From
Israel To Haiti With
Love - Remembering
IDF, Children

Photo:
Joel Leyden
By
Joel Leyden
Israel News Agency
Jerusalem
---- February 16, 2010
. This is not easy. Writing about
death, destruction and human suffering never is. I really don't
want to be here. I really didn't want to go to Haiti after its
devastating 7.0 magnitude earthquake. But few have editorial,
Web 2.0, SEO - search engine optimization, new media skills that
could open a badly needed, vivid window to Haiti.
Nor did I
want to return now to this place of sweat, blood and tears.
The writer
F. Scott Fitzgerald when confronted with writer's block told his
publisher that he could not write any longer. Fitzgerald was given
this simple advice by his publisher: "write about why you
can't write."
With this advice I will now try to describe some of the horrors
and some of the pride of Israel for which I witnessed and felt
in Haiti.
As a messenger.
Nothing more, nothing less. I capture images not through a cold
lens click, but rather from those around me who whisper, cry,
laugh, touch, smile and breathe. It is for the people of Haiti
that I write. That you shall know their deep suffering and take
action in the most humanitarian means.
So if I can sit here going back into hell, you can surely take
out your wallet or purse and make a donation to feed some very
hungry and starving children.
Haiti
I first visited
Haiti when I was 12-years-old. My parents would take me on luxurious
ship cruises every Christmas to the tranquil, fun Caribbean. I
never forgot the poverty though, the dirt in the streets and the
white smiles of the children who came to the clean, tall docked
luxury cruise ships and swam to grab the silver coins we would
throw into the water.
The people
of Haiti are sweet.
Not corrupted
by commercial concerns. Very basic. Very Israeli in the sense
that the world has seemed to have forgotten them in their poor
misery. They have been victims sentenced by cruel fate and then
tossed about again by both human design and the unlimited forces
of nature. They remain victims today sitting among their dead
parents, brothers, sisters and children and babies. Sitting next
to their own fesis.
The 2010 Haiti earthquake
occurred at 16:53 local time on Tuesday, January 12, 2010.
By January 24, at least 52 aftershocks measuring 4.5 or greater
had been recorded. An estimated three million people were affected
by the earthquake catastrophe Haiti Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive
recently stated that over 220,000 people had died and that 500,000
remained injured.

Photo:
Joel Leyden / Israel News Agency
Bellerive also estimated
that 250,000 residences and 30,000 commercial buildings had collapsed
or were severely damaged.
Earthquake
Jocelyn Lassegue,
a native of Haiti who always wore a warm smile and worked as an
English to French translator with Israel
Flying Aid, describes the morning of January 12.
"I was
on my bike (motorcycle) on my way to work. I sell mobile telephones.
As I was riding on one of the main roads all I started to see
was dust. Dust rising from the ground. The ground was shaking
violently, so strong that it threw me off my bike. As I lay on
the shaking ground I could see cars flying in the air as they
turned over in every direction. Three people who stood just a
few meters from me and started to rush over to help me were hit
by falling cement blocks. They died where they stood. All I could
hear was the sound of people screaming and crying. I made my way
back home to discover that it was no more. Just rubble. My wife
Ruth and two young children were inside. My wife and kids were
watching a popular TV series. They were killed where they were
sitting. I could do nothing except cry myself to sleep."
Jocelyn-Lassegue
adds: "As the morning sun rose I started to remove the cement
and bricks. I pulled my family out and dug a big hole next to
the house. That is where they are now. With God."
Israel
Within hours of the
earthquake, Israel Prime Minister Netanyahu gave the orders for
the Israel Defense Forces Homefront Command Search and Rescue
and medical teams to leave for Haiti. Within 72 hours the IDF
had established the first field hospital in Port au Prince. Within
6 hours, the Israel Defense Forces were saving lives as they opened
their operating rooms to hundreds of Haitians.
In the two weeks that
the IDF served the people of Haiti, they treated over 1,000 people
and delivered one baby.

