This translation is not completely accurate as it was automatically generated by a computer.
Powered by

A UMNS Report
By Heather Hahn*
1:00 P.M. EST January 12, 2011
Haitian and U.S. volunteers work together to paint the home of “Sister Paulette”
Holly at the Methodist Children’s Home orphanage in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
UMNS photos by Mike DuBose.
View in Photo Gallery
Sometimes God’s plan comes with delayed flights.
Ten volunteers from Indian Run United Methodist Church in Dublin,
Ohio, planned to spend a week in Haiti, helping to rebuild a church and
bring cheer to local children. But when their flight was canceled, they
ended up staying a few days longer, hearing testimonies of faith from
earthquake survivors they would not have met otherwise.
One woman had rushed inside her collapsing house to rescue her
sleeping 4-day-old baby. She got her child to safety but suffered
serious head and shoulder injuries. The mother was taken to the
Dominican Republic for medical care, and her husband was warned she
likely would not survive.
“And she’s the one telling this story,” Howard Baulch, the United
Methodist team leader, recalled.
The mother believes she and her baby survived through the grace of God — or as she told the team, “My baby is special to God.”
Since the Jan. 12, 2010, earthquake, some 80 United Methodist
Volunteers in Mission teams have traveled to Haiti to work on
infrastructure projects prioritized by the Methodist Church of Haiti.
Many have returned home inspired by Haitian faith and eager to do more
mission work in the Caribbean nation.
Nearly 180 United Methodist volunteer teams are scheduled to work in the country in 2011.
A long history of cooperation between the Haitian church and United
Methodist volunteers is enabling the teams to accomplish much more than
they could on their own.
In six to eight months, the teams are completing projects that used
to take three to five years, said the Rev. Gregory A. Forrester, who
helped develop the denomination’s Haiti Response Plan for volunteers.
Forrester, the United Methodist Volunteers in Mission coordinator for the Northeastern Jurisdiction, has led three teams to Haiti since the earthquake.
“The response by UMVIM teams has been overwhelming and has enabled
rebuilding to occur quicker than could have been anticipated for the
damaged (Haitian Methodist) structures and their communities,” he said.
The Rev. Jim Gulley,
a United Methodist agriculture specialist and Haiti earthquake
survivor, said the volunteers are playing a vital role in giving hope to
Haitians.
“We may be impatient at times if things don’t work as well as we’d
like,” he said. “But on the other hand, we are accompanying the
Methodist Church of Haiti and the people of Haiti through this process.
And I think that they’re really convinced that ... we’re really
determined to be there for the long haul.”
Economic boost
The earthquake response marks the first time United Methodist Volunteers in Mission and the United Methodist Committee on Relief have worked so directly together in designing and funding a recovery plan of this magnitude.
The Rev. Val Garron (right) of St. Paul United Methodist Church
in Thorofare, N.J., volunteers with Haitians Jusner Mondesi
(left) and Desir Jean Clairsant in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
View in Photo Gallery
Each volunteer team of 10 to 12 people must, in addition to covering
its expenses, provide $3,500 to help hire Haitian workers and cover the
cost of supplies. UMCOR matches those funds.
That means for every United Methodist volunteer, two Haitian workers
are hired. The effort has provided jobs for hundreds of Haitians, said
the Rev. Mike Willis, who was the first Haiti volunteer-management
coordinator in the response plan’s pilot stage.
Haitian workers get paid and can continue the planned building
projects even when Volunteers in Mission teams are not there. For
example, work will continue even though 12 teams that were to travel to
Haiti in late January have been rescheduled because of fears of
political unrest around the presidential runoff election. The election
was initially set for Jan. 16 but has since been postponed to February
or later. United Methodist staff members in Haiti are monitoring the
situation.
Ultimately, the goal is to train a Haitian to take on the role of
volunteer coordinator for the teams coming to Haiti, said Una Jones, who
leads the mission volunteers department at the United Methodist Board
of Global Ministries.
Building faith
As the teams have built churches and schools, they also have built relationships with Haitians.
In the California-Nevada Annual (regional) Conference, volunteers
underwent “cultural competency” training before their trip to better
integrate with the Haitian work crews. Almost every volunteer agreed the
training was helpful, said Philip Bandy, the conference’s interim
director of volunteers in mission.
Bandy said he was most struck by the joy for life he encountered in Haiti.
“They don’t let their desperation eat them,” he said. “The Methodist Church in Haiti is alive and well.”
Experience in Haiti has affected the faith of mission volunteers,
such as Trey Barclay from Grace (United Methodist) Church in Cape Coral,
Fla. Barclay made two trips last year to Haiti, but it was the second
visit, in November, that changed him.
The Rev. Steve Knutsen (right), of Pleasant Valley (N.Y.) United Methodist Church, and translator Jean Claude Degazon tell
a story during a vacation Bible school for children at the Methodist church in Furcy, Haiti.
View in Photo Gallery
That moment came when his team visited Grace Children’s Hospital.
Another church member was making balloon animals for the young patients,
and almost all of the youngsters were smiling and laughing at the
rubbery creatures — except for one little girl. Barclay stood next to
her and tried to make her smile, but initially he had no luck.
He prayed for her, and for reasons he can’t quite explain, he tapped
her foot. Just one small touch, and she could no longer suppress a
smile. Soon she was laughing and playing like the other children.
“The look in her eyes I will never forget,” Barclay told his fellow
church members. “I know she is sick; I don’t know how her life will turn
out. But I do know for a very short time she was happy. She wasn’t
thinking about being sick or her future; she was just enjoying being the
child of God that she is.”
The experience prompted Barclay to make a decision of his own. He had
attended Grace Church for years but had never been baptized. His visit
at the children’s hospital moved him to become baptized while in Haiti.
Dealing with delays
When political protests in Port-au-Prince shut down the airport in
December, the Ohio team found itself staying longer than expected. The planned weeklong trip stretched to 12 days and brought additional challenges.
The group was working in Mellier, a village about a two-hour drive
west of Port-au-Prince, when word came from United Methodist staff that
the roads were blockaded.
Despite the uneasy time, the team members never worried about their
safety, Baulch said. Their construction project halted, and the local
school closed. The roads were eerily still because blockades had
prevented traffic from passing through. Finally, United Methodist staff
members were able to send a vehicle to take the team to the Methodist
Guest House in Petionville. From there, it took most of the team members
three days to get flights home.
“As American Airlines continued to cancel rescheduled flights, I kept
asking, ‘Why? Why were we being asked to stay? Why were we still
here?’” Baulch said. “My only answer at that point was the story we can
tell.”
When the team finally returned home Dec. 15, the volunteers found
their congregation and others in their community eager to hear about
their experience. Baulch, who directs missions for the church, said
those discussions sparked more interest in missions than he had seen
before. He wants to use that interest to encourage more mission trips to
Haiti.
“Even amidst the dangers, strife and stress,” he said, “we were always in God’s hands and able to do his work.”
*Hahn is a multimedia news reporter for United Methodist News Service.
News media contact: Heather Hahn, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
About UMC.org
RSS Feed
Press Center
Contact Us