Singing is my Signal Booster

The week after my conversation with Annabelle was a good one. I felt settled in my new digs at Tabarre and I was making progress at work, preparing an application for emergency hurricane relief. If it’s approved, 30 families will get money to buy food for their children and reassemble their homes. That felt like a good enough reason to be in Haiti that week.

I was in my stride, I was quoting Ban Ki-moon, it was all coming together! I was elated, Gena was frustrated. I knew why; you can create all the pretty statistics you like but you can’t tabulate human suffering. I looked at her and said, ‘This is a marriage made in heaven! You hate all this stuff. I live and breathe it’. Twenty years of local government training were coming into their own. Red tape? I have a black belt in it.

On Wednesday, I had this conversation with my friend Kim on Viber and I didn’t absolutely lose it, like I would have on day one. I just got on with it and accepted the things I cannot change, like the climate, the ecosystem and native gecko behaviour.

Me:        I just saw a little lizard in my room but now I can’t find him. My housemate says he’s not aggressive … yay.

Kim:       How little are we talking?

Me:        Small but swift.

Kim:       Apparently, they keep insects in check and are harmless, unlike mosquitoes (just googled).

Me:        That’s grand but I don’t want to wake up with a lizard on my face.

Kim:       Googles if lizards like faces …

Me:        Is afraid to google lizards and faces …

Buoyed up by feeling useful and reconciling myself to reptiles, I agreed to go to Kenscoff for the weekend. Kenscoff is the NPH residential home high in the mountains above Port-au-Prince. It houses over 300 children, some of whom are orphans, some of whom are abandoned, many of whom have special needs. Third move in two weeks, you say? Why, certainly! In fact, my bag is already packed. I live out of a suitcase now, you see! Cheerfully!

The Friday-evening drive took two hours on dusty roads and through crowded markets, where people sold crumpled clothes, fat-backed tellies and second-hand blenders. Every consumer item ever created in the first world must end its short life cycle here. There was rubbish and rubble everywhere; mountains of refuse, rivers of rocks.

The mini-bus driver bought twelve dozen eggs and handed them to me to mind. I balanced them on my knees and was afraid all the way that they would scramble in the heat or crack from their Haitian massage. That’s a euphemism for having the shite shaken out of you on roads that are more pothole than any other discernible thing.

Kenscoff’s setting is stunning; the mountains and tall trees make it look like the Swiss Alps. There were challenges of course; what would a new day in Haiti be without them? The drinking water was not safe, the rainwater had to be collected to flush the toilet and there was no Internet connection. I went to bed on Friday night thinking, ‘I can do this. If I can live with a lizard, I can do this’.

On Saturday morning, I walked the grounds with some of the children, who proudly pointed out their own individual houses and every facility on site; a school, a library, a bakery, a clinic, a little hut where boys go to get their hair cut. Then they taught me the Creole word for every animal under the sun at a mural of Noah’s Ark. And everywhere I went, big eyes stared at me like I was one of the exotic animals in that mural and little hands made their way into mine. On Saturday afternoon, I read a whole book in one sitting thinking, ‘This is amazing. I never read any more’.

On Sunday morning, my new beginning tripped and fell.  I had a very sick stomach, probably from the water, even though we boiled everything we drank. That’s another euphemism and it means the same thing as the first one. I was upset about the water and the sickness and the Internet and I wanted to go straight back to Tabarre. But Monday was a national holiday, so we wouldn’t be leaving any time soon. The rage was in me, this time with God.

I came to Haiti because of my faith. I felt drawn here in a way that I couldn’t explain or resist. But since I arrived, my conviction has wavered and the connection to God has collapsed, like the power lines that Hurricane Matthew flattened. It was like a Viber call that had gone from ‘excellent signal’ to ‘poor signal’ all of a sudden and for no obvious reason. Only there would be no Viber calls for the next few days, would there now, God? Only physical discomfort and social isolation and spiritual torment. It’s a good job God is used to me. Somewhere over Kenscoff, he may have rolled his eyes.

I went to Mass to distract myself and there, for the first time in two weeks, a brief, flickering signal was restored. The children had gone all out for the occasion; there were party dresses and smart shirts, there were dangly earrings and colourful beads. In my casual t-shirt and jeans, I was scarlet for myself. And they sang the sweetest songs and I nearly cried because I saw a young girl, who is non-verbal, who can’t make words with her mouth, add her voice to the chorus, her face all lit up with passion and pride. Start where you are, use what you have, do what you can – I use that motto all the time but I never saw it put into practice so movingly in front of me. I made a little video to remember the singing by; I watched myself mouth the word ‘happy’ in it because, in that instant, I truly was.

So, another week of highs and lows, all myriad and magnified. I don’t know if one is enough to sustain the other just yet but the fact is, I’m still here. I’m still here with the honest intention of learning some church music, so that maybe I won’t miss my gospel choir at home so much. I’m still here with the honest intention of getting through another week. And this week’s honest intention is better than last week’s wobbly hope.