Israel
Flying Aid
Well before the IDF
were unzipping their kit bags in Haiti, I sought means to get
there. The IDF had only 4 slots open for the Spokesperson's Office
and I was not one of them. They suggested that I speak with Israel
Flying Aid. By coincidence, I had the pleasure of meeting Israel
Flying Aid founder and director Gal Lusky, optimized their Website
a few years ago and thoroughly enjoyed a colorful fund raiser.
Israel Flying Aid invited
me to join their delegation to Haiti. This was with only two days
notice. When asked "when are we flying out" the only
answer was a tentative Thursday morning. Wednesday night I attended
a final briefing at their Tel Aviv headquarters. Hours before
I received injections for tetanus, typhoid and malaria and picked
up an emergency satellite phone in Herzlia.
At the IFA headquarters,
large, black kit bags with our names attached on white labels
lined the halls. Our luggage contained a few things. White and
blue Israel Flying Aid Disaster Relief T-shirts and hats to be
identified by, head flashlights, a brown, plastic spoon and fork.
And dozens of alcohol gel packets to remove our hands and faces
of the germs and disease we were about to depart for.
Next to our bags lay
open bags of hundreds of small, white, fluffy dolls. Bunny rabbits
and tigers and cats. All providing a glimpse of the mission that
we had before us. To treat the children of Haiti for severe trauma,
shock and rape.
|
The
tragedy that is Haiti was very well illustrated this week
by Deborah Sontag, a reporter in a front page news story
of the International Herald Tribune. This reporter spoke
with an American, Dr. Elizabeth Bellino, a U.S. pediatrician
who was treating a 12-year-old before his leg was amputated.
While treating him, she broke down in tears facing an unlimited,
depressing burden of children suffering around her. The
young boy comforted her and told her to attend to the other
children who were more sick. She regained her composure
and gave the boy a kiss. Two days later she left for Rwanda
for another humanitarian mission, but her mind always went
back to this little boy in Haiti. The reporter found both
Elizabeth and the little boy. Elizabeth said that she planned
on returning to Haiti within two weeks and wanted to know
what the little boy wanted. Upon hearing this from the news
reporter, the little boy in Haiti quickly responded that
he wanted a bicycle to ride to school and to church. Then
he took his hand and hit his head, saying: "I forgot."
|
Lastly, we signed several
insurance forms, actually three insurance policies that would
provide something to our families if we didn't return. We signed
waivers releasing both Israel Flying Aid and the State of Israel
of any responsibility for the humanitarian volunteering we were
about to jump into.
If anyone had the slightest
notion that we were heading for a holiday, that idea came to an
abrupt halt hearing Gal say: "please do not wear any jewerely,
they will cut off your fingers for your rings."
For going into a war
and or disaster zone, we wear different colored clothes. Our work
clothes when carrying an M-16, helmet and flak jacket is green,
we wear gray when carrying a laptop, mosquito spray and bottles
of alcohol gel.
With only 8 hours to
departure time, I and a good friend who helped me to prepare for
this trip to Haiti, Gayla Goodman, ventured into a huge supermarket.
We were not there to buy Pringles but rather 12 underpants, 7
shirts and three pair of cargo pants. As we were counting the
minutes, I actually tried on the cargo pants in aisle 5. No one
noticed. There was to be no washing or drying machine where IFA
was going. We needed to be able to change clothes every few days
into whatever we brought.
Now with my large kit
bag in hand, my laptop, one satellite phone, two digital cameras
and one day pack, I made my trek to Ben-Gurion airport before
sunrise.
Israel Flying
Aid and the Israel Defense Forces were to work together at the
field hospital in Haiti. They were also planning to visit orphanages
in Haiti to decide which was the neediest.
Israel Flying
Aid and Orange Israel Telecommunications announced that they had
planned to aid humanitarian efforts in Haiti by creating an orphanage
which would immediately accommodate up to 70 children.
This will
be the first of three stages of establishing an orphanage which
was expected to absorb over 200 children in Haiti.
The orphanage
would be staffed by both Haiti and Israel volunteers. These volunteers
will provide primary medical care, educational, social services,
nutrition and trauma treatment working in cooperation 20 Nuns.
"Israel
Flying Aid is based upon the Jewish principles of the prophet
Isaiah to: 'Uphold the rights of the orphan; defend the cause
of the widow, and in doing so we do not discriminate by race,
nationality or religion," said Gal Lusky, CEO and founder
of IFA.
"From
showers to electricity and computers, from water, food and clothing
we will rebuild this orphanage," said IFA team member David
Avner, CEO of Orange Israel Telecommunications.
"As for today we will take a yard and put up tents as it
is unsafe for the children to remain in these cracked and unstable
buildings."
IFA and Orange
Israel are presently seeking to raise between 1-2 million dollars
from the Israel business community for this humanitarian project
in Haiti.
Avner, who
lives with his wife and three children in Haifa, Israel and has
served as CEO of Orange Israel for four year, says that the challenge
will be the continuation of the orphanage for many years to come.
Israel
Defense Forces IDF
"The
IDF came to Haiti to save lives, we have examined over 1,000 people
at our Field Hospital", said Lt. Col. Tarif Bader, MD.
"We have
been very successful in saving many lives but there is still an
enormous amount of work to be done in Haiti, but the IDF is designed
to work in disaster and war zones whereby we provide primary care
treatment. We embrace the many doctors and nurses who have left
their homes in Europe, the US, Canada, Columbia and several other
countries, the US military which has provided a hospital ship
and will remain behind to provide primary care needed. The IDF
has transferred all the hospitalized patients who need further
treatment to other facilities in Haiti which are now operative
at full capacity. I am very proud of being part of this IDF delegation
and appreciate all of the IDF soldiers both in career and reserve
service who took part in this difficult humanitarian operation."
The Team
The IFA team
consisted of a nurse, Linoy, from Schneider Children's Hospital
in Petach Tikva, Israel, 4 medical clowns, two logistics experts
- Gal Lusky, the founder and director of IFA and Sima, a photographer
- Ariel, the CEO - David Avner and COO of Orange Israel, our ground
crew - Israelis living in the Dominican Republic, a translator
and myself.
In our flight
to Paris to catch our connecting flight to Haiti, we slid deeply
into our own thoughts. This was no ordinary trip to the sleepy
Caribbean. Long, white sandy beaches, rum laced drinks and the
sweet sound of steel drums was not awaiting us.
Going through
security at Paris was something I would never forget.
Not being a frequent flier and knowing EU laws, I was told that
I could not take a bottle of Scotch that I bought at Ben-Gurion
duty free. It had to be 100 mls or less or drank on the spot.
I became really upset knowing that they knew that was a transfer
flight and rather than keeping the Scotch, let's take it away
from these ignorant tourists and have them buy in our French duty
free stores instead. Something to lift my spirits in this far
away tropical Island had been taken from me.
Now adding
insult to injury, they grabbed my expensive Polo Explorer cologne.
I argued that I did not buy it en route - this green bottle came
directly from my bathroom! They responded that I could spray myself
as much as I wished before they took it. Fuming, but smelling
good, I headed for the departure gate.
As I arrived at the gate, I realized that my blue hat with the
Israel flag on it was not on my head. I made a u turn and walked
as fast I as could back to security.
"I want
my hat," I said. One of the French security guys just shrugged
his shoulders as if he had no idea of what I was talking about.
Again, I demanded louder: "I want my hat."
Another security
guy reached into a draw and took it out in less than a second.
Many of the
French may not like Israel, but they do not need to steal our
hats as souvenirs!
On board this
11 hour flight to the Dominican Republic were several search and
rescue teams from nations including Greece, France, Turkey, Switzerland,
Netherlands and Spain. It was almost like going to the Olympics
and seeing the many colorful uniforms with the names of the country
inscribed on the back of their jackets. But this was not the Olympics.
If anything, these were true heroes about to risk their lives
among falling buildings, disease and perhaps gangs of thieves.

