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Rebuilding Haiti, Five Years Later

Progress is slow, yet steady five years after the earthquake struck Haiti.
United Nations
Progress is slow, yet steady five years after the earthquake struck Haiti.

When the first earthquake tremors struck Haiti,LorvenaSalomon was at her aunt’s house in Saint Marc, an hour northwest of Port-au-Prince.

“I’m just laying on the bed, and all of a sudden, the bed just started shaking. I was like, ‘Sak passe?’” she remembers of that devastating night, five years ago this week.

Her aunt replied, “Jezi ka passe.’’ That’s Creole for “Jesus is coming.”

“Jesus is coming? What does that mean?” Salomon recalled. “She said, “It means earthquake. There is an earthquake!”

Salomon had arrived in Haiti from Florida just two days earlier to see family. She was hoping to introduce her fiancé to her grandmother. Instead, she was a witness to a devastating tragedy that toppled landmarks, killed tens of thousands of people, and displaced more than a million.

The Haitian National Palace was heavily damaged in the January 2010 earthquake.
Credit United Nations
The Haitian National Palace was heavily damaged in the January 2010 earthquake.

She thought, “Lord, why did I come to Haiti around this time? Why am I here? And I thought about it? And it was like why are you not?”

Salomon made her way to the U.S. Embassy to ask for help, but ended up translating and nursing the injured.

After two weeks, the U.S. sent for its citizens and Salomon left, carrying her passport, a purse, and guilt.

“The hardest thing was getting into the plane and coming back home. I had clean clothes to put on and I knew what I was going to eat the next day, and they had no hope,” she admits.

Over 1 million Haitians were living in tents in the weeks after the earthquake. That number today has dropped to 100,000.

In those first weeks after the earthquake, hundreds of injured Haitians were flown to Florida hospitals for treatment. And for months, nurses, doctors and others across the state worked in makeshift hospitals in Haiti, offering whatever medical care they could.

The need to help hasn't stopped. Medical and humanitarian efforts continue, including from those with personal connections to Haiti like Lorvena Salomon.

The 27-year-old is a now an MBA student at University of Central Florida. And she goes back twice a year to bring food and hygiene products.

Hundreds of displaced Haitians live in makeshift homes outside Gheskio Field Hospital in Haiti.
Credit U.S. Navy
Hundreds of displaced Haitians live in makeshift homes outside Gheskio Field Hospital in Haiti.

She’s also a member of the Greater Haitian American Chamber of Commerce and is starting a non-profit to fill existing gap in services in Haiti.

Louise Comfort, director of the Center for Disaster Management at the University of Pittsburgh, blames that gap on a political vacuum where uncertainty reigned before and after the earthquake.

“This is a situation where the existing government in Haiti was very fragile. Resources came pouring in. It wasn’t a question of money. It was really a question of how do we get the work done,” Comfort said.

She is partnering with a Haitian state university to train students to use technology to assess building standards.

“International help can guide, can support, can suggest,” she said. “But honestly, the Haitians have to do it themselves.”

The Haitian Consul General in Orlando, Laurent Prosper, agreed.

“That’s the reason I believe our diaspora is very important to us,” he said. He has coordinated post-earthquake missions with doctors, nurses, and engineers in Central Florida—many Haitian.

“We are in a better situation than we were five years ago. We have a pretty strong educated diaspora, and we’re hoping that with them, we can make Haiti get to the other level,” he said.

Tourism in Haiti is up and new companies have emerged, but Prosper says education and job creation are key to rebuilding. More than 1 million children now attend school for free. Prosper wants to make sure they stay in Haiti.

“We definitely have been exporting our academic resource. Haitians go to a lot of countries in Africa and Canada and the U.S. and not coming back,” he said.

But that’s not Loverne Salomon. Back in Orlando, she shares her earthquake survival story whenever she can.

Salomon is preparing to get 501 c 3 status for her non-profit. She says if people like her don’t go back and help, then Haiti will remain the way it is.

“It’s not the government that’s going to change Haiti,” she said. “It’s people like us.”

Renata Sago is a reporter with WMFE in Orlando. WMFE is a partner with Health News Florida, which receives support from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

Copyright 2015 WUSF Public Media - WUSF 89.7

Renata joined the WVIK News team in March 2014, as the Amy Helpenstell Foundation Fellow. She anchors during Morning Edition and All Things Considered, produces features, and reports on everything from same-sex marriage legislation to unemployment in the Quad Cities.
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