Saturday, December 6, 2008

Luc travels to US in November






Willie Nelson sang on the road again ... and Frank encouraged Luc to pose by this mural in youth area at Derby Friends Church while we were visiting Wichita Kansas area, in honor of the 2,500 mile road trip we were making.

Luc flew to Kansas City where Gary Wright, Frank Penna and I picked him up, we then visited several people who have supported ministry in Haiti over the last few years one way or another, this was such a good time for people meeting with Luc most for the first time.



One of the most wonderful meetings was this one, with Mrs. Clouse at her home, she has helped with training pastors and leaders for several years now in Haiti. (These Conferences have been named in honor of her Husband Clint Clouse) Mrs. Clouse had never had an opportunity to meet with Luc, this was a God designed meeting, Frank & Gary as well as myself were privileged to be there. The obedience of this wonderful lady has had a great impact on our ability to train our leaders in Haiti.

Thursday, October 23, 2008

First Church Service after the flood



People gather in Unfinished Mission house to thank God for their survival.

















Madam Luc Leads singing.

The Children of Christ Compassion Orphanage










Standing in the compound of the Mission House under construction.

It's not Christmas but these Birthday Party for Jesus bags are all they have. Look at the smiles.













Standing on the porch of the mission house under construction, this is home for now.





These gifts couldn't have been picked up any earlier or they would have been gone with everything else in the flood, God worked it out.

More of the Aftermath of the 4 Hurricans & Floods











This family is digging out trying to get into their home to make it livable.







It's hard to believe this is a Street.




The flood waters were so strong they overturned these cars.






It looks more like a war zone than anything.

More Pictures from Goanaives, Haiti Flood

2 of our Pastors were in town on September 1st and fled to the attic space to excape the flood, this is the 2nd story of the rented Orphanage building.
Interior of Gonaives Church after flood damage, not safe to use anymore.

This home is almost covered in dirt & mud.


Luc's family & 25 Children fled from their home to the roof of this building behind the house, and still were concerned for their lives for the next 3 days.



Luc's former home after the flood.











Team Evangelism in the days before the Flood




In the days before the 2008 September flood as a result of 3 hurricans in a row, life was as usual in the city of Gonaives Haiti. These pictures show adults and children getting ready for evangelism. And then came the rain!

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Luc's Video in the days after the Flood

Luc walks the streets of Gonaives after the flood waters receded. Look at the Houses, they were completly under water. Mud is left knee deep inside some of these homes. The women are trying to clean up but the water is unbelievably muddy.

Saturday, October 18, 2008

September was a difficult month

Gonaives Haiti Flood 2008

September was a hard month in Gonaives Haiti for Luc Joseph and his family as well as 25 Orphan children living in Christ Compassion Orphanage. The hardships continues but here is a little of what happened in their lives, what was happening in your life during that time?

September 1st 7:00am God tells Luc Joseph to go to the rented property for Christ Compassion Orphanage and bring all 25 Children to his house. No known or specific reason, only go to get children not a routine happening.

September 1st it started to rain about 2:00pm but by 10:00pm the city was under siege by flood waters.

September 1st by 10pm they had to evacuate the house and flee with all the children to the top of the 3 story building behind them that was under construction.

September 2nd by morning they could not see the top of the house they lived in next to the building they fled to, it was completely under water.

Sept 3rd still on the roof no food no water.

September 4th finally able to leave the top of the building where they had been stranded, and walked in water for 2 or 3 kilometers to mission house under construction.

Everything of value lost, in the families rental house was full of mud, the rental house for the Orphanage full of mud almost everything gone including a building.

God knew that lives were in the balance, he told Luc go get the children, Luc obeyed, not knowing why, only that he need to do what God instructed him to do.

For more than 2 weeks the only thing they had to eat was what they could salvage from the flood waters, most notably was banana from the trees that had been washed away from the hills above the city. The only clean water to drink was rain water.

By the 10th a Catholic priest gave Luc some bread that they could eat.

By the 24th Western Union Gonaives was open, and we were able to send money for buying food.

By the 29th we were able to deliver a substantial amount of money and he Luc was able to buy food in Saint Marc.

For the first time they had enough food to meet their daily needs.

Over the very difficult month of September, God had told Luc what he needed to do, and he was faithful to do it.

Although it was very difficult, and they are all alive but still living in a bad situation as of the 17th of October, in an unfinished mission house with 25 children, plus his family, plus other people who help with the children, they are all alive.

