The phrase “no going back” when considering my 20 years of
work in Haiti has taken on quite a few meanings for me in the past few weeks.
Taken literally, there may be “no going back” at this point in time because of
the extremely volatile and dangerous political situation coupled with the
possibility that the priest in charge of Martel, where we are now working, may
be moved, leaving this community under the guidance of a new priest – one who
has yet to form any relationship with our team, or with the community to which
he is assigned.
Martel is hours from civilization – we go there only confident
in the safety that the current priest in charge, Pere Phanord, provides.
Without his presence, work in this tiny, remote community may not be possible
for us Americans.
That brings me to another “no going back.” We have
established a strong relationship with Martel. We have been in partnership with
them for over five years, with multiple visits each year. We have provided much
needed prevention education and healthcare to over 2000 unduplicated community
members. There is most certainly “no going back” on our commitment to Martel.
Our commitment in this work has always been to develop a
locally sustainable preventive health and primary health care program. While
doing this work, we have tried to imagine, with them, the end-goal of what will
happen when “we are no longer here.”
With this in mind, from the outset we identified and
incorporated into our team well-trained and very talented Haitian doctors and
nurses. These men and women are now trusted caregivers in Martel, and they are
committed to providing ongoing monthly visits to this tiny, remote community.
They are quite clear that, for them, there is “no going back” on their
commitment to the residents of Martel, just as we are quite clear that there is
“no going back” on our commitment to continue to fund the costs of this modest
but critically important healthcare program.
So, while there may be “no going back” physically, there
is most certainly “no going back” on our commitment to these brothers and
sisters who live in Martel and the brothers and sisters who have vowed to care
for them. We will continue to send the funds required to maintain an effective
level of prevention education and primary health care in Martel, Haiti.
We love so very deeply our companions in Haiti. It is a
love that burns in our hearts and humbles us in all ways as we consider our
great fortune as citizens of the United States of America. More importantly,
our Haitian companions have taught us to see God through very different lenses,
and to experience a way of walking with Christ that has been life changing. For
us, this a truly another, and perhaps the most important, “no going back.”
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