Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Design a Tee for Lambi

While some groups are cutting back, Lambi Fund is redoubling its efforts to support sustainable development in Haiti. We are working with grassroots partners in rural Haiti to implement many new projects such as grain mills, irrigation pumps, reforestation, fishing, and microcredit funds. How exciting that the continued support of so many Lambi Fund advocates like you has given us the opportunity to fund more projects than previously anticipated!

Now it's time to harness your creativity and do good for Haiti! The Lambi Fund of Haiti is proud to announce our very first t-shirt contest, "Tee for Lambi!" We need you to help us create a memorable t-shirt design encapsulating the Lambi Fund spirit. The winning design will be featured for sale in our new Lambi Fund Store, receive some great prizes, and enjoy all the notoriety and good fortune of becoming "Lambi Famous" (you will be featured in our newsletter and online). Click here for more information and all of the rules & regulations.

Well quit reading already! Tell your friends, family, children, students, and enemies, and get designing! Can't wait to see what our talented Lambi Fund supporters produce!

Have a happy week and remember, Lambi Fund wouldn't be as spirited and effective without your support.

Peace,

Karen sig


Karen Ashmore
Executive Director

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Lambi Fund's Deputy Director Receives Community Service Award

What a great day for Lambi Fund! On Saturday August 8, 2009, our very talented and committed Deputy Director Leonie Hermantin received the 2009 Community Service Award from the Haitian Diaspora Unity Congress.

She was honored for her outreach work in advocating for sustainable agriculture and reforestation in Haiti’s rural communities.

Past recipients of this prestigious award include Jacqueline Charles of the Miami Herald and Wyclef Jean of the Yéle Foundation.

This year’s monumental four day event in Miami included speakers and issues of concern to Haiti and Haitian Diaspora, with keynote speakers including Bill Clinton, UN’s Special Envoy to Haiti, and Michèle Duvivier Pierre-Louis, the Prime Minister of Haiti.

Ms. Hermantin also participated in several engaging workshops about peasant-led reforestation and sustainable agriculture programs in Haiti.

Friday, July 24, 2009

A Note from Josette








Bonjou,
What a summer! The Lambi Fund of Haiti has been busy as ever working throughout Haiti's countryside visiting partner organizations and providing on-site training.
Our newest projects are in the Northwest. The Lambi Fund team is working with a group of fisher folk to upgrade their fishing equipment with new nets and a boat. They are excited that they will be able to fish more productively and improve their livelihoods.
Lambi Fund staff also led an effective training session with a large women’s group in the Northwest. They learned about water purification, sanitation and rainwater cistern management. Now, this community is looking forward to clean, potable water on a reliable basis.
Seeing these projects become a reality is a true pleasure, as is watching enthusiastic families working to transform their communities.
Enjoy the rest of your summer, as we will be busy working with locals to reforest the land and prepare for the upcoming hurricane season!
All my best,
Josette Perard
Haiti Director
P.S. Follow us on and for all the latest Lambi Fund Updates and visit www.lambifund.org for even more information on sustainable development in Haiti.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Haiti Reforestation Act


THE HAITI REFORESTATION ACT OF 2009- PROMOTES SUSTAINABLE APPROACHES TO REFORESTATION AND AFFORESTATION

US Senator Richard Durban (D) from Illinois recently introduced a bill in the US Senate addressing the issue of reforestation in Haiti. Bill S 1183, the Haiti Reforestation Act of 2009, if enacted into law will authorize the Secretary of Agriculture to provide assistance to the Government of Haiti to end within 5 years the deforestation in Haiti and restore within 30 years the extent of tropical forest cover in existence in Haiti in 1992. In the process of drafting the Haitian Reforestation Act of 2009, Senator Durban's staff met with Lambi Fund of Haiti board member Jay Schoenberger to discuss our reforestation efforts. It must be noted that Lambi Fund's approach to reforestation is reflected in the portion of the bill which governs NGO involvement.

While Bill S 1183's primary focus is to work with the Haitian government, it also provides support for NGOs engaged in reforestation and afforestation activities. We are very pleased that the bill describes eligible agencies as those whose activities, similar to the Lambi Fund’s, support grassroots sustainable economic and environmental activities. As stated the bill will give preference to organizations which:

· Focus on sustainable income generating growth
· Provide seed money to start reforestation or afforestation collaborative
· Partner with local communities
· Focus on efforts that build local capacity to sustain growth after the completion of grant program
· Secure the involvement of local communities and indigenous peoples to protect forests in existence and carry out reforestation and afforestation activities

The Lambi Fund of Haiti is extremely interested in your opinion about Bill S 1183
www.opencongress.org/bill/111-s1183/show

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Notes from an Intern

By: Anya Cherneff

As an outreach coordinator for The Lambi Fund of Haiti, I was offered the amazing opportunity to travel with the fall delegation in late November to Haiti to visit some of the peasant organizations whose projects are supported by The Lambi Fund. We visited four organizations located in the southern region of Haiti: ODTPG- Rice Mill Project, ADZK- Pig Husbandry and Reforestation Projects, SASH- Bee Keeping Project, and TKL- Ox Plow Project.

All the community organizations that we visited had been affected by the recent, devastating hurricanes and all were struggling to continue their programs, in spite of the destruction they sustained from the flooding. Despite the recent set back, all the members of the organizations we talked to were overwhelmingly hopeful and positive about what the future would bring with the continuing growth of their organizations and their programs. Everyone we met was so grateful for the small contribution Lambi Fund had made (buying Apiary boxes, two ox plows, two oxen, a rice mill, etc..) With the starting platform Lambi Fund had provided for them, they were all able to successfully implement programs that expanded from simply plowing fields or raising pigs, to using the funds raised form their efforts to start micro-credit funds for organization members, mostly women, to start small businesses and participate in the marketplace economy.

Personally, I had previously regarded myself of a somewhat worldly traveler and was confident I understood concepts such as poverty and degradation and the extent to which they can permeate different societies, but it wasn't until I came to Haiti that I understood the extent that this could really happen. The Haitian people are trying to create a democratic society out of less than nothing and have been constantly beaten down by different ruling dictatorships, military regimes, foreign governments and false democratic leaders. They are on their own, with no support form the government and yet they have never lost their determination to pull themselves out of destitute poverty by coming together as communities and pooling their resources to create lasting change throughout the country. This is what I saw in the eyes of the people I met on my trip to Haiti. The indistinguishable drive to be successful, send their children to school, re-forest their bare lands and create lasting, sustainable change.

I am forever grateful to have gone on this trip and will always remember the people I met there. It has renewed my passion to work in the fields of sustainable development and human rights to see people with much less resources available to them than most, making the most of what they have and never giving up.

Thursday, December 04, 2008

Intern Notes

I’m new with Lambi Fund and new to working with Haiti, so before I went there two weeks ago, I don’t think I truly understood the level of need that existed throughout the country, though this set in very quickly.

But I also didn’t understand just how powerful Lambi Fund’s programs are to the communities where we work, though this also didn’t take me long to realize. For me the evidence wasn’t just in the progress reports from our community partner organizations, or the incredible gratitude they showed us, it was in their faces when they talked about what was now possible because of their partnership with Lambi.

They were no longer worrying about feeding their families, they were planning for growing their small businesses to bring prosperity to their communities. The head of one organization that Lambi Fund is helping to produce honey explained that with two more devices, they would be able to make honey that meets international standards and begin exporting abroad.

That is powerful stuff considering that these same people were using a piece of tree bark to produce honey before they partnered with Lambi Fund.

Intellectually, I understood before I went that our model of funding grassroots organizations according to democratic principles was an incredibly practical and effective way to approach development. But to see community after community transformed because of the up-front capital we provide to help them get their dreams off the ground was truly inspirational.

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Miami Herald: Letter to the Editor


Posted on Sat, Sep. 20, 2008

Help Haiti's storm victims


The Lambi Fund of Haiti is disappointed that crops destroyed by the hurricanes will not be harvested. Haitian farmers will not reap the benefits of their labor. We have worked with Haiti's rural communities for 14 years supporting peasant and farmer initiatives in the Artibonite Valley and in rural areas surrounding Les Cayes that have been severely affected by the hurricanes.


