This translation is not completely accurate as it was automatically generated by a computer.
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A UMNS Report
By Kathy L. Gilbert*
7:00 A.M. EST January 13, 2011 | PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (UMNS)
Children play between rows of tents at Camp Corail where the United
Methodist Committee on Relief is helping provide services. UMNS photos
by Mike DuBose.
View in Photo Gallery
An hour’s drive separates the quiet refuge of Camp Corail — among
Haiti’s largest tent cities — from the clutter and clatter of the
dusty, garbage-strewn streets of the capital city.
The population in and around the camp is about 10,000, with the
thousands living in the planned settlement of hurricane-proof white
tents joined by thousands more in makeshift shelters along the
perimeter.
Nine pastel green and blue schoolrooms built by the United Methodist
Committee on Relief’s nongovernmental organization —one of several
agencies providing day-to-day essential services — stand out in the sea
of white. “UMCOR” is spray-painted in red next to the front doors.
An anchor in the storm
This tent city offers a cleaner, more substantial home than the
filthy tattered tents thrust into every corner of Port-au- Prince. But
with no grocery stores, churches, restaurants or other urban
conveniences, the camp is also isolated and sterile.
Since it is difficult and costly for tent-city residents to get to
Port-Au-Prince for food and water, relief workers bring those items —
as well as services like security protection and latrines — to this
camp, just a few kilometers north of the capital city.
The UMCOR-built schoolrooms have wheelchair access and capacity for
50 students. By dividing the free schooling into two half-day sessions,
there are enough rooms to accommodate about 900 students.
Jeandline, 2, plays with a doll while her mother, Jean Marise, prepares dinner in front of their tent at Camp Corail.
View in Photo Gallery
“UMCOR is also supplying school materials, benches, desks and
chairs,” said Josny Mehu, a program officer for UMCOR-Haiti. The
management of the schools will be turned over to the Haitian government.
A Haitian national, Mehu worked with the former UMCOR Haiti office
before it closed in 2008. When the office reopened after the 2010
earthquake, he reenlisted.
Not only are the needs of the students are tended to, but so are the
fears. Each building has been designed, tested and constructed to
withstand a Category 2 hurricane, Mehu said. The schools are among the
most secure structures in the camp, with features such as 30-degree
roof pitch, hurricane strapping, reinforced trusses and half-inch
plywood construction throughout.
“When Tropical Storm Tomas hit the island in early November,
residents sought shelter in the schoolhouse,” Mehu said. “The buildings
were not damaged and everyone was safe.”
The camp and the school fill a desperate need. The 2010 earthquake
damaged or destroyed 4,500 schools in the Port-au-Prince area,
according to an initial survey by the Ministry of Education. As of
September, about 1,000 schools still required debris clearance.
Finding shelter, comfort
Despite the harsh reality of being a home for refugees from the
massive human disaster, the camp is not without beauty. White-capped
mountains frame the horizon. Horses, goats and other domestic animals
munch on the sparse grass leading up to trails through the hills.
But deep inside the tent city there are no trees, no grass, no bushes, no grazing livestock nor beautiful, pristine views.
The white gravel, used to cover and contain the dust in this
settlement, reflects the heat and is blinding at midday. Even in the
cooler month of November, it takes only minutes for the skin to burn and
sweat to roll down the back.
Camp Corail is home to about 10,000 people displaced by the January 2010 earthquake.
View in Photo Gallery
UMCOR plans to plant papaya and lemon trees for shade and a
community garden for food and income. Because the camp is located at the
base of a hillside, UMCOR is building a drainage system to keep the
camp from flooding. In fact, busloads of residents were brought to this
more secure camp from mudslide-prone areas during the rainy season.
Temporary wooden houses are also being constructed so tent dwellers
eventually will be able to move into more private, comfortable living
quarters. The homes will be placed in the same locations as the tents so
everyone knows who will live where.
On a warm day in November, 3-year-old Deshca skips around one of the
few sections with completed homes. Wearing a white dress, several
sizes too large, she plays with the tattered satin ribbon around her
waist. When she runs, she raises the dress hem, revealing dusty, little
feet.
Sitting outside their small home, Deshca’s mother, Princifanie, keeps close watch on the child.
The family of six recently moved into the new house, and she is happy with the change from tent-dwelling.
“This is something I could never do when we lived in the tent,” she
said, washing clothes in a small plastic pan. “It was much too hot
during the day.”
Princifanie, who is pregnant, appreciates the comfort she has from
owning a “real” home. She smiles and says, “Now if I get tired during
the day I can go inside and lie down.”
Princifanie washes her family's clothes while her daughter, Deshca, watches in front of their temporary home at Camp Corail.
View in Photo Gallery
Going inside to rest during the daytime is not a comfort offered to
those still living in the tents, which are laid out with military
precision on the white-gravel plots that cover an area of about 20
football fields.
The tents don’t “breathe” so it is impossible to sit inside during
the day, says Jean Dline, a young mother who lives in one of the tents
in Block 3.
Her family has been waiting several months for a chance to move into
the more substantial wooden homes like Princifanie occupies.
She says the family is unhappy here, but they can’t go home. There
is no home, nothing for them to return to, in Port-au-Prince.
“Life is very hard here,” she says. “But we have no choice.”
*Gilbert is a multimedia reporter for the young adult content team.
News media contact: Kathy L. Gilbert, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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