Photo:
Ariel Shruster
Santo Domingo
Upon arrival
in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, all appeared very normal
in the tiny airport terminal as we filed out our arrival and customs
forms. We then made way to our hotel for our last night sleeping
with air conditioning on a normal mattress with clean sheets and
running water. This I knew. Lack of running water was something
I had never experienced except on camping trips. This lay ahead.
It was now summer time in the Caribbean. No different than the
night before a major and challenging march in the desert with
the IDF, we enjoyed a really good meal. Kinda of like the Last
Supper as we had no idea of what to expect the following day,
the following weeks.
After taking
three portions from a large American style breakfast, we left
with heavy security on a two lane country road over and through
villages, hills and jungle to the Haiti border. I remember speaking
to a journalist who was sitting next to me in the hotel dining
room. He looked exhausted, stressed and pretty much burnt out.
I wondered if that was how I was to look in two weeks. I had little
idea of what he saw and heard, but it was not good.
It seemed
rather romantic as we trekked over dirt, bumpy roads and eyed
the tall volcano shaped green mountains on our left and right.
We had no problem crossing into Haiti. There were many seeking
to cross from Haiti into the Dominican Republic at the border.
They walked around, they sat holding office documents, they sold
canned food.
Port-au-Prince
- Upside Down
As we approached
Port-au-Prince we looked for cracks in buildings. The first sign
that a powerful earthquake had been there before us were a string
of wooden electric poles leaning like the Tower of Pisa. Then
we saw homes without roofs.
As we entered
the city, a thick smoke, masked the many fires, that we passed.
We had instructions to keep the doors and windows closed and locked.
From the little that I could see behind the black tinted windows
were a mass of people wandering around. Many wearing white, surgical
face masks to block out the stench of dead bodies, while carrying
freshly cut wood and black charcoal in their arms.
We had no
idea that wood was to replace electric lights, ovens and radiators.

