This site is closed to new comments and posts.

Notice: This site uses cookies to function.
If you are not comfortable with cookies then please don't browse this website.

Help Hurricane Relief Efforts in Haiti — Brooklynian

Help Hurricane Relief Efforts in Haiti

Donations of bottled water, rice, beans, tarps, hand towels, undergarments, toothbrushes, toothpaste, soap, and of course money are being collected at the Brooklyn Armory.

The devastation in Haiti resulting from four brutal hurricanes is almost beyond belief. Before these hurricanes struck, Haiti was already one of the world's poorest countries, suffering from widespread famine. In the wake of the hurricanes, it has become a place of unspeakable suffering.

America's official response to the situation in Haiti has been disappointing, to say the least. Naturally, the Bush Administration has shown far less interest in the Haitian tragedy -- occurring literally right off of our shores -- than it has shown in sending aid to Georgia. Haiti is at best a blip on the screens of the MSM. Senator Obama has spoken out about the ongoing catastrophe in Haiti, but he can't do it alone. As we are all well aware, he is very busy with some other matters.

Ordinary Americans are doing extraordinary things to help. Relief efforts are ongoing in South Florida. Here in New York, there is a concerted effort in the Haitian community to promote relief efforts.

Sunday, September 21, 2008, is the African American Day Parade in New York City, and there will be an effort to concentrate public attention on the plight of the Haitian people. Donations are being collected at the following sites:

Adam Clayton Powell Jr. State Office Building
163 West 125th Street, Lobby
New York, NY 10027
8AM to 7PM

Brooklyn Armory
1579 Bedford Avenue (Between Union and President Streets)
Brooklyn, NY

If you are in the New York area, any help at these locations would be much welcome. If you are in other locations, please find out if there is anything you can do.

[Cribbed from Daily Kos.]

Comments

  • It's time to cut foreign aid. Nobody helps us at times of natural disaster.
  • WE NEED YOUR SUPPORT! Haitian Women for Haitian Refugees (HWHR) is mobilizing solidarity support with Lakou New York to provide relief to flood victims Haiti. Lakou New York is a grassroots media outlet that connects members of the Haitian community to social justice movements through alternative news reporting, dialogue, and activist initiatives. HWHR was founded by Haitian women in 1992, to respond to the refugee crisis faced by Haitian immigrants in the U.S. and Guantanamo Bay. Both organizations have worked together on various projects, including flood disaster relief for Haiti and the Dominican Republic in 2004 and both provide cultural programs that include popular education and community organizing.


    In recent weeks, Tropical storms Fay, Gustav, Hanna and Ike have battered the coast and interior of Haiti. More than 1000 people have already been confirmed dead. The port city of Gonaives is under water, and the once-fertile Artibonite valley has been devastated by the opening of the biggest hydroelectric dam on the island. Never having fully recovered from the hurricanes of 2004, the southeastern agricultural region of Mapou is now isolated due to flooded roads.

    As Haiti's most vulnerable populations - rural peasants and the urban poor - struggle to re-organize with limited international assistance, HWHR and Lakou New York are appealing for solidarity to assist three important initiatives which will serve communities in hard-to-reach areas:

    - HWHR is sending two members to Mapou, to bring initial solidarity aid and assess the needs first hand.

    - We are collecting medical supplies to support the members of the Cuban Medical Brigade (traveling doctors) based in the coastal city of Jacmel.

    - We will provide school supplies for the Kole Zepol elementary school project in Site Soley

    Surviving victims are faced with an immediate threat of diseases and a raging diarrhea epidemic, the result of the drinkable water supply being contaminated by rains, mud and stagnant water containing dead bodies. The hurricane season is not over. While international humanitarian aid has reached some affected areas, it is limited, and certainly has not reached some of the most devastated areas. Meanwhile the death toll is expected to rise, as thousands of people are reported missing.

    HOW CAN YOU HELP?
    To help our fellow Haitians, HWHR is collecting the following donations:

    DRY FOODS: Nutritional bars, fruit & nut bars, cereal bars. NO CAN FOODS PLEASE

    FIRST AID SUPPLIES: Rehydration salts, water purification tablets, antibiotic and antifungal (Mycology) creams, anti-allergy medication, anti-parasite medication, Tylenol, anti-diarrhetics, vitamins, gauze, tape and insect repellent.

    PERSONAL HYGIENE GOODS: Toothpaste, tooth brushes, deodorant, sanitary napkins, soap and new underwear.

    OTHER ITEMS: Tea Light candles & quality batteries (AA & D). NO CLOTHING , except brand new underwear.

    Those who wish to make tax deductible $ donations can send checks payable to
    IFCO/ Haitian Relief, 418 West 145th Street, New York, NY 10031


    DROP-OFF HOURS ARE: Mon & Wed. 2:30-8:30 P.M.

    HAITIAN WOMEN FOR HAITIAN REFUGEES
    335 Maple Street, 2nd Floor, Brooklyn, NY For more info: call (718) 735- 4660
    (Please use rear entrance on Lincoln Road between Nostrand and New York Avenue)



    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Thank you for your support.

    Ninaj Raoul
    Haitian Women for Haitian Refugees
    Tel: 718 735-4660
    [email protected]
    .
  • there is a fundraiser concert in park slope at greenwood baptist church on 7th ave and 6th st on saturday, 9/27 from 2-6pm - live local haitian bands and haitian food. money raised goes to FONKOZE, a not-for-profit specializing in micro-lending. check them out at www.fonkoze.org.
  • ParadeRest wrote: It's time to cut foreign aid. Nobody helps us at times of natural disaster.
    Oh, this country did plenty to screw Haiti's economy over the years.



    Thanks for posting the donation info Laura B and Yamecita. We'll pull together whatever we can.
  • The US does bad things in other countries? ...Not if I keep my head in the sand.

    http://www.peacenowar.net/Americas/News/Haiti.htm

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CIA_activities_in_Haiti

    http://www.netti.fi/~makako/mind/haiti1.htm

    http://www.globalresearch.ca/articles/RIE402A.html

    http://www.fpif.org/briefs/vol2/v2n3hai.html

    http://hrw.org/english/docs/1999/09/16/haiti1641.htm

    ...its ok, you can dismiss them all as looney leftists; It's world opinion that counts.

    P.S. Thanks for posting the info on the relief efforts. Sorry to contribute to the highjacking of the thread. ...give funds to those who need it!
Sign In or Register to comment.