When the Thing You Resist is the Thing You Really Need

It’s nearly two weeks since I left Petion-Ville. I resisted the move, even after hearing gunshots at the gate, because I’m the kind of human being who clings to what she knows.

I had just learned how things worked in Petion-Ville; how to find the key that I needed in the warden’s bunch that I carried, how to change the water dispenser and how to activate the electric pump when the water tanks are empty. I’m not good at maintenance matters at home and I’m even worse at them here. I was determined to learn but my eagerness made me clumsy; I tripped over or spilled everything I approached.

So, I had finally mastered a few basic tasks, giving me some degree of control over my own environment, or so I imagined. Then word came that I would be moving to Tabarre, the school and rehabilitation centre where I work. The move was for my own safety while my housemate was away but I wasn’t one bit happy. I felt like a witness protection scheme criminal moving between safe houses.

I sent a WhatsApp to my boss Gena saying, ‘I know you’re juggling and things change quickly, but I find all of this unsettling’. She replied, ‘That’s how it is here. We have to let go of our need to always know what will happen next’. That’s Mayo for, ‘Get on with it now, Lily White’.

The first night I shared a room with two Haitian girls who grew up in the orphanage that Gena runs. My face fell when I realised that I wouldn’t have a room of my own, like I did in Petion-Ville. I lived alone before I came to Haiti, apart from a short stay with my parents before I left. I really value my privacy. But privacy isn’t an option here. Here, you say, ‘Hello. Nice to meet you’ to someone new. Then you move in with them and hang your knickers on their line to dry.

The girls were friendly and we communicated through gestures. They pointed to the air-conditioning unit and seemed to ask if I wanted it left on overnight. I nodded. At 3 a.m. I had to climb out of bed, put on extra layers and use my towel as a blanket because it was bitterly cold. The girl next to me wore a woolly hat as she slept. I went back to bed bewildered.

I woke up the next morning to see the same girl remove her hat discreetly under her blanket. It occurred to me that she might have set the temperature lower than usual for me, for my comfort. Now she was trying not to offend me with her discomfort. The night before, after lights out and before the polar winds, I heard her chatting to herself. I only realised she was praying when I heard her say mèsi, mèsi – thank you, thank you.

By Sunday night, Lily White was contrite. Tabarre had transformed me and it was hard to say how. Maybe it was finally feeling physically safe. The low-level terror was gone and my brain cells and emotions rejoiced at their sudden liberation. ‘We’re back!’, they said. ‘We’re free to process other inputs now, like that Caribbean sunset you’re watching in a rocking chair on a porch. Look at those colours, all light and dark and swirly, like someone splashed pink lemonade on a bad bruise. We didn’t even notice that when you only fed us fear’.

Maybe it was the beautiful, candlelit Mass that I had just attended in the grounds of St. Damien Hospital. Fr. Rick Frechette is the priest here, a Passionist from the US. He’s also a medical doctor and national director of the charity I work for. When things get really difficult here, really violent and desperate, he stays and says, ‘What kind of shepherd would leave when the wolf comes?’ He said Mass that evening and even though I didn’t understand one word of his long Creole sermon, even though I sweated through it in complete linguistic oblivion, I still felt the better of it.

Maybe it was the news coming through of Hurricane Matthew’s devastating impact in the parts of Haiti that I couldn’t see but that are still in my new neighbourhood. 1,000 deaths and US $1 billion dollars of damage at the last reckoning. When I read that, when I started to comprehend the magnitude of the catastrophe here, I felt ashamed of thinking and writing the words ‘poor me’ on the eve of it. I wanted to edit those words out of my first blog post immediately but I let them stand as a lesson to myself. They’re my first milestone on the path to proper solidarity.

Maybe it was the conversation I had with Annabelle, the praying girl. In her hesitant English she told me that she didn’t know her own parents, that she had grown up in Gena’s orphanage and considered her to be her mother. She said that she didn’t miss her parents but that sometimes, when she saw a mother and child together, she felt sad. She joined her arms and made a cradling motion when she said that and I felt overwhelmed by compassion for the child she once was. Her smile is radiant and she’s always smiling. When I tell her that, she says, ‘It’s because I have a happy heart’.

Whatever the reason, I went to bed on Sunday night with a whole new attitude. ‘Don’t be the person who complains about mosquito bites when people have lost their homes’, I told myself. ‘Don’t be the person who sends uppity messages to her boss when she’s nursing a sick child in hospital and dealing with the aftermath of a hurricane. Be the girl who has no parents and very few possessions but who still shares her small space with good grace and goes to sleep whispering, ‘thank you’. Be that serene soul for a week. If you can’.

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These girls have been so kind to me.
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The Creole for smile is souri. Souri also means mouse. A mouse eats cheese. That’s what you say when you want someone to smile. I’m getting cute about learning new words. Please ignore my wet head.

 

The Tomato is Red

It’s 2 pm on a Monday afternoon. I’m in a small bedroom in a rundown house in a lawless city in a broken country. I don’t know why I’m here.