Photo:
Ariel Shruster
It took us
a while to find the Israel Defense Forces Field Hospital. It was
dark, road lights were out and not many knew where it was. Finally
we saw what appeared to be an IDF jeep. Two Nahal IDF soldiers
stood at a small, red metal gate at the end of narrow, dirt road
among dozens of Haitians trying to enter. Once inside you would
never know that you had left Israel. This was an IDF base no different
than any other IDF base in the Golan Heights, outside of Jerusalem
or the Negev. Even the soil, the rocks and the trees were almost
identical.
We were told
that dinner was being served at the heder ochel - the dining
room. As we entered this IDF dining room which had transformed
a tennis court into 6 long rows of blue and white tables, I stood
in awe. Just minutes ago I was in a scene out of the Twilight
Zone or the Night of the Zombies and now sitting directly
in front of me were over a hundred soldiers in IDF uniform singing
Shabbat songs.

Being
Shabbat, I worked without a flash. Then took what I had
and turned it into a digital painting. - Joel Leyden
I must have
stood in amazement, smiling in pride for at least ten minutes.
My smile would
not fade. I was never so proud to be Jewish. To be an Israeli.
Never so proud
of the Israel Defense Forces for having traveled half way around
the world to help people who were not Jewish, not wealthy, not
selling defense equipment or food to Israel. These Haitians could
not help Israel in any manner whatsoever. But we were there to
help them. Yes, they had voted for Israel to become a state back
in 1948, but that truly did not make a difference as Israel would
have been there all the same.
After a tasty
dinner served with traditional humus and some Shabbat wine, we
set up our two man tents and air mattresses on a football field.
The grass under and around our tents had turned from green to
brown. Our mission for the next day was to unleash our smiling
medical clowns to the traumatized children who were bleeding with
lost arms and legs inside the IDF tent hospital. But the clowns
would not wait for the hours to pass. They put on their colorful
costumes, their long, leather shoes, red plastic noses and made
the kids smile.
The sight
of all of these children, many crying for the parents who had
died in the earthquake was heart breaking.

Photo:
Ariel Shruster
One of our
clowns could not hide his tears after the first night. No one
who witnessed these children writhing in both physical and emotional
pain could not find a means to distance themselves. The IDF is
trained and used to caring for wounded soldiers, now some of the
most respected doctors, nurses and medics in Israel were treating
men, women and children with every kind of trauma associated with
falling buildings, disease and starvation.
We awoke to
the sound of a dozen roosters at sunrise. Our two man blue tents
were set up next the grandstands, about a 2 minute walk from where
IDF doctors were operating. The loud IDF PA systems announcements
and constant roar of US military helicopters flying low over the
hospital reminded one of the TV and movie series MASH. But this
was not TV. This was MASH.
What was totally
absent for the rest of the day, the remainder of our mission,
was the sound of birds chirping, singing. A sweet noise that I
did not hear until landing back in Israel.
For our first
week in Haiti the IFA team would divide its time between providing
medical clowns at the IDF Field Hospital and going to several
orphanges in Port-Au-Prince where we would park our vans for a
few hours each and provide shows for the children.
My job was
to document and report. To allow the world a unique and real view
of Israel. An Israel which would travel around the world saving
lives. In Israel, a majority of government and private, commercial
concerns after creating a great product and or service would say
that if the product was so good, people would come and buy it.
This marketing approach has proved about as successful as the
Titanic. But in this particular case, the IDF had flown into Haiti
within 3 days of the earth quake, had began operating within 6
hours of landing and that itself was the most powerful viral marketing
that one could wish for.
And Israel
had not come to Haiti seeking positive PR. Israel is so used to
being bashed no matter what it does, having professional public
relations at this IDF Field Hospital would not make one degree
of difference in world opinion. But again, Israel was wrong to
have thought that. Not having sought professional PR, crisis communications
or even event marketing - just the very news that Israel had the
only and most sophisticated hospital up and running made the news
from CNN, FOX and the BBC to Reuters, AP
and SKY News.
My job was
mostly done. But the remaining challenge that confronted me was
shelf life. Yes, Israel had done well. But could we keep Haiti
in the news for the people of Haiti and for the people of Israel
long enough to stave off the oil rich PR pros from Iran, Syria,
Turkey and Saudi Arabia who seek Israel's total destruction?

