Saturday, March 21, 2015

First days in Haiti

Barren lands and rice fields; azure ocean and mountainside slums; French and Creole - Haiti is a land of many paradoxes.  But the greatest paradox I’ve seen is the HATS-Haiti compound at the edge of a canal, sitting next to villages where there is no evening light and I am reminded that Jesus is the Light of the world; that He, and He only, can bring a nation out of darkness.                         

Seeing “tap-taps,” crowded markets, rolling mountains, azure oceans, welcoming smiles and children



On the way to HATS-Haiti Orphanage                                            Mountain slums


          
                        



                                                            

Market                                                                                   Gemima

Hearing children singing, roosters crowing, goats “baa-ing”, a rice mill grinding and generator working
                                
High school student singing                                           goat

Tasting fresh mangoes, “mini” bananas, pumpkin soup, rice with sauce and veggies I can’t pronounce
                                       
Mini-bananas (called “figs” in Haiti)                           Papayas

Smelling food cooking, charcoal burning, and yes- sweaty smells from working in the intense heat

Touching children’s braids, hugs from a child, kissing the cheeks of our cooks, net-covered bed             
       Children at HATS                                                               Mosquito net

Feeling joyful, thankful, useful, humbled
In Haiti, people will build “with another” level in mind; in case they want to add another floor.  I am reminded  that we, as Christians, need to build with another level in mind; meaning to not only lead people to Christ, but then teach them and grow them- to become disciples.  HATS is striving to do so, as they teach the next generation about the gospel; even as they learn their reading, writing and arithmetic.  It is our privilege to be here and so, we’ve been painting; a lot.  Lovely colours are being rolled and brushed onto the walls of a church built by Haitian contractors.  Another team will paint the outside and those who are waiting for the colour scheme, with bated breath, will see it tomorrow.

church


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