I’ve been in Port-au-Prince since Thursday night when I arrived on the last flight from Atlanta. Gena from Ireland and Norma from Argentina came to collect me from the airport. Annette from Sweden took charge of me when I arrived. I was shocked that first night. Shocked at the accommodation – such a basic bedroom, such a fortress feel, with an armed guard at the entrance and keys to every door and gate, keys that I can never let out of my sight or give to anyone for fear that they’ll rob me in the night. Or worse.

I fell into my little room with two overstuffed suitcases, all stunned and stumbling. I couldn’t make the light work and I didn’t want to disturb anyone so I went to bed in the dark, distressed because I couldn’t see to unpack or put up the mosquito net that I had gone to such great lengths to procure.

I was excited getting up on Friday, despite the 4.30 am start, despite the lack of hot water to shower in. I was looking forward to seeing where I’d be working and meeting the people I’d be working with. The driver came to collect us and we mini-bus-meandered through the city, climbing at times and stopping off to collect various, random staff members; the butcher, the baker, the candlestick- maker, or so it seemed. The city was alive at that early hour; colourful, loud, dusty. I was drinking it in, delighted to be in such an exotic environment, thinking about the photos I’d take of all the sights with my new camera, like the queues of elegantly-attired locals waiting for visas at the American Embassy; such surprising sunrise style.

We arrived at Tabarre, the NPH centre where I’ll be based; more guards, more gates. We went straight to morning Mass at the neighbouring hospital. I was warned to expect corpses in body bags laid out on the floor. There were none that day; no patients had passed away. It was a beautiful service. I was welcomed by the friendly Mexican priest Hugo, the singing was soothing and I left feeling happy and serene.

My working day is 7 am to 2 pm. There was a bad start. About 80 special needs children attend the school at Tabarre. I know some of their faces from the NPH page on Facebook. Their smiles are the reason that I left one life behind and flew 4,000 miles to start another. At first they were all kisses and hugs and shouts of ‘nouvo’ and ‘blan’ which was fair enough; I am new and very white too. Then one child sank his teeth into my arm and I froze. Haitians speak Creole. I have a few words but not the one I needed in that precise moment; stop!

I tried not to panic. There was no broken skin so I cleaned my arm and retreated to my cool, air-conditioned office to read some files on my desk. One of them mentioned the prevalence of HIV among NPH beneficiaries. I stopped pretending I wasn’t panicking. I texted all the work colleagues whose numbers I had to express my panic as politely as possible. They reassured me but I wasn’t convinced. ‘Tis a rough welcome’, Gena replied and that summed it up. It was just one little boy’s exuberance but I felt rejected, assaulted and woefully out of my depth.

I stood to observe a school lesson and learned my first Creole phrase; tomat la se wouj – the tomato is red. Tomato talk won’t get me too far in a crisis but it’s a start. I joined the other volunteers for lunch and there was goat stew on the menu. I couldn’t do it. Goat is something I’ll have to build up to, not a day-one-delicacy. I was insulting the cook and my hosts. It felt like another tiny failure on my part and they were starting to accumulate.

Then it was home to a weekend of lockdown and hurricane talk. There is a great feeling of unrest on the streets of Port-au-Prince at the moment. Elections are coming next weekend. In the meantime, there is no government, no proper state machinery, no stability. Crime is at a high because poverty and hunger are also peaking. Most Haitians survive on less than $2 a day. I spent ten times that on a quick food shop that filled a small basket.

So we can’t stir outside the curtilage of this house. There are about fifty steps between my bedroom door and the front gate. That’s my radius of activity for now because Hurricane Matthew is coming, so there’ll be no work for a few days. Matthew’s slow-moving centre is expected to hit Haiti tonight. Poor Haiti – as if it hasn’t suffered enough. Poor me too – clearing the yard of all potentially air-borne missiles on day three of my big adventure. Plant pots, rat traps; they’re all under cover now.

If any or all of this seems self-pitying, I apologise. I’m lucky in lots of ways. Unlike many of my 2.6 million new neighbours in this sprawling city, I have secure accommodation, a reliable food supply and enough money to get by. My work colleagues have been gracious and helpful and every Haitian I’ve met has been beautiful, curious, courteous and kind. I thought twice about sharing any of this because I don’t want to seem ungrateful or reflect badly on anyone. If I’m struggling, it’s because I’ve been naïve, not because anyone failed to warn me what was ahead. I need to be honest though and I need support from home until I find my feet in this truly chaotic country.

I’m reading “The Big Truck That Went By – How the World Came to Save Haiti and Left Behind a Disaster” by Jonathan M. Katz. He says, “Most foreigners arrived with good intentions: to help the poorest people in the hemisphere, people who could never seem to catch a break”. I recognise myself in that sentence and I’m wondering if good intentions are ever enough. For now, I’m just thankful to Jesus that one thing is the same in Haiti as it is at home; tomatoes are red wherever you go. Otherwise, and especially until the hurricane passes, all bets are off.