We are trying to get the mission house finished; I have delivered funds to Luc for drilling a well as well as some funds to continue work in order to complete the mission house.

But even when they have a well, and the mission house is finished, the problems will not be solved.

25 Orphan Children living in a house designed for 1 family and a few guest.

We need to purchase the land next to this house and build an Orphanage, school and church.

This is not a small project, but God loves these children, he saved them from certain death, and now we need to take the opportunity that God has given us to provide for these children, God does not want the present situation, with over 30 plus people living in a situation designed for, 10 people.

This project will cost an estimated $80,000 when completed, but to start with we need to purchase the land, at an estimated cost of $10,000 US.
Next we need to secure the property with walls, and then we need to build a building that will house a minimum of 30 children.

Can you turn your back on this situation? Scripture tells us to take care of the widows and orphans. These children need your help!

Luc was obedient and the children have survived, you and I need to be obedient also.

Max R Wright – WRI – Haiti Rep

Monday, October 6, 2008

YOUR HELP IS NEEDED!

I Talked to Luc this afternoon.
Drinking Water is the most difficult problem affecting health right now. The people need food, but if they drink bad water they are at serious health risk. The water plant in Gonaives was destroyed so safe water has to come from about 40 miles away.
Mosquitoes are an extreme problem in Gonaives right now, and Malaria will follow which is always a problem in Haiti. This will drive the death toll higher, the old and the young are at most risk. We are going to try to get sufficient Mosquito Nets for those living in the unfinished house.
The Gonaives Church and school is not able to function at present due to the destruction of the rented church buildings. Luc is holding services at his unfinished home, where he and his family and 25 Orphans are living in the unfinished mission house. Your financial help is needed to finish the house, install a water well, toilets, sewer, and get generator power to the house. We need your financial help now.
In the near future it’s Luc & my belief that God desires us to purchase the land adjacent to the mission house in order to have both an Orphanage as well as a building that can hold church services as well as school. The estimated cost of the land is $25,000 the cost of this project is estimated at $80,000. Obviously we need you to help this desperate situation.
In a country that is so poor how can the cost be so high? Everything that is not a natural resource has to be shipped in, other that the coral sand, everything else has to be shipped in so you have to add fuel and shipping cost to everything.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Haiti Death Toll Raises

Haiti raises storm death toll to nearly 800
The Associated Press
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti -- The official death toll from four storms that ravaged Haiti this summer has nearly doubled to some 800 people, authorities said Friday.
Civil defense director Maria-Alta Jean Baptiste said in an interview with The Associated Press that 793 bodies have been found so far, and authorities are still looking for bodies in the mud that swamped coastal settlements.
"As we're cleaning, we don't know what we're going to find," she said.
Crews have found 466 bodies in the hard-hit town of Gonaives alone, and government workers are burying the dead immediately to avoid contamination and the spread of infectious diseases, she said.
The four tropical storms that struck in late August and early September also wiped out at least 60 percent of Haitian agriculture and destroyed roads, bridges and homes.
The government had previously said 425 people died in the storms, which left thousands homeless.
International aid and food has poured in, but the U.N. World Food Program has so far received only US$1 million of the US$54 million it requested.

Monday, September 29, 2008

Good News

I was able to talk to Luc today and he confirmed that he received money that we had wired last week and also that sent via Bob Wakeland who had a planned trip prior to the flood with a group going south of Gonaives. Luc was able to meet with him today and get the money we had sent him. He was in Saint Marc buying supplies when I spoke to him.

His request was continued Prayer for all of those impacted by the flood.

They are living in less than acceptable conditions in the mission house that was under construction before the flood, no drinking water and no toilet facilities.

We continue to need $$ resources, to impact this crisis.

Pictures From Luc

Picture to the left is the 3rd story building roof where Luc his family and 25 Orphans escaped the flood.s











The house to the left is almost unrecognizable as Luc's rental house, the house had walls 8' high that enclosed the home, now thats gone.











It's dry compared to what they have been experiencing, now part of the sleeping arrangement's for Luc's family and 25 Orphans.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

A city trying to deal with the aftermath of Flooding.

Click on link below or copy and paste the link in your Browser.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LvcizzZw728

Some Relief Arrives Click on You Tube Link

Click on or Copy and paste this link in your browser and watch this You Tube Video.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sygFl7dwO48

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Roads are Closed & Bridges Out



Gonaives is cut off from the rest of Haiti by land. The roads at present are impassible from the south to the north of Saint Marc and from the east at Ennery.

