Archive | Mission Trips

Hait Update

Posted on 19 February 2010 by admin

I just returned from over 3 weeks in Haiti. I am home because there are things in my own life that need attention, but my heart is still in Haiti. The needs there are tremendous.

* Peter stayed behind to continue the work we started, Eddie and Djeune of course are there all the time. We have been feeding all the patients, families and hospital staff at Brenda hospital for over 1 week now. We will continue to do that as long as we can and as long as its needed. We have been providing as many as 200 meals a day for about $100.00 US.
* We are working feverishly to finish the girls orphanage so that have a place for the many orphans that have no where else to go.

* We have plans underway to purchase and ship more containers that will be converted into new homes for displaced families. We are cooperating with UN officials to find the most effective way to implement our “Homes for Haitians” program.
* We have several more orthopedic doctors arriving Saturday to continue follow up surgeries and care for then many victims that still need help.
* We have several more plane loads of supplies arriving over the next few days.
* We are actively collecting crutches, walkers, and canes to be shipped next week.
* Please donate all you can, as often as you can to one of our projects. All proceeds will go directly to help the people of Haiti!

Help us turn “Shipping Containers Into New Homes for Haiti’s Earthquake victims!”

Our original design for our new girls home uses shipping containers that are converted with windows, doors, a thatched roof for shade, new paint. As it turns out, this is also an excellent alternative for a new home for the thousands whose homes were destroyed in the earthquake. Our container homes are earthquake proof, hurricane proof, when finished according to our design, they are cool, comfortable, long term low maintenance homes.

Our goal is to acquire as many containers here in the US as possible, here we have a huge surplus of containers, we can purchase them here for about $1,200.00. We will offer the use of those containers for anyone shipping supplies to Haiti. Once the supplies are unloaded in Haiti, the container will then be delivered to sites where we can help local people turn their containers into homes!

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Impressions of Haiti- an open letter

Posted on 07 February 2010 by admin

A friend of mine asked me to do a follow-up email to share some of our thoughts and feelings now that we are home so here goes…

Home on American soil once again. I have had the blessing of traveling out of the country before on a few mission trips and it is always good to be home but this time it is vastly different. I was ready to come home. I was ready to leave the long days of being on my feet and working in the hot humid air. I was ready to leave the sight and smells of such despair and pain that we faced each and every day. I wanted to be home and “be normal” again. Don’t get me wrong, I was so happy and blessed to have the opportunity to go to Haiti and do the little part I could to help these dear children of God but you know the saying, “there is no place like home.” The only problem now is that since being home, all I do is think about the people in Haiti. I am always thinking about the patients that we cared for and wondering where they are now, how they are doing, are they feeling any relief from their physical pain, are they getting any relief for their emotional and spiritual pain? Bob and I find that we are drawn to the television whenever we hear the work Haiti – to catch a glimpse of what is going on there and even scanning the pictures to see if we recognize anyone from the small hospital where we worked.

I have learned many things from this trip. I have learned what it is to put your own feelings aside and be drawn by God to help even the least of these. I am not the person ANYONE would have thought to be working in a hospital on such traumatic injuries. I am the most unlikely person to be able to keep my emotions in check to be able to function at all under these circumstances, yet God chose me for such a time as this. I am humbled at His calm and peace that surrounded us as a team and me personally. I saw God more in this week than I think I have ever seen in my life. This was a Spirit-orchestrated trip from the time we said yes until we got home and even now continues.

I have a quote on my desk at work that kept coming back to me while in Haiti… “the will of God will never take you where the Grace of God will not protect you”. WOW just think about that for a few minutes. That makes me want to sing out a verse or two of the song “what a mighty God we serve”!