Photo:
Joel Leyden / Israel News Agency
The IDF provided
free Internet access to reporters under a make shift tent. In
fact, it was not even a tent, it was some large canvas that stretched
from the side of a caravan to the 3 or poles in the ground. I
began getting out news releases through PRWEB and Rush
PR News - online, new media, Web 2.0 services that provide
news release distribution to every media outlet around the world.
I forsaked using my own Israel News Agency for I had feared
that during an upload or download if the electricity went out,
the entire INA site could crash.
Web 2.0
- New Media

I was able
to get the news releases out and push them out to Google News,
Twitter and Blogger. All was working except for Facebook. My Facebook
account had been disabled the day that I entered Haiti with over
4,500 friends including governmental, humanitarian and media contacts.
I had not broken any of the Terms of Service of Facebook, yet
someone appeared to have hacked into my Facebook account and or
made false abuse complaints. This was three weeks ago.
My Facebook
account was only restored shortly before publishing this news
report. My disabled Facebook account did not hurt me but it did
hurt getting logistics from and to other NGO humanitarian contacts
I had on Facebook. This disabling action may have cost the lives
of some trapped and hungry children. Something that the Islamic
cyber terror hackers would have embraced. It was only after I
got back from Haiti that someone had pointed out to me that a
Facebook group with 700 members was created with the sole purpose
of taking my account down. The name of the Facebook group was
a very innocent: "Save Gaza".
International
reporters came and went to the Israel Defense Forces Field Hospital
but only two Israel reporters stayed throughout the entire time
that I was there. A female reporter from Yediot Ahronot - YNET
and a photographer from StandWithUs.
After only
a couple of days, one of our team members fell ill. It was one
of our medical clowns who was always in close contact with the
sick and sneezing children. He started to vomit one evening and
by the next day he could not move. Fortunately we were surrounded
by doctors and nurses. After two days, he was back on his feet
and ready to be evacuated back to Santo Domingo with one of our
nurses. Not more than a few hours would go by that we did not
wash our hands in Dr. Fischer alcohol gel.
During the
time we spent at the IDF hospital, Gal Lusky was gathering logistics
on an orphanage where the children had little if no food. After
two days, they found the orphanage and started to supply it with
food and water. As the IDF closed their field hospital and began
folding their tents after two exhausting weeks and handed it over
the US Airborne Army, our delegation set out for the orphanage.
It was to be our next home for at least a week.
|
From
USAID - February 15, 2010
Estimated
Deaths: 212,000
People Displaced: 700,000
Estimated People Departing Port-au-Prince: 467,000
Estimated Affected Population: 3 million
As
of February 14, 2010 only 42 percent of the population has
received
basic shelter / food
|
Orphanage
As we arrived
at the orphanage we were greeted by smiling nuns and curious children.
Many of these children had large stomachs, bloated from starvation
that the nuns mistook for over eating. The children were receiving
only one meal a day until we arrived. Our first task, get food
into the mouths of these sweet, innocent and loving kids.

Prior to the
whole delegation's arrival, representatives from Israel Flying
Aid and the Israel Defense Forces visited the orphanage in Haiti
where they examined 50 children who were suffering from severe
starvation. Seeing many of the children with bloated stomachs,
was something that Jews had not seen since the Holocaust.
An IDF Lt.
Colonel and three nurses began to vaccinate the children, while
professional clowns which were brought to Haiti by Israel Flying
Aid, provided the children with treatment for trauma.
The children
quickly grabbed and ate the fish, rice, beans and fresh milk that
IFA had brought to them food that they had not seen for
almost two weeks.
Twenty children
had been kidnapped from the orphanage just days prior to the arrival
of IFA and sold to human traffickers.
Our photographer,
Ariel Shruster, mentioned to me just an hour after arriving at
the orphanage, was it not kind of strange that the children were
not showing any interest in us. It took me a minute to realize
that he was right. Something was very wrong. These sweet, little
children were traumatized.
I immediately
made myself child friendly placing a small white, furry bunny
rabbit with two large pink ears strapped to my black satellite
phone case. The satellite phone case, bottle of mosquito repellent,
alcohol gel packets, my blue neck hanging bandana (ready to be
used as a tourniquet and catching sweat as it rolled off my forehead),
two digital cameras, and my red Swiss army knife replaced any
need for a M-16. It was this equipment which remained glued to
my body, not far away from much money tucked away in places that
only I and the cockroaches could find.