Our mission is to support sustainable development projects in Haiti's rural communities. Our work has had an impact on more than one million people; we have supported construction of irrigation canals, acquisition of irrigation pumps, construction of grain mills and the development of fish farms. We have funded animal-husbandry projects and microcredit programs for farmers and merchants. We have also implemented environmental and reforestation initiatives.

We are poised to support our rural partners' efforts as they rebuild their lives and communities. We will first help our partners get food and essentials, such as household items and school uniforms. We also will assist members of our staff, residents of these communities, who have lost everything. We will offer emergency assistance and work to stimulate the local economy and the cultivation of cash crops. Local merchants, primarily women, will have access to funds from recapitalized microcredit initiatives enabling them to replenish their stock and resume commercial activities. We will buy seeds and tools to cultivate devastated farmlands. We will support the acquisition of new irrigation pumps. In one community, we will rebuild an irrigation system. We will provide We will provide funds for farmers to buy goats, pigs and chickens and to replenish livestock. We will ensure access to safe drinking water by repairing the rainwater cisterns we helped build.

Even within the context of emergency relief, we can begin to lay the foundations that will support Haitian farmers' efforts to become self-sustaining.



LEONIE M. HERMANTIN, deputy director, Lambi Fund of Haiti, Miami

Thursday, September 04, 2008

An Update from Josette Perard, Haiti Director


Yesterday, Port au Prince was in a state of panic. It was extremely windy and raining hard. Many houses no longer have roofs, trees are uprooted, light poles with electric lines are down… but this is nothing compared to the devastation which has struck other communities throughout the country.

The Minister of Education postponed the opening of classes until next week, but in light of the unanticipated problems brought by Hanna, we don’t know if they will not have to postpone it yet again (we have heard that there are two other hurricanes on their way)

No one is talking about schools right now; the focus is on the damage wrought by Gustav and Hanna. We are all thinking about how to begin tackling the problems which have suddenly disrupted our lives.

We are receiving calls from our partner organizations with horrible news about their communities.

The peasant organization in River Blanche (ODEPERIB) called to say that one member of the organization has died, the flooding is really severe, and many houses are destroyed. Some of the cisterns we have funded have sustained a lot of damage.

The Women’s Association of Mapou Rollin, just called and Vyolèn, the president of the organization, said that Hanna is even worse than Jeanne. Her house is completely destroyed and she has lost everything. The grain mill we helped build is completely flooded and the corn and millet brought by the market women to be milled just washed away. The chicken coop which we also helped build is being used as shelter by over 100 local families. No one has eaten anything since Monday.

Mme. Cedieu, a leader in the farmers’ organization of Gwomon (AGPGM), said that she lost everything -- her crops and her animals. She said that the land cultivated by AGPGM was devastated and all the plantain trees are down. Fortunately our experimental field of young plantain trees is still standing. Not too many trees were destroyed but the irrigation pump will need to be repaired. I have not talked to the staff member who runs the Center for Plantain Propagation to determine its condition. We are still trying to reach him.

Tidjo (Lambi Fund Field Monitor for the North) and Margo (Lambi Fund Advisory Board member) called us this morning and told us that the waters are beginning to recede in Gonaives, and at Tidjo’s house as well. Tidjo has lost everything and there are now over 60 people seeking shelter on Tidjo’s rooftop. They have not had anything to eat in 3 days.

Once it stops raining we will try to go to Gonaives to bring some help to Tidjo and his family and to see in what way we can begin to help our partner organizations and their communities. Reaching Gonaives will be very hard, since a veritable lake now lies at the entrance of the city.

Meanwhile, St Cyr (Lambi Fund Field Monitor for the South) has finally gotten news from home. He came to Port-au-Prince from Les Cayes to attend a staff meeting when he got news that his home and neighborhood were flooded. He was extremely distressed to hear that his family and their neighbors had to seek refuge on their roof top. He was told this morning the waters had receded. He too has lost everything. Although St Cyr has learned that there is no way to get to Les Cayes, because Miragoane has overflowed, he is now determined to get back to his family, and he will call us when he gets there.

We have heard on the radio that Torbeck and Chantal are flooded. We are supporting projects throughout the area. We have not been able to reach any member of our partner organizations in Belfontèn but we heard on the radio that the area is in shambles.

The calls are trickling in we will keep you posted whenever we hear something.

Thursday, June 26, 2008

GWOB Conference Recap

I recently attended the Grant Makers Without Borders' (GWOB) annual conference held this year in San Francisco. GWOB is a network of the trustees and staff of public and private foundations who practice global social change philanthropy. While I found the majestic beauty of San Francisco's Presidio extremely distracting, the conference proved to be amazingly informative and thought provoking. As a relative neophyte to the world of social change philanthropy, I approached the conference very strategically, focusing on the workshops which would help me gain a greater understanding of how global issues affect Haiti’s rural communities.

I was eager to learn more about ways in which the food crisis, the environment, and climate change are interrelated. The information was overwhelming and a bit scary. I heard about how oil depletion and the resulting energy constraint would affect us in every aspect of our lives, from transportation to medicine and food security. We are hooked on oil and our lives grow exponentially more miserable without it. The transition to a future of reduced oil supply will require the development of clean, renewable energy sources and the reduction of oil production and consumption.The most thought provoking sessions on the current food crisis were offered respectively by Eric Holt-Gimenes and Grassroots International’s Maria Aguiar. Dr. Holt-Gimenes explored the root causes of the food crisis, stressing that it is grounded in the political and economic decisions which have undermined many countries' abilities to feed their people.. He talked about the impact of the "Green Revolution" on the food crisis, a "revolution" which deepened the developing world's dependence on multinationals and their Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs). These GMOs have produced seeds which self destruct after one planting and have forced farmers from Asia, Africa and Latin America to depend on multinationals for their supplies of seeds, pesticides and fertilizers. Green Revolution techniques, I learned from Ms. Aguiar’s workshop, rely on chemical fertilizers, pesticides and herbicides. The fact that most of these products must be developed from fossil fuels make “modern agriculture” extremely dependent on petroleum products. The intense use of fertilizers causes major problems including the depletion of the soil's growing capacity and the accumulation of inorganic chemical residues in the soil. Additionally, over fertilization harms beneficial soil microorganisms and increase soil susceptibility to disease. In other words they are …Bad News…for the environment and even more hazardous for Haiti’s severely degraded environment.

Wow did I learn, a lot! In my efforts to understand Haiti’s food crisis within this global context, I became ever more convinced that we, at the Lambi Fund of Haiti are most definitely on the right track. Our sustainable development programs promote organic agricultural methods including seeds banks, silos and composting. We provide funding not only for motorized tillers but for ox plows and tools suited for the environment. While some view agricultural reform as an opportunity to introduce the modern, highfalutin and oil dependent technologies needed to usher Haitian farmers into the 21st century, it is clear that the long term crisis involving fossil fuel depletion, global warming and the “food shortage”, demands innovative solutions. These strategies must support our farmers’ efforts to adapt and thrive in an era of oil depletion and decreasing dependence on petroleum based products. Lambi Fund’s approach is especially suited to soften the blows from impending petroleum crisis on Haiti’s farming communities.

Saturday, February 02, 2008

How to Help

Many of you have emailed us after reading the news article about Haitians eating dirt cookies or mud cakes and have asked what you can do. Lambi Fund of Haiti is partnering with communities in Haiti to become sustainable so that they can support and feed their families -- and not rely on food aid charity, which can create an unhealthy dependence.

Haitians are proud and do not like to have their poverty sensationalized. Haiti is, after all, the first independent black republic. But the fact of the matter is that malnutrition and poverty are concerns in Haiti, especially for the many peasants living in the countryside.

The best way an individual can help is to contribute to groups that work in true partnership with Haitians to become socially, economically and politically empowered. Lambi Fund is by far one of the best organizations to address these issues. And I am not saying that just because I work for the organization. Like you, I did my research beforehand and came to the same conclusions as you. Lambi Fund is one of the best models for creating change and sustainability while working for improved economic conditions and increased food availability.

Learn How You Can Help by going to http://www.lambifund.org/support_help.htm

Friday, January 18, 2008

Green Belt Movement Visits Haiti

The much anticipated visit of the Kenyan delegation representing the Green Belt Movement (GBM) finally happened. Lilian Muchungi, Josephine Wangari, Esther Wamucii and Mercy Karunditu, landed at Toussaint Louverture International Airport in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.

