiti, visited schools hit by the earthquake with Haiti’s minister of education this week.
“It’s really a disaster,” Maes said. “It’s a massive, massive impact on the education system.”
Roughly 100,000 students and teachers will have their academic years disrupted, he said. Classes are unlikely to return before October, a grave concern in a country where 1 in 2 children attending school are dropout risks.
UNICEF, Maes said, is considering solutions, including temporary classrooms.
“The frustration of the population is increasing,” Maes said. “They want to get assistance quicker, but it’s not easy for us to be everywhere with all of the assistance needed.”
L’Asile, a conurbation of 52,000 people living mostly in rural communities, was founded in the 1930s. After decades of trying, it secured its first hospital — a 50-bed facility complete with operating rooms and infectious-disease wards — in 2008.
Now, the administration offices of the facility have fallen on top of operating rooms, pediatrics and the maternity ward. Miraculously, no patients or staff died — though injuries included broken limbs and deep gashes. Expensive medical equipment and the only surgery center within a two-hour radius now lie under tons of concrete. The interior of the director’s office — a Haitian flag on his desk — is visible through a collapsed wall.
The hospital’s capabilities have been reduced to a small outdoor triage center, where bandages are changed amid mosquitoes and biting flies.
“Rebuild?” Dr. Geraldine Chery, 34, said with a grim laugh outside the collapsed facility. “How long will it take? Seriously? In Haiti? Maybe 100 years.”
Few trust in a rebuilding effort that could restore what little they had. The fear in communities like L’Asile — where most homes have been damaged or destroyed — is that they will simply fade into time, that their homeless residents will migrate to the capital or join the growing number of Haitians trying to make it to the United States.
“I’m the mayor, and I’m ready to go,” said Mayor Martinor Gerardin. “The people think I’m holding back help from them, and I’m afraid. Please, take me in your helicopter to Miami. I am ready to go now.”
Coletta reported from Toronto. Ana Vanessa Herrero in Caracas, Venezuela, contributed to this report.
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