Click on this link and scroll down to see Bois de Laurence, then zoom out to see where exactly these villages are located in northeastern Haiti.
is |
Soulvenie Succeda, community health evangelist in Lagwamit |
We also train people so that they don't get in fights on the street. We say, “A village is a family.” We should work together and get along. We should help each other. Neighbors used to not get along with other neighbors. We did two or three trainings and people saw that what they were doing wasn't good, and now they don't fight anymore
Many of us started planting vegetables and we are much healthier now. We started home vegetable gardens. We invited everyone to plant, and 14 people decided to make a community garden – so we call our group “The 14 Organization.”
(c) copyright Soulvenie Succeda. Used with author's permission.
Davilus Montimer, trainer in Sylvestre |
We
started with CHE in 2003. When cholera came in 2010 we were really
proud because we were able to teach others. As far as physical
topics, we taught people to wash their hands before eating and after
leaving the latrine. We taught people to drink treated water. We
taught people to use better hygiene so that their children would have
fewer parasites and less diarrhea. We taught them that every person
should have a place where they go to the bathroom. We taught people
about a spiritual life and gave people training so that they could
walk with Christ.
So
then, when cholera came, other organizations came in to train us.
This is when we all felt proud, because when people came with the
training they say that we already had all the information! No one
involved in the CHE program died, thanks to God, thanks to the
information everyone had.
Thanks
to CHE. . .we have done perinatal training, and thanks to this we
have fewer people die in childbirth. Once
I was in bed and I heard someone knocking at my door. It was someone
coming to tell me that Madame Jiwani had abdominal pains. I asked
when this started, and we found someone who had a bicycle and who
could go get her. He put her in a truck and went to the hospital in
Pignon. If she wouldn't have gotten there either she or the baby
would have died. She always talks about CHE and says that it's
thanks to CHE that she has her baby.
I
went to a house where the people there didn't ever go to church. I
took my Bible and went and tried to share some verses with them. I
continued to talk about how Jesus loves us, John 3:16, he gives us
hope. . . The woman of the
house used to go out and sell things on Sundays, but
now goes to church! . . She stays strong, she is continuing
to follow God.
Junimode, trainer in Mapou |
We were in darkness. We see CHE as a grace God gives to us, it is
like cool water for us.
During the time cholera was ravaging the country, thanks to God we
didn't lose a single person. Mapou has become a beautiful mapou tree! [The community is named after
the mapou tree.] We didn't know how to wash our hands, and the
children played on the ground. Now when you see a child with a mango
you'll hear someone shout: Hey, go wash that mango before eating it!
We
had a problem with our road. We sat down together and we decided to
come up with a plan to get there faster. No one from the outside
helped us, we did it ourselves. Unfortunately, we weren't able to
finish before the rainy season started. But thanks be to God, we
began. We will get there.