This was the beginning of a journey of mutual learning and sharing between GBM representatives, Lambi Fund staff and members of grassroots organizations engaged in reforestation and agro-forestry projects in Haiti. This visit offered GBM representatives the opportunity to learn about Haiti's degraded environment and its impact on the both rural and urban communities. It also allowed GBM representatives to become more knowledgeable about the Lambi Fund of Haiti by gaining a deeper understanding of how it works, its relationship to the communities it partners with, as well as the problems addressed. The Lambi Fund of Haiti benefited tremendously from this exchange, learning about the Greenbelt Movement, its philosophy, its methodology, its accomplishments and challenges. It was a true peer to peer exchange.

On their second day in Port-au-Prince the GBM delegation visited a national fair "La Foire de L'Alimentation" which explored themes of domestic agricultural production and food security. The colorful stands and displays of regional crops and culinary delicacies provided a great introduction to subsequent discussions about agriculture, the environment and food security. These issues were debated at a conference held in the afternoon where about 40 Haitian students, environmentalists, and other stakeholders gathered to meet the delegation, learn about the Greenbelt Movement and offer GBM representatives a greater insight into Haiti's environmental and ecological crisis.

The delegation left the next day for a visit to Gwo Mon located in the Artibonite Valley. The first site visit was at Lambi Fund's plantain greenhouse in Gwo Mon. This center is a great model of collaboration where, by working with local organizations, Lambi Fund is producing a plantain tree resistant to the diseases which have devastated local plantain production. Members of the delegation were very impressed with this center as it offered solutions to concerns about crop and food security.

The visit to the Oganizasyon Peyzan Bige was GBM's first encounter with a peasant organization. Members of the delegation were greeted with the haunting and vibrating sounds of the lambi (conch shell) calling the meeting to order. OPB is a grassroots organization that has partnered with the Lambi Fund to address the environmental degradation in the community of Bige with the construction of water cisterns and the commitment to plant 100,000 trees. So far, OPB has successfully planted 48,260 trees that were produced in the tree nurseries built throughout the community. The members had the opportunity to introduce themselves, discuss the nature of their projects, and listened with great attention to Josephine Wangari's presentation of the GBM's tree planting methodology. This presentation was followed by a lively exchange between OPB members and GBM delegates comparing and contrasting strategies and discussing the political and cultural contexts in which environmental work is conducted. OPB members took the delegation on a tour of reforested sites, answered questions about tree selection, maintenance and rates of tree survival.
The next day the delegation visited another grassroots organization, ODEPERIB, where members greeted them with songs of welcome and solidarity. The dialogue focused on issues of civic education and engagement. Members of ODEPERIB shared their frustrations about their inability to garner any support from locally elected officials. Lillian Muchungi stressed the importance of advocacy in Kenya's environmental movement and urged the ODEPERIB members to partner with the Lambi Fund around issues of advocacy. The meeting was followed by a site visit where ODEPERIB members took the delegation on an extensive visit of the multiple sites where reforestation, as well as agroforestry projects, were implemented.
Saturday was a very special day as the delegation had the opportunity to meet with representatives from all of the organizations in the Gwo Mon area that partner with the Lambi Fund. This meeting took place at Lambi Fund's Center for Food Security and offered representatives from different peasant organizations the opportunity to hear about the Greenbelt Movement and share their experiences.

What followed the meeting was a celebration of cultures. The entertainment was provided by the incredibly talented, dynamic and politically engaged women's musical group called Awozam, all members of a women’s organization partnering with Lambi Fund in the Northwestern part of Haiti. It was truly an opportunity for sharing knowledge and culture. The Kenyan women donned their traditional dresses and regaled the crowd with traditional Kikuyu songs and dances, impressing all gathered with their high pitched ululations. The day ended with a tree planting ceremony by the GBM delegation.

Upon the delegation's return to the capital, they met with the Honorable Marie Laurence Lassegue, Minister of the Women's Condition. She expressed enthusiasm about the historic partnership between the Lambi Fund and the Greenbelt Movement and offered her support of this Global South collaboration and partnership.

The visit accomplished its stated objectives of mutual exchange between the Greenbelt Movement and the Lambi Fund. The next steps will entail an assessment of the trip and discussions about areas of interest where the Lambi Fund and the Greenbelt Movement will partner to improve Haiti environment through sustainable grassroots efforts. Representatives from the Lambi Fund will attend a GBM sponsored Pan African Network summit next spring in Kenya and learn even more from the people who are responsible for the reforestation projects in the Greenbelt Movement throughout Africa and the African Diaspora.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Recent Travels to Haiti


By Karen Ashmore

I recently returned from a trip to Haiti and the progress that is happening now in Haiti is positive. First of all, the security situation has improved quite a bit and we were free to travel about the countryside without risk of harm. A big improvement from two years ago!

Grassroots Democracy. The grassroots democracy that Lambi Fund supports is taking hold. Democratic elections have been held and leaders are working together to get Haiti back on the right track. What is exhilarating is the fact that leaders of grassroots organizations that have been through Lambi Fund leadership training are now being elected to office!

In an example of grassroots democracy at work, the president of a grassroots partner of Lambi Fund was elected Mayor of the town of Chato, located in the South.

Joseph Fluto Clairvil, President of Konbit 2004, was elected the mayor of Chato earlier this year. Konbit 2004 is managing a large scale reforestation project as well as a large network of rainwater cisterns to provide safe drinking water to the area. The newly elected mayor is planning to bring his awareness of reforestation needs to the government by pushing for more enforcement of the "no tree cutting" policy and more governmental support for reforestation. This is an example of how growing democratic leadership through Lambi Fund training is going to change Haiti.

Gender Equity. Another exciting development I saw was the explosive growth of women in leadership positions. Women are vying for leadership positions in organizations and communities all over Haiti. Every organization we met with had women as elected officers. This was a changed scenario since my last visit two years ago. I was especially excited to meet Anaise Alcena Saintius, who is the first female president of a co-ed organization that I have met in Haiti. She is president of t heAssociation for the Development of Kasis (ADZK), which is managing a successful pig breeding enterprise in partnership with Lambi Fund.
Here is what she said about her experience: "I was born to a peasant family in Kasis, strong hard working, but knowing that as a woman my duties were exclusively those of wife and mother. When I was given the opportunity to meet with other women(through Lambi Fund Women's Leadership Conference) to discuss the need for us peasant women to take greater leadership roles in our communities and within our organization, I knew that I had what it took to be a leader. I had been one all my life. I just never applied those skills within the organization. When I came back I did not waste any time and became more active with ADZK. I applied the same work ethic I use running my farm and raising my children, empowered by the administrative skills I had acquired through the Lambi Fund's skill building workshop on project management.
I was recently elected president of the organization, the first woman ever in Kasis to hold such important office. While I am respected for my administrative skills and my ability to manage the project, one of my proudest accomplishments, is that I am encouraging and mentoring other women members to become more active in the organization and seek leadership positions as well."
Everywhere I went, I met women who are excited about opportunities to lead Haiti to a stronger future. Haitian women have always been considered the potomiten or center pole of the community. But now they are at the threshold of taking on substantive leadership roles in Haiti, with great excitement and enthusiasm.
Improved economic conditions.The communities with grassroots organization partnering with Lambi Fund made marked improvements in economic conditions and quality of life. For example, groups with sustainable development projects for the first time were able to afford to feed their families and send their children to school. Girls who lived in communities with local water cisterns financed by Lambi Fund could now attend school. No longer did they miss school in order to walk long distances to carry water. And children are no longer dying from an illness due to bad water. The impact is remarkable!

Progress towards reforestation. Thanks to your support we are moving forward with our collaboration with the Greenbelt Movement, led by Nobel Peace Prize winner, Wangari Maathai. In October of this year, a group of women from the highly successful Greenbelt Movement will be traveling to Haiti to offer the training and technical assistance based on their thirty years of experience. This is an exciting moment for Haiti, taking the grassroots reforestation of Lambi Fund to the next level.

