By Brian Stevens | Donor Engagement Director
Thank You for Your Life-Saving Generosity During the Pandemic
Your generous support made it possible to provide critical, life-saving, virus-prevention resources like masks, hygiene kits, family garden kits, emergency cash assistance, and the kind of accurate information that people need to protect themselves and their loved ones from COVID-19. Thank you for standing in solidarity with the people of Haiti in this moment of extreme vulnerability.
The Challenges Facing the Most Remote Communities With Which We Work
To give you a sense of the importance of your solidarity and generosity in this moment, we want to share a brief summary of the challenges facing communities on Lagonav Island -- some of the most remote communities with which we work -- as they struggle to limit the spread of the coronavirus. (Your generosity also supported response efforts in communities in Port-au-Prince where we work, and in southeastern Haiti too.)
On Lagonav Island, as of today, Dec. 2, there are 42 officially reported Covid-19 cases, although the likelihood is that there are many, many more unreported and undiagnosed. The only significant hospital on the island is located in Ansagale. The hospital -- which struggled to obtain PPE from the Haitian government -- has established a designated space on their grounds for treating patients with Covid-19 (or suspected of having it). Additionally, food production on the island has been impacted by a drought, and food insecurity and rising prices are impacting the most vulnerable families the hardest.
You Made it Possible: Masks, Hand-Washing Stations, Support for Nurses, and Family Gardens
Thanks to you and your generosity, our teams reached some of the most-vulnerable and remote communities from Lagonav Island, to Port-au-Prince, to Jacmel, with the following critical support -- in addition to what we reported on back in August -- to help stop the spread of COVID-19 and lift up families struggling to make ends meet:
Mental Health Support Workshops for Staff Dealing with Covid-19’s Impact
To support staff faced with the effects of a pandemic on top of several months of extreme socio-political unrest in the fall of 2019 (with much of the country in lock-down) and increasing insecurity and violence, a small group of staff began researching mental health support options. Some staff had fallen victim to violent incidents and several others experienced direct Covid-19-related issues in their families or communities.
After surveying our team for input and feedback, a decision was made to work with an organization specializing in trauma and healing called Rhiza, using their ‘Fire that Fuels’ program. Rhiza is a women-led collective that uses storytelling, healing, organizing, and research to support social transformation and environmental justice using a collaborative process. The integrated model allows for close cooperation with partners to design interventions at four strategic levels: healing and community transformation, organizational development, movement-building across networks, and power-shifting in larger society.
Retiring This Project But Continuing The Work Your Generosity Started
The situation in Haiti -- like in many other countries -- remains uncertain. While we will be retiring this project on the GlobalGiving website, the awareness-raising, virus-prevention work that your generosity started will continue and we will continue to monitor the situation in Haiti and stand ready to respond again.
Your Generosity and Solidarity Made a Life-Saving Difference
Your support delivered life-saving virus-prevention resources to some of the most-vulnerable and isolated communities we work with in Port-au-Prince, in southeastern Haiti, and on Lagonav Island.
From Hygiene Kits, to Handsewn Masks and Hospital-Grade PPE, Disinfectant, Family Garden Kits, Emergency Cash Assistance, and Virus-Prevention and Violence Prevention Messaging, your generosity has made it possible to get life-saving virus-prevention resources out to some of the most vulnerable populations
Thanks to you, and members of Beyond Borders’ Adult Survivors of Child Slavery Network, Child Protection Brigades, and SASA! Community Activists working to prevent violence against women and girls, thousands of people in 32 communities in Port-au-Prince, Jacmel and southeastern Haiti, and on Lagonav Island now have the knowledge they need to stop the spread of COVID-19 and protect themselves and their neighbors from this deadly virus.
If you have any questions about what you’ve read in this report, please contact Brian Stevens, Beyond Borders’ Donor Engagement Director, at b.stevens@beyondborders.net or (305) 450-2561.
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By Brian Stevens | Donor Engagement Director
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