Archive for March, 2010

“Helping In Haiti” (copied from post on http://gpcaribeatlantic.com)

Posted in Uncategorized on March 16th, 2010 by Greg & Heidi Edmonds – Be the first to comment

Homes on the "Saline"

Kids run barefoot behind the truck as it rattles up the road past tin-roofed shanties and drives toward the Wesleyan Mission Station. “That’s the Saline.  The poorest of the poor live there,” a missionary explains to the team of nurses riding in the back of the white pickup.  Plastic bottles, Styrofoam cartons, and discarded food line the ditches along the unpaved road where pigs and goats munch away.  The nurses look on with motherly gazes as they wave to the shoeless, pant-less children. 

Each year a hundred or more volunteers, like these nurses, pass through the Wesleyan Mission in Anses-a-Galets, eager to help the people of Haiti.  In this, the least developed country in the Western Hemisphere, there is no shortage of need.  Teams come to do anything from construction, to accounting, to hospital work, to post-earthquake food distribution.  As they give, instead of finding feelings of satisfaction at a job well done, many teams find themselves feeling discouraged that they couldn’t do more.

“It’s just not enough,” Caleb Thompson said to me in a conversation last week.  Caleb, a key player in major food distribution efforts, has already helped bring in over 140,000 pounds of supplies to La Gonave.  No matter how much he gives out, however, he hears people telling him that they need more.  A surgical team that recently visited our hospital had the same impression.  Working late into the evening on Sunday and then again all Monday morning before their afternoon flight, the team kept saying, “We wish we had more time. There’s so much more we could do.”

These feelings that the need is too big and the time too short are almost universal among volunteers here.  When looking across the Saline at rows of one-room, stick, mud, and block homes, most visitors feel overwhelmed.  It is true that there is no way a short-term team will change the life-style of the 80% of the population who live below the poverty line. If taken too far, however, these feelings of helplessness could discourage volunteers from trying to do anything all. 

Just because the need cannot be met all at once, does not mean that the need cannot be met at all.  In just one year of service here, I have seen teams vaccinate over 800 children, bring thousands of pounds of medical supplies, treat hundreds of patients in the hospital, give thousands of families food for the day, feed 58 orphans for several months, and invest hundreds of hours in education, work projects, and relationships.  And though this isn’t enough to put shoes on the feet of all the children in town, each team that comes in walks another step with Haiti in its journey to prosperity.

Encouraging Word for March 3rd, 2010

Posted in Uncategorized on March 3rd, 2010 by Greg & Heidi Edmonds – Be the first to comment

“Never determine the truth of a situation only by looking at the circumstances.  Don’t evaluate your situation until you have heard from Jesus.  He is Truth (John 14:6).” 

The disciples were in a boat in the middle of a storm and Jesus was asleep in the back of the boat.  They thought they were going to die and cried out to Jesus to save them. 

“In a moment Truth Himself would stand up and calm the storm.  Then they knew the Truth of their circumstance.  Truth is a Person who is always present in your [the Christian's] life.  You cannot know the truth of your circumstance until you have heard from God.” 

Whatever storm you are going through today remember that God is in control.  He knows the Truth of your circumstance, and He knows the solution before you even knew you had a problem!!  He still calms storms today.  (Quotes taken from “Experiencing God” workbook by Dr. Henry Blackaby)

The Rains Started

Posted in Uncategorized on March 1st, 2010 by Greg & Heidi Edmonds – Be the first to comment

One of many "Tent Cities" that millions of Haitian people now call home.

(This is the latest update from the Wesleyan missionaries in Haiti on http://gpcaribeatlantic.com

This past week the rains started. They came early in the evening and lasted late into the night as they usually do this season.  Normally Haitians, thankful for the cool winds and the increased crop, welcome these rains.  But this year that is not the case. 

This year the rains come as an added stress to an already overwhelmed people.  Haitian citizens are still trying to adjust to life after January’s earthquake, looking for work, waiting for schools to start.  All across the country families are still sleeping outside under tarps, tents made from bed sheets, and make-shift tin shelters.  Just last week, when people were starting to feel comfortable enough to re-enter their concrete homes, we experienced two more tremors.  Now families who were contemplating normalcy are back out on the street and out in the rain. 

The rains will continue to come in the following months, and with them we could see an increase in typhoid fever, dysentery, and other illnesses.  “The rains are death,” a visiting French nurse commented as he looked out at a cloudy sky yesterday afternoon.  And death is the last thing people here need to experience.  After a month and a half of grieving and foraging for a new way of life, people here are ready for some semblance of stability.  But with the changing climate and the introduction of new challenges, this stability may still be a long way off.