Still a long way to go. Although we encountered many success stories, there are still many more communities and grassroots organizations asking for Lambi Fund to support their ideas for self-sustainability. I saw numerous children with red-tinged hair, a sure sign of malnourishment. With our meager budget we are only able to partner with a limited number of grassroots organizations. With your major support, we would be able to partner with more rural communities in Haiti who are on their way to a hopeful future.
Please consider making a "stretch" gift that stretches your pocketbook but will make a tremendous difference in the lives if Haitians who are seeking dignity and self-respect. I live in Colorado but our organization is headquartered in DC. A loyal donor is matching every donation so you can double the impact of your donation on families that live on less than $1 a day. Send donations to PO Box 18955, Washington DC 20036. More info at www.lambifund.org

The Lambi Fund of Haiti works because of its unique bottom-up collaborative approach that is different from the top-down approach of many charities. The Lambi Fund's original, grassroots development model succeeds because it relies on Haitians themselves to determine the needs and the most effective solutions in each community. The Lambi Fund's emphasis on democracy, a community's actual needs, and peasant-led solutions ensures more successful outcomes.

PS We are planning a delegation to Haiti the week of Nov. 12. If you are interested in traveling with us to Haiti and seeing firsthand the amazing work of peasant organizations in Haiti, email info@lambifund.org. I look forward to personally sharing with you the people and sights I have enjoyed in Haiti.

Monday, April 09, 2007

Day Four of First Visit to Haiti

March 21, 2007 Maniche, Haiti


…We drove to a remote spot where there were a few shacks on the mountainside
and walked to a meeting area where the members of the organization called
ADZK were singing and clapping as loud as they could…I took pictures of the
kids again with the digital camera and then let them look at them on the
screen. It seems to be a good way to interact after we get past "what is
your name?" and "mwen pa pale Kreyol" [I don't speak Creole].  I wonder how
many of these kids have seen their picture before.  Lambi funded and trained
the group for a pig breeding project.  They had 25 new piglets so far.  A
woman said, "Pigs allow us to live, that is the way we take care of our kids
and all of our needs."… There are good things happening in Haiti.

Day Two of First Visit to Haiti


March 19, 2007 Chato Haiti

Today we visited a peasant organization that called themselves Konbit 2004.
When we drove to the top of the hillside, there was already a large circle
of people sitting beneath the semicircle of palm trees singing and clapping.
A woman brought a thermos of coffee and basket of bread for us to eat.  The
coffee was so sweet I think I became a diabetic after one sip.  We sat and
listened to the members of the organization describe their group's history
as we slurped coconut milk out of coconuts that had given to us.  A man
said, "We wanted to organize and work together in such a way that we could
improve the living conditions of our group."  It was very powerful to hear
the men and women of the group speak about how their lives had changed after
the microcredit and the cistern  and reforestation project…We drove to see
one of the cisterns and the tree seedling nursery and the man I was sitting
next to in the back seat didn't know how to open a car door.  This was a
poignant reminder of how different our existences are on this earth.  One
woman summed up everyone's comments about the projects stating "It [the loan
fund] helped us send our kids to school and feed them, the cistern allows us
to have time because we no longer have to walk 2 hrs to get water."  The
group estimated that because of the micro-loan project around 100 more
children were able to go to school.

First Visit to Haiti

By Matt Kaiser

I was able to visit Haiti for the first time in March to visit a few of the
organizations Lambi Fund works with in the Les Cayes area.  It is hard for
me to imagine what daily life is like under the impoverished conditions of
Haiti, but that is not the story here.  One can read a newspaper to keep up
with the bad news in Haiti.  When I boarded the plane to leave Haiti, I left
with a deeper respect for the Haitian people, confidence that the work Lambi
Fund does truly empowers people to improve lives, and hope that this work
and its effects will continue to spread in Haiti.

The following are a few excerpts from a journal I kept during our visit in March:

March 18, 2007 Camp Perrin, Haiti

…the flight from Miami took only an hour and a half.  It's like the
newspaper headlines I've read about Haiti have come to life, like I just
jumped into the photograph of Port-au-Prince that was in the NY Times' last
article about the UN in Haiti. As we left the city, the mountainous
countryside came into a panoramic view that was absolutely gorgeous. Green
mountains falling into the sea that reflected all shades of blue.  Then I
noticed that parts of some of the mountains were missing where abrupt white
cliffs interrupted the continuity of the green hills. These were the sites
of mudslides that washed away Haitian's fields and homes.  This was my first
glimpse at the deforestation I've read and heard so much about…The drive
from the airport to where we are staying is unreal.  The sights cannot be
fully captured by words.  The road was an endless stream of motorbikes,
bicycles, children, women on their way back from the market, chickens,
goats, mules, and the occasional tap tap, a small pickup used for public
transportation with people clinging to all sides. Despite all I've read
about this country and causes of poverty, it's still hard to understand how
something like this could happen. I'm looking forward to visiting projects
tomorrow and hearing the people's stories of good things happening here.

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Lambi Fund of Haiti Appoints New Deputy Director

March 14, 2007 — Leonie Hermantin was named Deputy Director by Lambi Fund of Haiti, where she will be responsible for outreach and education in North America and Haiti. Formerly the Director of Research and Strategic Planning at the Santa La Haitian Neighborhood Center in Miami, FL, Hermantin was one of two Haitian Americans cited by the Miami Herald for special recognition as up and coming leaders in South Florida. She has a Juris Doctor from University of California, Berkeley, and over ten years of non-profit management experience. She currently serves on the board of Little Haiti Housing and Accion USA, Miami, and has received numerous awards for her activism and civic contributions. 

The Lambi Fund's mission is to assist the popular, democratic movement in Haiti. Lambi Fund works in partnership with rural grassroots peasant organizations to support economic justice, democracy and sustainable development in Haiti.

Monday, February 05, 2007

How are things in Haiti?

 Jan 2007

By Josette Perard

As you already know, governments in Haiti do not fulfill their institutional role. Thus, Haitian society is left alone to now deal with all sorts of crises. The symptoms (of that deep crisis) are visible everywhere: permanent political instability; mounting controversies within the state institutions (Parliament – Police – CEP); a suffocating form of misery that has engulfed the general population; constantly mounting inflation; a staggering 70 percent of the population out of work; a panicked middle class; the technical cadre of the country leaving in droves; armed groups rendering the country unsafe with their misdeeds: kidnappings, rape, and assassinations. In less than three months, armed bands burned as many as three public markets in the capital city of Port-au-Prince.

The year 2006 ended deplorably!!

Government officials are still making beautiful speeches, promising plenty but yet, they are still unable or unwilling to face head on the current conjuncture (reality) in order to earn the confidence of the overall population.

As for the economy, there is a gap between what government is offering and the real needs of the population. The Project “HOPE” for Haiti, as approved by the U.S. Congress, is nothing more than an attempt to reinvigorate the Assembly Industry, or it is at least the same ideas of pushing forth the garment industry in Haiti, but now rearranged, corrected in the Neo-liberal Political Context. In other words, government officials have no plans of their own to get the country off the underdevelopment road.

The International Community, represented it in-country through its own institutions, only want one single thing done: for the current Haitian government to strictly adhere to its “Structural Adjustment Program”.

The only raison d’être for MINUSTHA in Haiti is to prevent the class contradictions in Haiti to implode resulting in uncontrollable violence. MINUSTHA has succeeded in putting the armed bands on the defensive; they have not been able to uproot them however, because the problems of armed bands are not simply military. You can find this same type of violence, now enveloping Haiti, in countries like Jamaica, Brazil, Trinidad and Tobago, and Colombia. Why? Because the same causes produce the same results. When MINUSTHA attacks poor neighborhoods to get rid of bandits, even if they find a few among those, they also make many innocent victims within the civilian population. The problems however remain intact, unresolved.

We understand that life, for the civilian population, is extremely difficult in this context. During the holiday period, even before schools were closed for the Christmas holidays in Haiti, parents kept their children home because the spike in kidnappings was indiscriminate, with even school children as such victims. Many schools were forced to close their doors before the prescribed holiday vacation period in December. Schools reopened their doors in January. However, even if the security situation has improved a bit, both parents and their school children are experiencing paralyzing fear.

Poverty, found everywhere, forced the poorest to function in what is known as “the Informal Economy”. In reality, it’s an economy of subsistence where the poor little merchant sells goods like avocado, oranges, cosmetic products, etc..., in the middle of the streets. These kinds of economic activity do not bring much positive changes in the poor man’s life.