When we were in this small airport waiting to leave Haiti we had time to kill so I was just walking around. I wandered outside the airport to the parking lot and stood by the street just taking in the sights and sounds of the normal day living in Les Cayes, Haiti. All of a sudden I was struck that I was hearing a sound that I recognized but couldn’t put my finger on it immediately. Then it came to me, that was the sound of the theme music for Focus on the Family. A few minutes later I heard a song on the radio playing in English… “I stand, I stand in awe of You” I just stood there and sang the song softly in a moment of worship to God for the tremendous opportunity He had given to me during the week. Even that was a gift from God.

Don’t wait for the time to be right and everything to be just perfect…if God brings an opportunity to serve Him, grab it… even if you are fearful and best of all if it takes you outside of your normal confines and surroundings. Change is good and being stretched by God can bring amazing results. He can and will do exceedingly abundantly above all that you could ask or think…there is no better place to be than where God is and where He is moving powerfully.

Thank you for your prayers — they made the difference.
Charlene
May you always be overwhelmed by the Grace of God rather than by the cares of life.

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Haiti Disaster

Posted on 14 January 2010 by admin

Just a quick note to all who may be concerned.  There are four of us here in Haiti now from the US who are here now after the earthquake.  Thom Kelly left and Monday and is home safely.   We came down here to work on the new home for girls that IHAF (International Humanitarian Aid Foundation, Inc.) is helping to build in southern Haiti.  We are all safe and comfortable enough for the moment but we are not sure when we will be able to get home at this point.  We were supposed to go home tomorrow but that is not going to happen with the disaster conditions in Port au Prince.  We are looking for ways that we can help from here since we are here anyway,  Eduoard will be talking with his supervisor at the UN tomorrow to see what we could do.  We have welding equipment, generator, jacks, etc. and may be able to help in some way.  In the midst of all of this, Honel’s wife (a Hatian that works with us) is having her baby as we speak.  I have been to the hospital with him several times to offer food and suppport there.  I was there at midnight last night when more strong tremors shook and many panicked,.   People are all sleeping in the streets, even here, where the damage was minimal.   I need to go for now so others can use the skype connection to make calls. Its the only way we can communicate right now.  If any would like to send support, please donate through www.IHAF.us .  We were in the process of finding funding for another container of rice meals that is ready to be shipped from the US and donations would help that happen sooner than later.

You can read about 2 recent news items here:

http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2010/01/midland_park_pastor_stranded_i.html

http://www.northjersey.com/news/011910_Midland_Park_pastor_in_Haiti_working_despite_malaria-driven_fever.html

If anyone can find some of the supplies below please let me know. Thanks!

Dermatome with blades
Mesher with mesh plates and cards
K wires all sizes
Steinman pins
Pin cutter
Plaster saw
Bandage scissors

Thank-you.

Yours in service,
Andy

Donate to help to the Haiti Disaster Relief:

Haiti Disaster Relief Donation

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Consolation Center Haiti Journal - Monday, Nov. 2, 2009.

Posted on 10 December 2009 by admin

It’s the second trip now to physically work at the new property for Consolation Center. This time Peter Kikot is with me so we hope to accomplish a lot! We are starting out with our first day and night in Port au Prince. We have arranged to meet with some representatives of Pure Water for the World to see their factory and to hear about their part in putting water purifying filters in every school in Haiti and in as many homes as possible. We meet with one of their US representatives and with Roman who is very involved in running the factory and training people that receive the filters that are being made here. We have a good meeting at their “mission house”. We make arrangements to have 1 or 2 of our guys come to a seminar here next week so that Consolation Center can qualify to receive one of their filters. Its impressive how much they have accomplished with this project since I first heard about it at the Rotary Water Conference that was here almost 2 years ago. They not only have a factory employing 30 people making water fliters but they have placed filters in hundreds of schools and public places, training hundreds of people in the process in clean water handling and general sanitation practices.


