Written by Minister of Information JR    Monday, 01 March 2010 03:32    PDF Print E-mail
The earthquake takes Port au Prince back to the Stone Age

The Haitian capitol, the Palace, was destroyed in the earthquake, as you can see in the background. Many believe that the international community is leaving the Palace rubble in place to symbolize what they believe Haiti is now: a broken country of the descendants of rebellious slaves who beat their great general Napoleon and who dared to ask for reparations for the money they were forced to pay France so that they could be recognized internationally by other countries, most notably the U.S. – Photo: Minister of Information JRHaiti report-back, Part 3

Downtown Port au Prince, Haiti, looks like it was hit with an atomic bomb. Many say it was hit with a United States military-made weather weapon. Most people live in tents or makeshift tents, and some live in damaged cave-like buildings.

It is hard to put into words what I saw. There were so many buildings that were pancaked, meaning with the ceiling touching the floor and the supporting walls, in between, crushed. Hella people are dead in the rubble, and you can smell their bodies rotting.

There are more buildings blown out and crushed then there are standing intact by far. We passed by an indoor flea-market-like spot that I was in last time that I was in Port au Prince. It was gone.

We saw the Palace, the Haitian version of the White House, first up close and then up high, a ways back. It totally fell off of its foundation in like four places.

Surrounding the Palace, thousands of people live outside in the elements in a shanty-town, some in bedsheet and stick houses, on dirt. People were praying at a Christian prayer service outside of the Palace in bleached white on Feb. 12, the first day of the National Days of Prayer, marking a month since the quake.

The people at this event were deeply religious and deeply involved in the ceremony. There was a youngsta with a deep gash in his head watching the ceremony, like it was normal. It kind of fucked me up, for lack of a better term.

It was cold blooded to see how these Haitians were/are being done by the international community. Everybody is taking photo-ops and making speculations on land, but nobody cares whether the people live or die.

I am making this assessment based on what I saw on the ground not being delivered to these thousands, if not millions, of people. Where’s the money? I don’t know, but I do know if relief is not getting to Port au Prince, the capital city, chances are the other cities and rural areas are most likely suffering more.

After we left the prayer service, we went to SOPUDEP, the school where our tour guide, Rea Dol, is the director. The school building was heavily damaged and the desks and stuff in the classrooms were all broke up.

There were people living at the school who didn’t have any other place to go. When we were on the plane to Haiti and told the airline attendant where we were going, she gave us a bag of crackers, peanuts, pretzels, cheez-its, cookies and more. We gave it to Rea. She passed it out at SOPUDEP to people who might have to eat that stuff for dinner.

One young woman we met in the area has had a fever for a month and saw a number of doctors who have not been able to cure her. Rea helps to take care of her.

back to the Jim Crow mission where we are staying doesn’t feel hot at all. But where else are we going to go in another country?

For the first few hours of being in Haiti, I was silent, soaking in everything that I saw, all the dead bodies that I smelled, so I could report it to the people. It was definitely an intense experience. I just thought about the fact that even though I’d soon be leaving, I feel like this – yet this is these people’s life. They live here.

Email POCC Minister of Information JR, Bay View associate editor, at blockreportradio@gmail.com and visit www.blockreportradio.com.

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