And now … it’s the Carnival season… it’s like a dose of vaccine, with the drum playing its role of helping the masses forget about their misery and desperation.

Every Sunday thousands, if not millions, of young men and women take to the streets, in urban and rural areas throughout the country to sing and dance as though they were trying to bypass, forget about their miserable conditions.

In other places, in rural communities, concerned individuals and citizens get together trying to fight this abject poverty. Organizations that the Lambi Fund supports have not stopped the fight to obtain their rights. The organizations that are part of this struggle are only getting stronger. Once more, the members of these organizations say loudly: Haiti will not die! Things have to change! But change will only happen from the grasroots up. Lambi Fund partners with grassroots organizations in Haiti to support the economic and social empowerment of Haitian people. Through the grasroots, true change will happen.

Friday, July 28, 2006

The situation in Haiti Today

July 2006

By Josette Perard from Port au Prince, Haiti

In English and Haitian Kreyol

Touswit apre eleksyon Fevriye 2006 yo, operasyon kidnaping oswa vòl ak zam te fe yon ti ralanti. Sitwayen lan peyi a te konprann sekirite te pral retabli.

Right after the election of February 2006, the kidnapping operations and other armed violence took a little break. It was understood that the country's security situation needed to be re-established

Men, sibitman, apre anviwon yon mwa, operasyon kriminèl yo te rekòmanse lan plizyè vil peyi a, Gonayiv, Senmak, Okay, espesyalman lan Pòtoprens, bandi ame ap rantre lan magazen osnonn lan rezidans prive moun pou kidnape, vòlè, asasine. Lan sèten katye popilè, gwoup ame ap goumen youn ak lòt, lè se pa ak lapolis osnon Minista.

But, suddenly, after about a month, criminal activity started up again in many towns such as Gonaive, St. Marc, Les Cayes and especially in Port au Prince. Armed bandits entered stores or private residences to kidnap people, steal and murder. In certain quarters of the population, armed gangs fight each other, when they aren't fighting the police or MINUSTAH (the UN occupation forces).

Malge eleksyon Préval, tout moun konstate gen yon vid onivo Leta a ki panko konble. Enstitisyon Leta yo frajil; inite ki ta sipoze simante yo onivo politik ak administratif pa egziste. Pa egzanp, lè Andresol, Chef Lapolis la deklare ke bandi Lapolis arete jwenn liberasyon yo, sa gen yon grenn sinifikasyon : gen majistra lan sistèm lajistis la ki lan kondòday ak bandi yo.

In spite of Préval being elected, everyone declares there is a void on the State level which has yet to be filled. The institution of the State is fragile; the unity which is supposed to cement the levels of politics and administration does not exist. For example, when Chief of Police Andresol declared that the bandits the police arrested had been freed, that means the judges in the Justice system are in collusion with the bandits.

Ansyen premye Minis Jera Latòti sove, men li kite kèk kado pwazon pou Preval. Kominote Entènasyonal la di li debouse 960 milyon dola pou Ayiti sou Gouvènman Latòti - Bonifas, men kès Leta a vid, gen plis chomay lan peyi a, pri machandiz premye nesesite miltipliye pa 3 osnon 4 sòti 2004 rive 2006, plis lamizè blayi lan mitan ouvriye, peyizan ak klas mwayèn nan.

The previous Prime Minister, Gerard Latortue – [installed, not elected] – ran away but he left a few poison presents for Préval. The international community disbursed 960 million dollars to the Latortue - Boniface administration, but the State treasury is empty, there is very high unemployment in the country, the price of goods has multiplied 3 or 4 times from 2004 to 2006, there is more misery spread over all functions with the peasants and middle class being very effected.

Lè Préval te monte opouvwa le 14 Me 2006, li te di pèp ayisyen an “gade m lan je, m ap gade w nan je ”. Sa fè plis pase 2 mwa pèp la ap gade misye lan je, men mesaj yo wè lan je l pa di anyen. Ositou, chalè lari a monte, manifestasyon ap boujonnen babò tribò divès fòs sosyal ap chache eksplwate vid politik la selon enterè klas yo, gwoup yo. Atoufè tout kalite pwofite pou antre anaksyon.

When Préval took office on May 14, 2006, he told the Haitian people, “Look me in the eye and I will look you in the eye.” It has been more than two months that the people have looked in his eyes, but the message they see doesn’t say anything.

Immediately, the streets heated up, protests are growing everywhere, various social forces are searching to exploit the political void according to class interests, group interests. And so, all kinds can profit from the inaction of the State.

Jounen jodi a, peyi d Ayiti lan yon kafou difisil. Pwoblèm li anpil e yo konplike. Anpil moun ap defile lan radyo ak televizyon pou pwopoze sa yo kwè ki ka solisyon pwoblèm yo, tankou pa egzanp ogmante efektif lapolis, ba li bon zam pou l ka afwonte bandi, tabli yon lapè sosyal kreye travay, reyòganize administrasyon piblik kòwonpi a, apati yon priz konsyans jeneral.

Today, Haiti is at a difficult crossroads. Its problems are many and complex. Many people are putting forth on radio and television the proposals they believe can give solutions to the problems, for example, improving the effectiveness of the police, giving them arms to confront bandits, establishing a social truce, creating work, reorganizing from the beginning, for the corrupt public administration to have a grasp of general conscience.

Sepandan, sa moun yo bliye osnon pè manyen, se rasin tout pwoblèm sa yo, sètadi rapò sosyal ki tabli an Ayiti depi 2 syèk e ki akouche depi lontan yon Leta ak yon klas dirijan an fayit, yon demokrasdi pèpè, yon ekonomi sou lagraba, yon anviwònman delabre, mizè jeneralize, analfabetism, koripsyon, kidnaping, okipasyon etranjè. Moun save nan gwo peyi yo fabrike 2 etikèt pou Ayiti ak peyi ki sanble ak li : “Pays moins avancés” - “Entité chaotique ingouvernable ”!

However, it is that people forget or are afraid to grasp, that the root of all problems, is the social structure established in Haiti for these past two centuries: the ruling class has bankrupt the State, democracy is trashed, the economy is on its last feet, the environment is dilapidated and there is general misery, illiteracy, corruption, kidnapping and occupation by foreigners. Scholars in larger countries have fabricated two labels for Haiti and other countries like Haiti " Countries minimally advanced " and "A chaotic entity ungovernable".

Ajitasyon politik ak voye monte moralizan ki refize touche rasin pwoblèm yo ap rete lan yon virewon pèmanan, yon virewon ki ranje zafè yon klas moun onivo nasyonal ak entènasyonal.Pou n kòmanse sòti lan pwoblèm yo, pèp ayisyen an bezwen yon diskisyon onèt e serye, lan yon kad òganize, sou baz sa a, chimen an va louvri pou n vanse.

Political agitation by some people who refuse to address the root cause of our problems are keeping us in a permanent turnaround, a turnaround which directly profits a few people on a national and international level. For us to get out of these problems, Haitian people need an honest and serious discussion that is organized and inclusive so that the road will open for us to advance.

Thursday, May 11, 2006

Book Signing - May 20: Haiti, Rising Flames from Burning Ashes


Haitian writer, author, and political analyst Hyppolite Pierre, Director, Political Affairs and Founder of the Institute for Research in the Sciences of Politics (IRSP), invites you to a book signing ceremony on
SATURDAY, MAY 20, 2006, at 7 P.M. at
Books and Books - map
265 Aragon Avenue
Coral Gables, FL

The book, Haiti, Rising Flames from Burning Ashes, is a publication of the University Press of America. Already being marked as “one of the most important works on Haiti”, this book is a historical study of patterns that have caused and continue to cause the failure of the island nation of Haiti as a state. The strength of the book lies in its final chapters, where the author proposes solutions which, if implemented, will help Haiti find its proper place among nations of the world, as a thriving, vibrant, multicultural, and thoroughly democratic state.

Hyppolite will make a short presentation, followed by a question/answer session with the audience. He will also sign your copy of his book, already available at the bookstore.

For further information about this exciting event and seating availability, please call Books and Books at (305) 442-4408.

Book Signing - May 14: Haiti, Rising Flames from Burning Ashes


Haitian writer, author, and political analyst Hyppolite Pierre, Director, Political Affairs and Founder of the Institute for Research in the Sciences of Politics (IRSP), invites you to a book signing ceremony on

SUNDAY, MAY 14, 2006, at 1:30 P.M.