Tuesday- We have rented a 4×4 crew cab pickup for this trip to help with picking up supplies in PAP where they are more available and also to have transportation readily available when we need it. We meet up with Honel and Yvald, the two guys who are working (mostly volunteering since they don’t have any work otherwise) with Eddie and help out with all sorts of things. They are here to make sure we get back safely and not lost. We run around PAP a bit Tuesday morning shopping, find out that the 2 – 20′ containers that Express Logistics thought were available to purchase, are currently full of stuff and they don’t know how soon they will be unloaded. We decide we will look anywhere and everywhere to see if we can find a couple more somewhere.


We finally head off to Les Cayes around 1 PM, arriving there about 6 PM. Not too bad really considering the several detours we have to take because of washed out roads and bridges! What a ride, you can tell its Peter’s first time across this country by looking at his photos! He has tons of pictures of people carrying evey imaginable thing on their head! Pictures of people and conditions of extreme poverty, huge mountains of garbage right next to the “open air” market, cooking on the street, “open air” bathroom, “playground”, etc. The mixture of sights, sounds, smells, levels of poverty and struggle are hard to describe or even begin to fathom for anyone, unless you have been there.

Wednesday - Everything here is going along typical Haitian style which means its incredibly difficult! Hope to have 2 more containers delivered tomorrow and the well finished being drilled, but it will be months before we can move

girls to the new property without more support and that is becoming a problem. ask for prayers for more support so we can make the new property liveable sooner than later. Peter cut his other thumb today but still went back to work in spite of the blood and pain. long hot days here, had a bit of heat exhaustion my self today but after a break, lots of water and some time in the AC from the truck we rented , I recovered and worked the rest of the day. Now I just have a bunch of little burns from welding all day, the gloves only cover a foot or so of the arms.

Had a good meeting with Eddie tonight and are meeting with the people from his board here tomorrow night. Hope to agree on a mission statement and some basic goals and guidelines for moving forward.

Thursday- We did a lot of cutting and welding today. Onel finally finished all the arrangements to purchase and have delivered 2 twenty foot containers late today. They are supposed to be delivered tomorrow. Lord willing the crane will be there on time and working and we will set the containers up level on blocks that we had delivered today. Tonight we met with Eddie and 3 of the people that are on his board here to discuss plans, ongoing maintenance, goals, fundraising, etc. It was a good meeting. We finally got back to the Hotel about 11 pm. A long hot day but we are getting a lot accomplished. We did have one big holdup today, the “mayor and his counsel” came out to the property and told us we had to stop working until we got authorization. Of course it is just a question of money, Eddie met with them, straightened things out and paid 1,000.00 gourdes, about 25 dollars. So the well drilling continues tomorrow along with the rest of the work!


Friday- No containers today! Typical Haitian style, Honel says they will leave PAP today but doesn’t know exactly when, doesn’t finally leave until late afternoon. They arrive at night, after dark so we arrange to meet them early in the morning. Only problem now is that the good crane we had reserved is not available on Saturday, we end up working out a deal with the guy we tried to use last time. Its not ideal, but it works. We make sure everything is marked out where we want the containers to go, finish welding security bars and the door hinges and latches. Now we can store stuff on the property.



A friend of Eddie’s, Petual, asks us to come visit a poor child with deformed legs. We go

into a ghetto area of Les Cayes to a make shift house where the 9 month old child is sleeping. We take some photos, arrange for xrays, we will submit to doctors here once home to see if surgery is a possibility. On the way out, Petual mentions this is probably not a safe place for white people, good thing its night time so not many saw us come and go!


Saturday morning comes early, another hot one! Oh yeah, we’re in Haiti, its always hot here! It takes all day, but we unload the 2 new containers, go to Espwa to get the one 40′ that is there, eventually get all 5 containers placed where they belong up on cement blocks so that we can dig the footings. Next trip down, the guys will have the footing poured, we will do a final jacking into level and then build block and concrete piers and a set of step for each.

One of the nicest things this trip has been the interaction with the local neighbors. Not only have many of them come by to watch but they have often been helpful with chairs, water, and even a mat for Peter to sleep on when he was really tired and waiting for the truckers to finish their work!