Photo:
Ariel Shruster
We would wake
early but no ealier than the nuns who would be praying several
times a day. Occasionally one of them would use a small, hand
held metal bell in their kitchen to let us know that breakfast
was ready. Forget the eggs, coffee and croissants. We were eating
the food that we had brought with us - pasta noodles and rice.
As part of
our team was coordinating the purchase and delivery of truckloads
of food, the other members were out recruiting construction workers
from one of the many tent cities that now covered every park in
Port-Au-Prince.
Israel Flying
Aid was determined to rebuild the orphanage with the financial
help of Orange Israel Telecommunications before we left Haiti.
Until now, the children were sleeping outside next to garbage
and cockroaches as they feared staying inside a building that
they and the Nuns thought would fall on their heads.
Gal's idea
was to build a wall for security and then inside an adjoining
field, build four strong walls from cement and cement blocks and
provide kind of a Sukkah roof. Easy and fast to build and none
of the aftershocks would send cement blocks hurtling downward
towards the sleeping children.
Gal is a very
attractive, personable and sensitive human being who speaks a
number of languages. But behind that warm smile lays nothing less
than a truly focused tigress. With the organization of an elite
IDF combat officer in a firefight, she would demand and get total
respect from the IFA team.
Where I had
grown up in New York where it was fashionable to be a bit late,
here you were warned that you would be left behind. Their was
no nonsense with this team leader. Not a minute would pass that
this real life "Macgyver" was not working on and getting
accomplished what she started out for.
At one point,
two men from the Pinson Foundation in Florida had driven two hours
to find us to donate a mobile, electric generator. Now we had
the generator, the oil and the fuel. All that was missing was
the funnel.

Photo:
Joel Leyden / Israel News Agency
"Joel,
can you please give me one of the news releases," Gal asked.
I wondered why in the middle of putting together this electric
generator did she want to review one of the news releases. Without
questioning, out of my gray cargo pants pocket, I unfolded a news
release and gave it to Gal. She then took the paper and shaped
it into a funnel. The generator now had both oil and gas. Never
had I seen operations and public relations integrated so quickly
and intimately.
One of our
team members who came as a medical clown now took on the job of
logistics coordinator given his large size and strong frame. The
children and nuns would smile and call him Jesus as he did look
the part. Gal and Jesus (his real name is Ohad) searched for and
found ten construction workers in a mere two hours. Within three
days a building stood to provide shelter, safety and warmth for
the children.