Hard Bean Coffee & Booksellers
36 Market Space
Annapolis, MD, 21401 - map

The book, Haiti, Rising Flames from Burning Ashes, is a publication of the University Press of America. Already being marked as “one of the most important works on Haiti”, this book is a historical study of patterns that have caused and continue to cause the failure of the island nation of Haiti as a state. The strength of the book lies in its final chapters, where the author proposes solutions which, if implemented, will help Haiti find its proper place among nations of the world, as a thriving, vibrant, multicultural, and thoroughly democratic state.

Hyppolite will gladly sign your copy of his book, already available at the bookstore.

For further information about this exciting event and seating availability, please call Hard Bean Coffee and Booksellers at (410) 263-8770.

Monday, April 03, 2006

Reflections on the Haitian Elections


by Ron Bluntschli of Gwo Jan, Haiti

Considering all that has been going on politically in Haiti over the past few years, what happened here on Feb. 7, 2006 and a few weeks after was both surprising and inspiring. The Haitian people went out in large numbers to make a powerful statement to the elites and the international community, whose combined misrule has had little support among the masses. Their determination overcame the many obstacles put in their way. They did not get discouraged and go home when many polling places remained closed until late in the day, nor did they riot after waiting for so long only to find themselves turned away because somehow their names weren't on the list where they were told to vote. What they did do was demonstrate forcefully but peacefully to demand that the Provisional Electoral Council (PEC) solve the problem, which it finally did under pressure around 2:00PM (voting was supposed to start at 6:00AM and end at 4:00PM) with the declaration that people could vote wherever they were and that the polling places were to remain open until everyone had voted. So the election went off without violence (the four deaths that did occur were not political in nature, rather the kind of incident normal for large crowds of people under uncomfortable circumstances; the real story is that there weren't more) and the people went home to wait for the results. Not that there was any doubt about who won the presidency, but there was concern that the people's will would not be respected.

That fear seemed to be confirmed after the election as the vote count started to come in. Preval was ahead with around 60% initially but then a day later went down to 50%, less than the absolute majority he needed to not have to go to a run-off. It remained hovering around that point for the rest of the week. Preval supporters suspected that the count was being manipulated to force a run-off vote, which they wanted no part of, and began to demonstrate in the streets. The big issue initially revolved around the amount of blank votes recorded, which when included in the total – as mandated by Haitian electoral law – dropped Preval's lead below the needed 51%. It defied reason, given the context, that 4% of the electorate would have deliberately voted for "none of the above" as a protest. The discovery of several thousand ballots dumped in the garbage north of Port-au-Prince added more fuel to the fire. The city was effectively shut down for a few days due to the roads being blocked, but there was no violence or destruction of property to speak of, except when the UN fired on a crowd that wouldn't let their vehicles pass, killing two and wounding four others. To resolve the problem before it got out of hand, the PEC agreed to discount blank votes to give Preval the majority needed to be declared the winner. Other than a few candidates and the small minority of people strongly opposed to Preval, most people welcomed the decision and things returned to normal. Official observers also agreed, declaring the election valid and without significant fraud.

Much of the above story was fairly well reported in the press (a good article to start with would be "The Fight for Haiti", by Kathie Klarreich, in the March 13 issue of The Nation). What wasn't given much attention was what the people understood was going on in this game that was being played with them, and why, and how their response to it deserved much more admiration and respect than they got. What they saw was that the powers were going to try to provoke them to violence in order to have a pretext for taking over the country entirely, or at least to install another puppet government. The election going up in flames would prove that Haiti had become ungovernable, a failed state. The violent masses would take the blame. Did they have reason to believe this, or was it just the paranoia of a backward, uneducated people looking for someone to blame for their misery, as foreigners often view Haitians?

Let's start by looking at a bit of recent history. Two years ago, President Aristide was forcibly removed from power by what was called a popular revolt. While there were certainly many Haitians –although never the majority- who were angry with Aristide and wanted him out, the coup d'etat was given financial, organizational and logistical support by the big players in Haiti: Washington, France and Canada (how it went down is well covered in the book "Canada in Haiti: Waging War On The Poor Majority", co-authored by Antony Fenton). Although the Haitian Constitution mandates elections within three months of the presidency being vacated, for whatever reason, this was ignored by all those staunch defenders of the Constitution that Aristide had been accused of violating. While hungry for power, the elite political class knew that Aristide's political party, Lavalas, was still the dominant political force in the country and would win overwhelmingly were a speedy election to be held. They needed to destroy the party and demoralize its popular base first before daring to organize an election in which any of them would stand a chance of winning. This they proceeded to do over the next two years, under the inept and corrupt leadership of the provisional puppet government cobbled together by the same powers that supported the coup d'etat. During this process hundreds of Lavalas officials and supporters were rounded up and put in prison, almost all of them never even having charges filed against them. Many others were "disappeared". This was all blithely overlooked by the UN, which had taken over the "peacekeeping" mission from the very busy US military, who stayed only long enough to kill several people and "restore order".

Much of the work was initially carried out by elements of the Haitian Army, which had been organizing and training in the Dominican Republic for months prior to the onset of anti-Aristide demonstrations (one wonders why they were allowed to operate so freely there and where they got their money) in anticipation of providing the violence necessary to push Aristide out when other means proved inadequate. Although by any reasonable standard these rebel forces would be classified as terrorist, they not only were allowed to ravage northern cities and threaten Port-au-Prince, enabling the coup d'etat to happen, but were also given free range to re-establish bases and keep their weapons afterward. Most Haitians, even many of those who wanted Aristide out, were appalled to see the Army reasserting itself again, considering their brutal history. Had the international objective been to truly stop violent conflict, the rebels should have been disarmed and their leaders arrested; instead, they were told to keep a low profile and wait for a newly elected government to decide whether the Army would be reconstituted or not. They were unable to remain disciplined, however, and proceeded to try and establish themselves operationally in defiance of the occupying powers. When their depredations went too far, the UN and the Haitian police finally shut them down about a year ago.

A lot of the preparatory work needed to begin organizing elections had already been done by this time in any case. Lavalas was unable to function and most of its leaders were in hiding, in prison or dead. The political violence was much worse than it had been under Aristide. Poor neighborhoods in Port-au-Prince like Cite Soleil and Belair had turned into armed fortresses in response to repeated attacks; first by the US, then by the Haitian military and police, as well as the UN. The gangs that Aristide had armed to be his own security forces began a campaign of kidnapping which terrorized primarily the business class and elites, who had overwhelmingly supported Aristide's ouster (it should be noted, however, that many of the kidnappings occurring during this period were not committed by gangs and had nothing to do with politics). This justified further incursions by UN forces, since the population of the armed neighborhoods had now become "terrorists". In one such attack in Cite Soleil, UN forces killed at least 27 people, mostly women and children. The people in these neighborhoods were fully convinced that it was the intent of both the Haitian authorities and the international community to eliminate them, but they were determined not to give up without a fight, shooting at any invading police or UN personnel. While the politically motivated kidnappings were terrible and beyond justification, the responsibility for them should be acknowledged as shared by those in power as well as by the actual perpetrators. The rulers, of course, accept no responsibility, preferring to blame Aristide as somehow orchestrating the whole operation from South Africa.

With Lavalas on the run and its main strategic areas of popular support under the constant threat of siege, the stage was now set for moving ahead with elections. Anti-Aristide forces looked forward to an election they might finally have a chance of winning, but the poor majority was totally uninterested unless Lavalas was allowed to operate freely and present its own candidates. Desirous of legitimacy and knowing that this would not be recognized if Lavalas –still the party of the people- was not involved at least superficially, the authorities negotiated with individuals from within Lavalas willing to play the game and present a candidate for the presidency, which resulted in the laughable choice of Marc Bazin as the Lavalas candidate (laughable because Bazin never had any popular support, especially after accepting the post of Prime Minister during General Cedras' reign of terror). The main body of the Lavalas party rejected this outright, instead pushing for Father Gerard Jean-Juste to represent them. The authorities responded by arresting him on bogus charges to prevent him from being able to register as a candidate. Without a candidate they could believe in, popular interest in the elections remained low.

