I had the amazing opportunity to serve at an orphanage in
Haiti for Easter break. It was an incredible
experience that is impossible to fully describe in words. I’ll do my best to
describe the adventure! I left my apartment Monday morning for the Caribe Tours
bus station. Twelve hours later I
arrived in Port-au-Prince. The bus ride
was nice and even included food. The
border was a long and somewhat scary process due to the unknowns. The bus company let us off on one side of the
border without any directions in English or Spanish. Unfortunately, I didn’t know a single word of
Creole. The border was congested with
overloaded trucks and bustling people. I
weaved in and out of the obstacles on the dusty dirt road trying to follow
familiar faces from my bus. Finally, we
reached a customs shelter and a LONG line.
Eventually we made it back to the bus, stopped at customs again and then
headed into the beautiful country of Haiti.
I was in Port-au-Prince the entire week and returned to the capital the
following Sunday. The return trip was
much easier and took 3 hours less.
The week was nonstop, just the way I like it. J The orphanage currently has 138 kids ages two
months-16 years old. They are divided in
groups by the babies, toddlers, and school age.
The orphanage has three houses. I
lived at the largest house where all of the babies, toddlers and school aged
girls lived. If I wasn’t at a planned
activity, there were always plenty of kids to play with at the house.
The orphanage runs a two room school (roughly K-2nd
grade and 3rd grade-16 yrs old).
My school days were filled with teaching lessons (both on the fly and
prepared), playing games, eating lunch, etc.
When I wasn’t at the school the infant and toddler rooms always needed someone
to help with feeding, playing or just holding a little one.
Of course, one of my favorite parts was building
relationships with individual kids. It
was incredible to hear some of their stories.
I was constantly surrounded by loving smiles and warm hugs,
but I had heard their stories of being HIV positive, being left in dumpsters,
Earthquake tragedies, and so much more.
It’s amazing to see kids that love each other and all that enter their
home with such agape love despite the adversity their lives.
I instantly fell in love with a little boy named Luke. He arrived to the orphanage from rural Haiti
only a few months ago. No one has been
able to find any adult that can identify the child. The orphanage knows nothing about him, no
age, no name, no history. Another child
at the orphanage named him Luke and his age is estimated to be about 7 years
old. The catch to all of this is that
Luke is deaf. He knows no form of sign
language. It was difficult for me to
imagine what this precious child’s life has been like without the ability to
communicate.
Since Luke had unique needs, one of the
projects I undertook for the week was introducing some basic language to the
teachers and students at the school. Even
though a week isn’t long enough to learn much, I knew that anything I could do
to help Luke feel included would help. I
always use a few signs with the students in my class (bathroom, water, yes, no,
etc). I taught the signs I knew and then
used the internet or books to look up other useful signs like good job, book, thank
you. I also taught the classes two songs
with sign language. A highlight of the
trip was with Luke finally used one the signs on his own.
(Below are a few videos of some of the girls practicing the
sign language before bed one night.)
The work of all the staff at the orphanage is amazing! They are dedicated to providing a loving home
to so many children. I’m so thankful for
the opportunity to serve and will continue to pray for the children and staff
of HIS Home for Children.
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crossing the border |
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beautiful country |
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Port-au-Prince |
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tire shop |
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tent city still left from Earthquake relief |
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They are having trouble getting some of the people to leave the tent cities because their life is better living in a tent than it was before. But, tent cities are a huge risk for cholera. |
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Orphanage school (K-2nd grade classroom) |
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lunch at the school...Ramen day! |
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Luke |
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Luke and Melinda |
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Playing soccer at recess. The big sport in Haiti is soccer, not baseball like its neighbor. |
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Orphanage school (3rd grade-16 years old classroom)
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dinner time |
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sweet baby |
I love the following sequence of pictures. :)
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my bed for the week |
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She made me a bracelet like hers. :) |
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walking from the girls house to the school |
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very few roads are paved, even in the capital |
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everyone loves to listen to a good book |
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story time |
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older students' classroom |
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peanut butter and jelly day |
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visiting the park |
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He was so tired he fell asleep on the swings! |
Eli needs special care right now, so he stayed on our floor instead of the infant room. We had lots of time together :)
Feeding 138 kids three meals a day takes a mega
shopping trip every Thursday. I tagged
along to see more of the city and experience the shopping trip.
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LOTS and LOTS of RICE |
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grocery store |
We ate lunch out during the shopping trip. I admit I was very apprehensive about eating Haitian street food, but I didn't really have a choice and it turned out to be delicious! Lunch was a Haitian version of an empanada or Hot Pocket. The fried dough is filled with meat and vegetables.
The next sequence of pictures shows how there was never less than five kids surrounding me when I was with the toddlers. (And I love every minute of it.) :)
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I drastically improved my feeding-babies-rice techniques over the week. |
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playground time with the toddlers |
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I found the swings were my favorite playground activity because I could hold one child in my arms and push four swings at the same time. The slide and seesaw were not as easy to manage. :) |
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I was constantly on the lookout for cholera. |
A
local organization donated the use of a swimming pool to the orphanage to use
on Good Friday. I love swimming and
despite years of lifeguarding experience under my belt I have to admit I was a
little apprehensive about taking 75 orphans to a swimming pool when only FIVE
of them could swim. Needless to say I
was on full alert, but I can thankfully say there were no drownings (although
quite a few saves) and the kids LOVED it.
The orphanage gets to use the pool about twice a year. One of the cutest moments was when a child
that is new to the orphanage since the last pool trip saw the pool for the
first time and observed from a safe distance (outside the fence). Finally, he slipped off his shorts and began
to inch closer to the pool. Little did
he know that it is generally not well accepted to swim in pools naked. One of the staff explained to him about
wearing the shorts in the water, and it was so interesting to watch him explore
a swimming pool for the first time. He
warmed up the pool a little bit but remained cautious and close to the wall.
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sunset from the orphanage |
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oh just a normal day of riding a tricycle missing 2 wheels and all clothes :) |
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sink/dishwasher |
Since
I was there the week before Easter I had the chance to participate in fun
Easter activities like putting together Easter bags from the donated goods and
dying Easter eggs. We died 140 eggs (one
per child) that were to be hidden Easter Sunday and then eaten.
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donated supplies |
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Making an Easter bag for each child. If you know me, you know that I wanted the Easter bags to be as fair as possible. So, yes, I counted out every single jelly bean. :) |
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before |
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after |
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Happy Easter! |
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so much laundry! |
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infant room |
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toddler room |
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Port-au-Prince street |
Tap taps are a form of public transportation in Port-au-Prince. These old trucks are always ornately decorated.
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countryside |
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food on the bus |
The kids love to sing. They broke into this song while waiting for their turn to die Easter eggs.
Toddler snack time-Although it was very kind of the little girl to try to share her snack with me, I had to politely decline :) Again, you can see how my lap was always full of as many kids as it could hold.
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