Photo:
Joel Leyden / Israel News Agency
The orphanage
was located in a residential area of Port Au Prince. This was
an area where both shacks and large, elegant homes coexisted.
What they shared in common were dirt roads with sewage streaming
down the sides. There was no pavement, just garbage with a new
element added to it. The gray cement rubble of the homes which
had either totally or partly collapsed from the earthquake.
Not having
any wireless Internet, I set out searching for it. With the luck
of the gods, I found an Internet cafe just two blocks away - without
the cafe. The small store had about a dozen computers working
being powered by solar panels and a mobile electric generator.
Joel, the Internet shop manager who spoken a bit of English, told
me that many of the computers were down. After about 2 hours I
got them back up and running. But what most came to this store
for was to recharge their cell phones.
To and from
this Internet store named Strac, I would pass men sitting and
playing Monopoly. I thought it was rather a strange paradox that
they were buying and selling buildings when all around us was
either down or cracked. The women sold toiletries and some canned
foods. There was even some meat and fish out, but whatever was
open was covered by a blanket of flies. One barber had his small
caravan doors open for business. The haircut that he gave me was
the only normal taste of civilization that I experienced while
in Haiti.
Walking alongside
me on the cracked, dirt roads were the skeletons of dogs, pigs
and goats. Many had open wounds for which flies attacked. I wanted
to find a vet for a dog whose eye was bleeding, but in this chaos
I had to remind myself that the children I was staying with came
first and foremost. In Haiti, man's best friend - dogs - were
expendable.
One would
see very few cats in the street. When I asked about where were
the cats, I was told they were being eaten. When I finally found
a few, their owners made sure that they never ventured out to
far from their homes.
Our young
drivers were from the Dominican Republic. They spoke Spanish as
they flirted with French speaking Haitian women. Normally those
from the Dominican Republic and Haiti had very little in common
- in fact they did not like one another. Perhaps it was a clash
of Spanish and French cultures. But the earthquake changed all
of that rapidly as hundreds of rescue and medical volunteers poured
into Haiti from Santo Domingo. These two neighbors, who were once
separated by different languages, were now united in a language
called humanity.
We ate very little.
Our first meal inside the nun's kitchen consisted of rice. It
made eating uncooked, combat food - Luf - in the Israel Defense
Forces seem like a delicacy. But I sat there chewing it and smiling
all the same as not wanting to offend the nuns who were also eating
it. One of our team members must have helped them with the recipe
because by the next day, it was edible.
I joked that there
was Weight Watchers and there was Haiti. I was now on the Haiti
diet and was very thankful for the cinnamon granola bars that
I had taken with me. For the Kellogg's cereal that we had bought
and brought with us from Santo Domingo. As for water, we drank
from mineral water bottles. And we made sure that we always had
a bottle or two near us or on us for reserve.
After two days of not
showering and really being in a combat, camping mode, the nuns
announced to me that my shower was now ready. I knew there were
no showers and looked at them with a questioning face. Through
a translator I realized that they had warmed up water over a fire
and had a large, warm bucket of water waiting for me in a tall,
closed wooden stall.
At first I refused.
But then after realizing the effort that they had made, and the
use of valuable water, I put on my Crocs and made my way to a
prehistoric shower where I poured about a dozen cups of water
over my head. I completed this ritual with giggling nuns sitting
and standing just outside. I must admit that it felt good but
headed for the bottles of alcohol gel to finish the process. I
was also pleased that I made their (the nuns) day.
While in the "shower",
I took great pride in finding and slamming humongus cockroaches
with my Crocs. Knowing that there was one less cockroach that
would disturb these beautiful kids.
Our team could not
be more diverse. As some of us supervised the physical rebuilding
of the orphanage, and others were out securing food, the medical
clowns were inside the orphanage teaching the children to use
crayons and paper again. Within 24 hours the walls of the orphanage
looked no different than the walls of any modern elementary school
with orange, pink, blue and yellow drawings clinging to the grey
and white cement walls.
By the end of our humanitarian
mission, the government of Haiti thanked Israel Flying Aid.
"We have
been watching you and your team work 24 by 7 since you arrived
at the orphanage. Your quick, professional and modest humanitarian
action in caring for these very small and sick children has saved
many lives," Haiti Minister for Culture and Communications
Marie Laurence Jocelyn-Lassegue told Gal Lusky.
"The
efforts of Israel Flying Aid should be used as an example to the
world that Haiti children can be protected, cared for and provided
with everything from essential supplies and housing to children
movies and loving hugs."

US
Army Airborne takes over the IDF Field Hospital
Photo: Joel Leyden / Israel News Agency
The tragedy
that is Haiti was very well illustrated this week by reporter
Deborah Sontag on a front page news story in the International
Herald Tribune.
This reporter
spoke with an American, Dr. Elizabeth Bellino, a U.S. pediatrician
who was treating a 12-year-old before his leg was amputated. While
treating him, she broke down in tears facing an unlimited, depressing
burden of children suffering around her. The young boy comforted
her and told her to attend to the other children who were more
sick. She regained her composure and gave the boy a kiss. Two
days later she left for Rwanda for another humanitarian mission,
but her mind always went back to this little boy in Haiti. The
reporter found both Elizabeth and the little boy. Elizabeth said
that she planned on returning to Haiti within two weeks and wanted
to know what the little boy wanted. Upon hearing this from the
news reporter, the little boy in Haiti quickly responded that
he wanted a bicycle to ride to school and to church. Then he took
his hand and hit his head, saying: "I forgot."
There are
now two types of victims.
Those living
in Haiti and those who came to aid them. The stress and pressure
which affected this American doctor in Haiti, affected us all.
No one can witness this living nightmare without suffering from
some degree of PTS. Every doctor, nurse, medic and volunteer who
went to Haiti during this disaster was and is nothing less than
a hero for risking their lives among falling buildings, aftershocks,
disease and violent gangs.

Photo:
Joel Leyden / Israel News Agency
"You
have raised human spirits and elevated the name of the State of
Israel and the Israel Defense Forces," Israel Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu told the returning IDF team. "As many
plot against us, distort and muddy our names, you have shown the
real IDF."
"The Chief of Staff has told me that the other militaries
were astounded by how quickly Israel arrived at the scene and
began to work," added the prime minister. "Those who
have seen the IDF over the years, operating under seemingly impossible
situations and missions, are not surprised."
"Many
have tried recently to tarnish our image," Ashkenazi said
in his welcome. "With your deeds, you have proven that the
opposite is true."
"Facing
this massive catastrophe was an exceptional group of people from
the Home Front Command and the IDF Medical Corps," Ashkenazi
said. "This group was a source of pride for every Jew."
One of the Israel Flying
Aid medical clowns, Hamutal, worked nonstop with the small children.
Her creative, loving energy appeared endless.
Drawing, singing, dancing,
blowing balloons and playing catch.
She once asked me if
I wanted to join in and in minutes I was teaching them the words
to the Sound of Music. I wanted to cry but quickly found
relief in their smiles. As the director of Fathers for Justice
in Israel, fighting for equal access to be with my children and
only being allowed nothing more than being labeled a visitor for
2 days a week, here I had over 50 children who were hugging me
and I hugging them day and night.

