Eric Adman in Haiti |
By Eric Adman
In January 2011, I traveled with firefighters from Shoreline and Bothell to Port-Au-Prince, Haiti, on a medical relief mission with EMPACT / Disaster Response Northwest.
I left home with some anxiety over malaria, Dengue fever, cholera, recent violent political demonstrations and State Department warnings.
Extensive damage to the Presidential Palace |
The only way to get rid of garbage is to burn it |
School children |
The wall around our house was topped with broken bottles |
In the yard, we had a mango tree and an almond tree, plus a resident tarantula.
Partly collapsed houses were nearby |
We lived with our team of translators, a nice bunch of young Haitian men and 1 woman, mostly in their early 20’s. Most had been either students or teachers until the earthquake changed everything. I may be twice their age, but they have twice the life experience. They are very heart-felt about helping their families and country. Though raised in slums and tent camps, they are educated and articulate. EMPACT/DRNW pays and houses them, and provides a house for visiting teams.
Most days we worked at what had been a small amusement park before the quake, now a medical clinic and field hospital. We were “doctors” for people who ordinarily did not get much medical care. It was a bit of a surreal setting.
One of the large tent cities |
We visited some impressively clean and organized cholera treatment centers.
Doctors there said cholera cases were decreasing, and only a few of the treatment beds were occupied.
Large Baptist church |
On Sunday, our translators took us to a Baptist church service with lots of gospel music.
Like most people in Haiti, our translators are very devout.
The kids seemed happy, but there were probably 75 of them in a small house.
There are many orphans in Haiti, many of whom live on the street, especially after the earthquake.
Tents line the road by the airport |
Seeing Haiti first-hand made me realize how relatively rich we are here in the US. As I like to say, the “problems” we deal with here are “just re-arranging the frosting on our cake.”
EMPACT, a local non-profit started by a Gig Harbor paramedic, has been sending medical teams to Haiti since the earthquake. Recently, they sent a team to Japan. You can get more information or contribute to EMPACT at their website.
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