Then the surprise. On the day before the deadline for candidates to register, Rene Preval entered the race under the banner of the newly formed party Espwa, which means hope in Kreyol. This changed everything. The whole country, including many strongly anti-Aristide people, suddenly got fired up to participate. People started registering to vote en masse, feeling that now they had a candidate they could truly support. The ruling class had not anticipated this and was not at all happy about it, because everyone knew from the moment he entered the race that Preval would win hands down in a fair election. Preval's edge was that he had already been president, had not been accused of corruption while in power (although he was unable to stop rampant corruption in the government), ended his term able to remain in the country and continue to live as a private citizen (a rarity in Haiti) and was accepted and respected by the masses as being solidly "of the people and for the people". His former close association with Aristide made him popular with Aristide supporters, his commitment to popular causes without being tainted by Aristide's power plays and corruption made him popular with pro-democracy people who had been disillusioned with Aristide, and his business-friendly politics made him acceptable to some of the powerful families who dominate Haitian commerce. That he was not known as a competent administrator or very charismatic didn't matter at all.

Another reason for his popularity is that he is hated by the ruling elites and political class, as much if not more for his style as for his politics. Preval is the sort of person who will sit on the ground to talk to a group of farmers, dresses casually, dances with grandmothers, drinks and plays dominoes with regular folks and prefers to speak Kreyol rather than French. The elite view him with the kind of disdain that a New York socialite would have for some good old boy living in a trailer park in Alabama. He is not a politician, yet he has had two presidencies handed to him without even trying, so the political class hates him as well. The people like this about him, though, and by voting for him sent a strong message to the ruling class about just how little they admire them.

Once Preval became a candidate, those in power tried what they could to scuttle or at least forestall the elections, pushing the date back again and again until they worked out some sort of plan and could no longer offer an excuse for the delays. When it finally became clear that the elections were indeed going to be held, the people mobilized and prepared themselves for whatever might be thrown at them. By this time it was obvious to many that there were going to be attempts made to provoke mob violence to spoil things. For one thing, many of the elite were afraid enough to leave the country or send their kids out for the week of the election. Also, during the week before, UN patrols went into Cite Soleil and marked many houses with skull and crossbones symbols, which the inhabitants understood as marking where to shoot when the troops entered. (It would be hard to imagine what other purpose these markings could possibly serve.) Then, on the day before the election, US warships appeared in the harbor off Port-au-Prince, and the news arrived that there were around 800 US soldiers stationed in Barahona, close to the border in the Dominican Republic, supposedly to build four polyclinics (why so many armaments were in their camp was not explained). The only question was how were they going to incite the violence. A lot of people, including myself, thought that thugs hired by opposition parties would start shooting up polling places to set things off. As it turned out, a different approach was used.

It became clear on election day what the strategy was. To start with, the polling places set up for poorer neighborhoods were located in exposed areas with no shade and next to piles of stinking garbage. As previously mentioned, the offices opened very late and were badly disorganized and short of materials. Previous elections, when there was even less experience in holding them, somehow went much more smoothly. The UN, charged with material and logistical support and security, was noticeably absent in many places, especially where the people of Cite Soleil and Belair were to vote. All this did have its effect; people became frustrated and angry and ready for action. But the anticipated violence did not happen. There was no gunfire from those violent "terrorists" of the targeted neighborhoods. People endured the humiliation to cast their votes, foiling the expectations of those who apparently made their plans on the assumption that the people were little more than violent animals unable to control their emotions. At the end of the day, when it was plain what had been attempted and how the people overcame it, my admiration for the Haitian people rose to a level it hasn't been at in years.

The shenanigans after the election were even more potentially explosive than the humiliations of election day. Especially disturbing was the complicity of the UN in continuing to play the role of spoiler. That ballot boxes had been dumped in the garbage before the count was complete was bad enough; that the trucks that dumped them were UN trucks was worse. Unaware of such details, an outside observer of the demonstrations that followed might be pardoned for thinking, "Why don't they just let the process go on, even if that means a run-off if Preval doesn't get a clear majority? Can't they behave in a more civilized fashion?". But from my perspective, having felt the anger upon seeing how people were treated for simply exercising their rights, I was deeply impressed with how well they kept discipline and avoided destroying not only life but property as well. In comparison, there is usually much more mob violence in the US during a post-Super Bowl victory celebration than what we saw here. After the way people comported themselves on election day they should have been given the respect they deserved; instead, they were treated with contempt. And the people rose to the occasion with dignity, maturity and disciplined determination.

Spirits are still high in Haiti, and there is hope in the air like there hasn't been since 1994. You could feel it in this year's Carnival, which was noticeably free of the sporadic fighting that usually breaks out with so many people together dancing and jostling each other in tightly packed crowds. People are no longer as naïve as they were before, however, so they remain wary. There are already signs that efforts will be made to cripple Preval's presidency. For now, though, the people have the satisfaction of having scored a big point against the forces that continue to try dominating them. I hope they can hold on to this spirit, this energy, and with it start to heal and rebuild the country.

Ayibobo for the Haitian People!

Monday, February 20, 2006

Finally!

"Anfen !! Apre anpil sispans epi gras ak detèminasyon Pèp lan ki te achte lari a lajan kontan, KEP lan jedi 16 Fevriye a 3zè nan maten ba rezilta definitif eleksyon Prezidan.

"Finally! After much suspense and grace and determination, the People took to the street as if they owned them. The CEP (electoral commission), on Thursday February 16 at 3 AM in the morning, gave a definite result of the Presidential election.

René Préval pase Prezidan Peyi a ak yon pousantaj 51.10% Moun yo te Dòmi devna Palè Nasyonal tout lannwit epi maten an yo sòti nan Lari Pòtoprens ak nan pwovens yo, pou chante, danse kontantman yo, nan lòd ak disiplin."

Rene Preval became President of the country with 51.10 %. People slept in front of the National Palace the entire night and in the morning they took to the streets of Port au Prince and in the provinces, singing, dancing with happiness, with order and discipline."

Wednesday, January 04, 2006

Women's eNews names Josette Perard Leader for the 21st Century




(NEW YORK Jan. 1, 2006) Women's eNews announces today its 21 Leaders for the 21st Century 2006: women and one man who are dedicating their lives to improving the lives of all women at home, in the workplace, in school and on the playing field.

Out of a pool of hundreds of impressive candidates nominated during the past several months, these 21 determined and passionate trailblazers stand out for their extraordinary visions and commitment to working on behalf of women. Josette Perard, Haiti Director of the Lambi Fund of Haiti, was one of the award winners.

Josette Perard, Haiti's Center Pole

Josette Perard's heart has never been anywhere but her home, Haiti. Her great laugh and greater works, though, have affected the lives of thousands elsewhere.

At 25 years old, faced with the daily threat of violence in Haiti, she went to the Congo (now Zaire) to help women adjust to their new lives, finally free of colonialism. She was given the opportunity to go because they needed French-speaking social workers.

Six years later, she left "those troubled, but strong African women," as she puts it, to take up residence in New York City.

She went to school and pursued accounting to support her two young boys, who adjusted quickly to the United States. But Perard never felt like she belonged despite 20 years of living in the city. "New York is a city where you have to be young and grow there," she says. "I was always waiting to go back to my Haiti."

After two decades as an accountant in New York, Perard finally got her homecoming.

In 1987, after president Jean-Claude Duvalier fled, she returned to still-turbulent Haiti and embarked on a lifelong dream of providing social work in her native land. After a chaotic U.S.-installed military regime, Jean-Bertrand Aristide was elected president in 1990. Most of his term was usurped by a military coup d'etat (i.e. more violence), but he returned to office in 1994, the same year that Perard co-founded the Lambi Fund of Haiti in Port au Prince, a nonprofit created to help poor women create economically and environmentally sustainable communities throughout Haiti.

Today the Lambi Fund of Haiti has supported over 100 projects throughout Haiti's nine regional departments with foundational support and private donors.

These days, Perard spends most of her time organizing regional groups of women to create self-sustaining agricultural and community projects.

Most recently, for example, the Lambi Fund of Haiti helped a rural community build its own sugar cane mill, which provides jobs and income to local workers. Before that, community members—mostly single mothers—walked miles and paid exorbitant prices charged by a rich landowner who controlled the other local mill. "When the situation is bad where I live and I'm concerned, I go on location," Perard says, "and when I meet the women my spirit goes up."