Photo:
Joel Leyden / Israel News Agency
Tears
For our last evening
with the children, we set up a projector and a DVD player next
to the warm light of the kerosene lamps. The Jungle Book
was soon being animated with sound on one of the once cold white
walls. The children were given bags of crisps, reassembling Bamba
- that we have here in Israel.
As we would lay down
to sleep, first one, then two, then four or five children would
take my hand and lie next to me. As with my own children, I made
sure that the sheets covered them and scratched their backs as
they fell asleep.
As we awoke to our
last day in Haiti, again it was the roosters saying good morning.
The children and our team members melted together. Their new sleeping
quarters were up and the cement was drying.
One by one, the children
were led by the nuns to their new house as IFA team members greeted
them with a selection of dolls. They were all crying. Clutching
onto our clothes, begging us not to leave. I never fought so hard
to keep my own tears from falling. I remembered to breath deeply.
I still am.
Israeli
Flying Aid (IFA) is a non profit, volunteer-based, non-governmental
organization (NGO) that aims to provide humanitarian life saving
aid and relief to communities in areas stricken by natural disaster
or territorial conflicts.
Israel
Flying Aid reaches out to populations that for a variety of reasons
are unable to receive help from formal international aid organizations
such as the Burmese Delta survivors of cyclone "Nargis".
The professional experts of IFA provide emergency assistance in
three aspects: food, medical aid, and post- trauma for those who
suffered loss.
IFA is
dedicated to providing supplies and assistance for every individual
in need, and to transcending political differences, prejudices,
race, nationality and creed.
IFA, which
was established in 2005, has an uncompromising obligation to the
victims of disaster and not to their countries, governments, militias,
or military that may prevent international assistance to victims.
IFA chooses to deliver aid to communities that are hostile toward
Israel, such as Iraq, Pakistan, Sudan, Indonesia and others.
Hundreds
of IFA volunteers, who leave their families on short notice and
risk their lives as they are dispatched to the most remote areas
of the world in order to help those most in need, are brave individuals
who represent the heart of Israel.
Israel
Flying Aid reaches out on behalf of the Jewish people in the spirit
of peace, love, and compassion.
Donate
IFA
is placing an urgent appeal to the global public to assist in
finding and treating children in Haiti by sending donations to:
Israel Discount Bank, Branch 199, Account # 57797,
SWIFT: IDBLILIT.
The above
news story was edited and SEO optimized by the Leyden Communications
Internet Marketing, Digital PR, New Media, Crisis Communications
Group www.IsraelPr.com with
sponsorship for coverage of the Haiti earthquake disaster by the
Bernard Leyden Memorial Foundation, Michael Cherney Foundation
and the Rochelle and Richard Maize Foundation.
The Michael
Cherney (Mikhail Chernoy) Foundation renders help new arrivals
to Israel, victims of catastrophes, terrorist acts and to low-income
victims of terror in other countries. The Michael Cherney Foundation
is also involved in the news, media and information effort with
regards to providing facts on Israel democracy and Islamic terror.
The Rochelle
and Richard Maize Foundation is a philanthropic organization
that supports and contributes volunteer and financial resources
to causes locally in the community and worldwide by supporting
meaningful programs focusing on art, culture, family services,
humanitarian and health care that work to help people live more
fulfilling lives.
Richard
Maize has generously supported organizations and causes including
the American Cancer Society, Vista Del Mar Child and Family Services,
Hurricane Katrina, Los Angeles Police Foundation, and Cedars Sinai
Board of Governors.
More Information
on the humanitarian efforts of Israel Flying Aid in Haiti can
be found through Facebook, YouTube and Twitter at Israel4Haiti.com.
The
Israel News Agency,
which is accredited by Israel Government Press Office, was the
first on line news organization in Israel. The INA reaches up
to 60 million readers through Google News and Internet social
networking channels such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube from
New York, London, Moscow and Paris to Toronto, Los Angeles, China
and India. Leyden is presently launching the United
States News Agency using the INA as a successful working model.
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