Noël Anisia, committee member
|
For me, before CHE came to Lospinit we had so many things ravaging the community. For example, we had kwashiorkor, children with bloated bellies. We learned a lot about nutrition, and now the children are more well-nourished.
Also
with cholera, God really extended grace to us through the CHE program
– the trainers taught us great lessons. They taught us to wash our
hands before we eat, to make a Tippytap to wash our hands. They
taught us to make a dish rack, to make latrines, keep our yard good
and clean, and gather up the trash. Oh, man, this was really good.
The
trained a committee and community health evangelists (CHEs). The CHEs started doing home visits.
Whatever house we go to, people are really glad and they tell us not
to get discouraged and to keep visiting them. After we learn
something we show it to our family.
Something
else we teach people is to sit down once a month to share. We meet
the fourth Sunday of every month – the trainers, committee members,
and CHEs. We gather funds into a pool, we call this a “mutual.”
We loan the money to each other, and for every 100 gourdes you borrow
you have to pay back an extra 10 gourdes. It's for when one of us
has a problem, this augments what we have. Once I had a need and at
our monthly meeting everyone gave me 100 gourdes. . . I resolved the
problem. In two months I repaid the loan.
In
terms of what we learn in CHE about wisdom: even if it's not easy,
because of the training we learn -- even if we are the loser in a
situation we control ourselves, we use wisdom, we measure our words.
(c) copyright Noël Anisia. Used with author's permission.
François Jean, committee member |
CHE
has taught me many things. I have learned how to have better
hygiene. I have learned SODIS [solar disinfection of water]– we do this quickly and we see it's
a really good way to treat water. Before I treated water with
chlorine but that's difficult because you have to buy the chlorine.
SODIS is easier. Also,
we help people built latrines so that they can protect themselves
against bacteria.
CHE also teaches us how to evangelize better and
in a way that is more brief. We don't talk on and on like we used
to. With what we learn in CHE we learn we should speak briefly and
simply. We shouldn't talk on an on, brief is better. I like to use
the brochure “Peace with God,” we teach a lot of people how to
use it.
Once
I was walking down the street and I came across a person who was
evangelizing. He was talking a lot and made people tired. I looked
for him later on so that I could teach him this method. He thanked
me, saying that he thought the brochure was really good. He asked if
I could get one for him and I said I would look into it for him.
(c) copyright François Jean. Used with author's permission.
(c) copyright François Jean. Used with author's permission.
Amelie Jean-Baptiste, Community Health Evangelist |
What
I like about CHE is the Bible teaching. When you see a portion of
Scripture, that really helps you. If you have a disagreement with
someone we have learned we shouldn't yell at people. We have changed
this and really behave better with people within the CHE group and
with our neighbors. We even tell the children they should live like
brothers and sisters and not argue or hit each other or throw stones
and hurt one another. When there is fighting the children suffer and
their parents suffer, too. They listen to us, and even though they
still fight sometimes it's gotten better.
(c) copyright Amelie Jean-Baptiste. Used with author's permission.