The Port at Gonaives is in shambles, and the UN can not unload because of security problems. Despirate people do despirate things.

Pray that God makes a way to get relief to the people of Gonaives.

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

PIctures from a Friend























More die as a result of storm.

By JONATHAN M. KATZ, Associated Press Writer Tue Sep 9, 3:13 AM ET

GONAIVES, Haiti - Nine people died in shelters in this marooned city desperate for relief supplies, even as waters from Hurricane Ike receded and a U.S. Navy ship dispatched amphibious boats to deliver food.
Two children were among the dead at shelters across Gonaives on Monday, said Daniel Dupiton of region's civil protection department. It was not immediately clear what caused those deaths.
Thousands have taken refuge in schools, churches and homes on high ground, many with scant supplies or supervision.
"We cannot confirm that they died because of hunger," said Vicky Delore Ndjeuga, a U.N. spokesman for the mission in Gonaives. "We need to make an examination to make sure it was because of food."
With most roads across the country still impassible, Haiti — and the world — still lacked a complete picture of the destruction, and desperation was setting in among people who have spent days in the floodwaters and mud.
Aid groups are appealing for donations to sustain a lengthy response, warning of a secondary disaster caused by waterborne illnesses and other problems in the weeks ahead.
The death toll — which government officials said stood at 331 people in four tropical storms in less than a month — is sure to rise as more bodies surface in the mud.
Two more bodies were found Monday in coastal Cabaret, where 60 people died as mudslides and floods unleashed by a swollen river crushed homes in the middle of the night. Sixteen others were missing, mostly children.
Late Monday, authorities confirmed 10 more deaths, five attributed to Ike and five to Tropical Storm Hanna.
In Gonaives, Police Commissioner Ernst Dorfeuille said his poorly equipped force — 15 officers for the city of 160,000 — has buried dozens of badly decomposed and unidentifiable corpses in graves outside the city.
"After three days, those bodies could not stay," said Dorfeuille, adding he witnessed the burial of five people.
It wasn't clear how these bodies fit with previous tallies of the dead, but Dorfeuille denied reports citing him as giving a death toll of nearly 500 in Gonaives.
On one city street, a man used a rope to drag a bloated body through the floodwaters.
Hard-hit Gonaives, north of the capital, remained cut off by land. Red Cross trucks trying to reach Gonaives and Les Cayes on Haiti's southern coast had to turn back, one of many international aid efforts still struggling to leave the capital.
Broken pews were scattered across the mud-smeared floor of the Gonaives cathedral, where about 50 people now live in the choir balcony. They gathered around a small cooking pot, stirring some goat meat and cornmeal to share.
Meanwhile, inmates at the city's jail clamored for deliverance from the overpowering stench of filth and sewage, and supplies for jail staff and U.N. peacekeepers as well as the 224 inmates were perilously low, said Dr. Manvoor Ahmad, a Pakistani member of the U.N. mission.
The USS Kearsarge arrived in Port-au-Prince Monday after it was rerouted from a humanitarian mission to Colombia. With eight helicopters and three landing ships, it can deliver cargo and equipment all over Haiti, providing much of the logistical support needed by aid groups that have not been able to get through on land.
But even the Kearsarge was frustrated in its effort to bring prompt relief to Gonaives.
The ship spent most of Monday heading into port, sending helicopters ahead to find places around the city large and secure enough to offload. None were identified.
Two helicopters carrying with rice, beans and cooking oil from the World Food Program headed instead to the town of Jeremie on Haiti's southwest peninsula, also cut off by flooding.
A woman who cares for 110 children at the Haiti Gospel orphanage was among about 50 people asking for a share of the rice, beans and cooking oil from the World Food Program.
"My garden was destroyed," said Yvros Pierre, who had just two bags of spoiled bread mix left. "My food is finished. My boss told me to see if there were any Americans coming and ask them for help."
The Kearsage finally docked in Port-au-Prince in the evening, loading the amphibious ships with food for an overnight trip to Gonaive and hard-hit Saint Marc.
"We can deliver several thousand tons a day. It's not what we can do, it's how it can be done," said the mission's commander, Capt. Fernandez "Frank" Ponds.
___
Associated Press Writer Alexandra Olson, with a helicopter crew from the USS Kearsarge, contributed to this report.