Peter and I feel like we have 14 new girl friends at the house where the girls are living now. Every time we stop by there they greet us with hugs and kisses all around! Peter ordered a “Sawyer” water filter to install in their house, it will filter out 99.99% of all impurities. Peter has been using one all week for his own drinking water, taking water from the local faucets! It must work pretty well, he doesn’t get sick from the water at all this trip, too bad it doesn’t keep mosquitoes away! He does come down with Dengue fever right after getting home. Spends a week in the hospital and a week at home recovering! The price we pay for helping others! True service above self.


We are committed now, Consolation Center is well underway. It feels great knowing how much we accomplished this week in spite of the difficulties! Until next trip, January, Lord willing, Andy

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A New Mission Project in Haiti

Posted on 15 June 2009 by admin

2009-06-15_1216

A New Mission Project in Haiti – The poorest country in our Hemisphere



We (Peter Kikot & Andrew Topp with International Humanitarian Aid Foundation) are in the midst of creating a fresh new home for girls called Consolation Center in southern Haiti. We are already helping homeless girls, currently aged 5-15, just outside of Les Cayes, in the area known as Turbec. Like the predecessor boys orphanage (Project Hope), this one is a very modest beginning. Managed by a husband and wife team (Eduard- who “graduated” from the original orphanage, and his wife Dejuene), the current rented facility provides daily meals for their fifteen in-house children and an additional twenty-five transient street children with no other means of support. The group of indigenous fifteen girls is fully supported with food and shelter, clothing/school uniforms (and education at an adjacent Christian school). All of these mission activities are supported on a mere $2500/month or less.

Pastor Andy has come up with a design for a housing facility for up to 50 girls, to be built on a piece of property that has been donated to Eduard and his wife Djeune. The total construction cost of the primary dormitory buildings will be $54,000.00. The bulk of this cost is for materials as most of the labor will be volunteer. This is the first phase of construction and is the most important to get started. We are seeking funding for the other phases of this humanitarian project, which will total $100,000.00 to build complete.

We are very interested in not only providing a safe and nurturing home for the girls we take in, but also provide them with essential life skills, education, and spiritual care.

If there are individuals, Rotary Clubs, Interact Clubs, churches and other organizations that would be interested in supporting this project, with finances as well as hands on help, their participation would be welcome.

Haiti is the poorest country in the Western hemisphere. As such, the suffering of so many people there, especially children, is mind-boggling. Yet we can make a difference, and indeed, some already have. While, the investment here is relatively small, the overall benefit to the girls currently living on the street and the good will it generates is enormous! Just read some of the girls stories below to see the kind of difference that has been made already. God is Good!

Stories of the current residents of Consolation Center, as translated from Creole by Eduard Constant:


Brisline Jean :
She was born in 2001,Brisline Father’s left the family since she was born.
Brisline doesn’t know her Dad but he still alive says people. She has 5 siblings, her Mom Can’t provide them food she left them with their 73 years old Grand Mother .Her Grand Mother heard about consolation home for girls she came and asked to receive all of them unfortunately, we do not have enough place and want to give a chance another need.

Dadine Jean:

We accepted her little sister Dadine Jean who was born in 2003.They are doing well at school and look very healthy.Same stories to her sister

Samorah Pierre:

Was born in 2003; she is the youngest of 4 brothers, 2 sisters

Her parents’ can’t afford to take care of her .They gave her to someone else where she works as a slave all day. She has to clean the house, carry head a bookit of water .A morning, we saw her cried she was asking to stay .Now she is with us , he is doing well at school and stay good hard work kid.

Sandra Calixte :

She was born in 2003; since she was born her parents left her and run to Dominican Republic and never come back. She stayed with her Aunt who doesn’t have a job Sandra was very anemic, weak and colorful hair when she came him .now she is a very quiet kid who loves to draw.



Manoucheca Sinal :

We don’t have a lot of details about her age but she says she is 5 years old

Her parents died in Gonaive during the hurricane. A Lady from les Cayes took her, later his husband kicked her out because she eats too much.



Daniela Calixte:

Daniela was born in May 2003, she is the 6th in her family with 7 kids who never go to school because the parents are too poor to afford that she is with us since September to go to school. Daniel is very happy to be with us



Sophonie Calixte:

Was born in 2004 same story with her older sister Daniela


Litane Etienne:

She was born in 2000 at Maniche, she was abandoned by her Mom and stayed with her mother in law. She worked as a slave, she was a malnourish kid, she was too weak to work the mother in law kicked her out. I am doing a humanitarian mission field where I met her in the street. I took her to the hospital where she stayed for 3 months for treatment. Now she is start school and doing therapy.

Tamara Wagnac:

She was born in 2004; she used to be a prisoner of her drug edict Father.Her Mon run a way in 2003.


Yousline Renaudin :

She is 5 years old , she was dropped with her birth certificate by someone on from of our gate. She said having three other sisters


Merisianne Jean Pierre:

She was born in 2004, She is a very good girl; She used to stay in the corner to ask for money or food to take care of two oldest sisters handicaps .Merisianne’s parents are category of mental handicap but Merisianne is healthy says the Doctor .


Edline Paul:

She is 10 years old she was abused by for money to buy food .She was recommended to us by the Mayor. A friend on mine who is a psychologist visits her twice per month. She made a lot of progress, now she is more happy than the passed


Lora Benoit :

She was born in June 1998 she is the oldest girls of consolation home. Lora doesn’t know his Dad she stayed with her single Mom since she was born. Lara Mom came around to consolation home offered her service just to find some foods to take home. One day she came with Lora and the little sister Yvenise the were enjoyed to be at consolation house and refused to go back because they find free foods joys of the girls now they become a member of our family.


Yvenise Zamy :

She was born in August 2006 same story with her older sister Lora

(A Note From Eduard…)

I send you these photos of Christian (below) that my

wife Djoune founded this little boy abandoned by himself under a bridge At Fond des Blancs .Djoune took Chris to the judge to legalize his case then took him to hospital where he spent 3 months. We do not have any in formations about his blood family. Since august 2008 he is with us at (mother in law house) I send you the photo # 210 that I take from now to compare to the ones that I took when we founded him.


Proposed new home of Consolation Center


Donations can be made to:

International Humanitarian Aid Foundation, Inc.

P.O.Box 13

Midland Park, NJ 07432

Or at: www.IHAF.us

Please designate “Consolation Center”

Proposed Budget Plan for Girls Orphanage Project in Haiti

Run by Eduard and Djeune Constant

For 50 Girls and some guardians

Phase I

4 – 40 foot containers @ 2,000.00 each    8,000.00

4 – 20 foot containers @ 1,500.00 each    6,000.00

Delivery = 500.00 each -            2,000.00

Masonry footings – 800.00 ea. X 8 =     3,600.00

Metal cutting equipment -             3,000.00

Welding supplies-                2,000.00

Miscellaneous – (screening, paint, etc)     400.00

Sub-total-                    25,000.00

Phase II

Build masonry base of compost house,

add toilets, sink, solar exhaust-        10,000.00

Equip housing with Bunk beds, desks,chairs 6,000.00

Equip Kitchen with gas stoves, sinks, etc    3,000.00

Solar power system for lighting and electric    10,000.00

Phase two sub-total                29,000.00

Phase III

Build roofing system -             25,000.00

Out door tables, benches, play area    10,000.00

Classroom/study/Chapel            10,000.00

Complete Project Total            99,000.00

The above prices are primarily for materials. Most labor is assumed donated/volunteer except for masonry work.

Respectfully submitted, Rev. Andrew J. Topp

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