Women, Perard believes, are the heart of Haiti, especially given that violence has left so many families fatherless. "In a voodoo temple," she says, "there is a pole in the middle and everything goes around that pole. The women are that pole in Haitian society."

— By Courtney Martin

Tuesday, September 13, 2005

Wine Label Benefits Lambi Fund


After producing some of California’s most highly sought after cabernets from its vineyards on Sonoma Mountain for twenty years, Patrick Campbell of Laurel Glen Vineyards took an exploratory trip to Chile in 1995 and liked what he saw. Making limited production (and hence, relatively expensive) wine had its charms; but Campbell, whose lifetime fascination with Che Guevara reveals a stubborn egalitarian streak, yearned to produce a more populist wine. He realized that the Colchagua region, in the shadow of the mighty Andes, could produce a delicious and lively cabernet.

The result was Terra Rosa, which has gained a well deserved reputation for honesty, affordability, and environmentally conscious farming practices. While Patrick was searching the farther reaches of the Chilean and Argentine wine worlds, one of his daughters, Maia, was engaged in setting up legal mediation centers in the Guatemalan highlands, and through her work had encountered the Lambi Fund.
Patrick was intrigued. Why not draw on his Terra Rosa contacts to develop a wine that not only tastes good but does good? Patrick ran the idea past his old friend and business partner Tim Chegwidden, an economist with broad experience in the international wine trade. Tim was as excited as Patrick.
Thus was born Chévere, a modest contribution to wine lovers with a social conscience. A portion of the proceeds from the sales of this rich and deep cabernet will be donated to the Lambi Fund to support their vital work. Salud! 2003 Chévere!
In the southeast corner of the Colchagua Valley lies one of the few actual hillside plantings in all of Chile; the 2003 Chévere! begins here on its steep and rocky slopes. While Chévere! is full with the soft and delicious texture we associate with Chilean cabernet, its higher level of color, tannin, and fruit concentration underscore its hillside origin. This is a delicious wine to serve with pastas, meats, pizza, robust cheeses, and with any other hearty foods. Purchase here.

Wednesday, September 07, 2005

Information on the Kidnapping Incident


By the Lambi Fund Advisory Board and Haiti staff

Note: Some of you may have heard bits and pieces about an incident that happened to four Lambi Fund staff and board members in April. Here is a brief factual account of the events.

Every other year the Lambi Fund of Haiti (LFH) holds its annual board meeting in Haiti in different locations. On these occasions, LFH staff and board members that live in the US always have the opportunity to visit nearby LFH projects and meet with members of its partner organizations.

This year the meeting was scheduled to take place on April 14-18, in a seaside hotel on the Cote de Arcadins. LFH staff (both US and Haiti), directors of the board and advisory board members planned to visit four projects in the Artibonite Valley, one of the LFH’s geographic areas of project concentration.

LFH US staff and board members arrived in P-a-P on April 14. The LFH Haiti team met them at the airport and the group headed directly out of the capital on National Rd #1 in 3 rented cars.

On that road, specifically in Tamarinye after Bon Repos, a group of four armed bandits stopped the rented car. Inside the car were the LFH Haiti Project Director who was driving the car and four female staff and board members of LFH USA. The bandits blocked the road, held a gun to the LF Project Director’s head, made him get out of the car and then drove the car away with the four LFH USA staff and board members in the car.

The LFH Project Director immediately borrowed a phone and called the other LFH staff and board members that were ahead in the other two cars. After re-uniting, they analyzed the situation in order to determine what to do next.

Meanwhile, the bandits drove down a remote road with the four LFH women in the car they had stolen. After terrorizing them with cocked guns and deadly threats and taking all they owned --money, jewelry, laptops, and personal belongings-- the bandits released them on Blanchard Road in the Cul-de-Sac plain. They did, however, return the passports to their victims.

Local residents directed the kidnapping victims to a nearby church where they sought help. From there, they were able to phone LFH staff, who rescued them. The LFH Haiti staff found the four women a secure place to stay the night.

Crimes such as kidnapping and highway banditry are happening everywhere, at anytime and to anyone in Haiti now. In this context, we remain convinced that LFH was not specifically targeted in this attack. We also have no idea who the bandits were or if they claim any affiliations.

Lambi Fund takes this opportunity to thank everyone who aided them in this difficult situation: the staff of the church run by the Oblates in Blanchard, who gave them refuge and much consolation; the staff of the Faculty of Agronomy that permitted LFH members to gather at the faculty to discuss the incident and make decisions; and the Sisters of Hospice St Joseph who took in the Lambi Fund women in their place that night.

The goal of telling this story is to correct mis-interpretations and erroneous accounts regarding what happened. LFH staff received many solidarity calls, especially calls from organizations that LFH has supported. People asked Lambi Fund to not be discouraged…to continue the good work it is doing, to continue to support them. The Lambi Fund assures people it is continuing to support their struggle to obtain a better life for people in Haiti.

Letters of Solidarity

By Karen Ashmore, Executive Director

As one of the Lambi Fund of Haiti team that was kidnapped while traveling through Haiti, I want to say that although this was a terrifying incident, it in no way deterred my commitment to the struggle of the people in Haiti. We escaped with our lives when they released us with just the clothes on our backs on a remote rural road. But it was the grassroots people, the honest hard-working peasants of Haiti, who rescued us and delivered us to safety. Once again, the grassroots movement proved its strength in Haiti.

We returned to our homes in the U.S. traumatized, of course, but more committed than ever to the Lambi Fund of Haiti. This is because we were clearly reminded of the huge need that the Lambi Fund is filling. Kidnappings and murders by lawless people are increasing each day as Haiti struggles for democracy. As devastating as our kidnapping was, Haitians live with this fear and violence each and every day. And, unlike us, they cannot board an airplane and leave.

This is why the board members, the other staff, and I, although narrowly escaping death in Haiti, will continue to dedicate ourselves to the Lambi Fund. It is the best way we know to ensure that not one more person in Haiti dies of violence from the anti-democratic forces, of hunger, or of neglect.

We know that you, too, care about the people who are left behind, who have no option but to continue surviving and fighting to turn their country’s fate around. We know that you will share with us our delight in how the peasant-run projects that Lambi Fund supports are continuing to flourish. And we believe that you will keep funding our work, because the Lambi Fund is one of the best ways that you, as one who cares about Haiti, can help.

One of the most heartwarming aspects of this whole incident is the letter of solidarity I received from representatives of 18 peasant organizations in Haiti. I share this letter with you:

De: Organizasyon Rejyon Latibonit
From: Organizations from the Artibonite Region

Pou: Fon Lanbi
To: Lambi Fund

Objè: Lèt de solidarite
Re: Letter of Solidarity

Dat: 15 Avril 2005
Date: April 15, 2005

Zanmi kanmarad nou yo bonjou

Greetings to our comrades and friends,

Kijan nou ye? Eske nou repran moral nou?

How are you? Is your morale better now?

Nou menm òganizasyon patnè ki nan rejyon latibonit lan, nou te chita ansanm pa zòn pou nou te reflechi sou sak pase a. Dapre refleksyon nou yo, se yon aksidan ki rive, tankou sa abitye rive anpil nan manm nou yo sitou ti machann ki vwayaje Pòtoprens yo. Se ka ensekirite Global peyi a. Se vre se yon kou di pou LF pou chofè ki tap kondwi machin nan, lè li pa konnen ki bò yo fè ak kanmarad li yo. Sa yo pral fè ak yo. Se te pi di toujou pou kanmarad yo ki livre nan men kidnapè yo, kap sibi presyon, e yo pa konnen ki sò yo. Se te yon kou di tou, pou rès manm Lanbi yo, ki tap viv moman pak la tap rive. Bon Dye te la. Bagay yo pase jan yo pase a, konpliman pou Bon Dye.

Members of our partner organizations from the Artibonite sat down in our respective areas to reflect about what had happened. Based on our reflection this incident that occurred is what our members experience, especially the little market women who travel to Port-au-Prince. There is a global insecurity problem in Haiti. It is true it was a blow to Lambi Fund, especially to the driver who did not know what had happened to his colleagues and what their fate would be.

It was even harder for those kidnapped that were under pressure not knowing what their fate would be. It was a hard blow also for the other members of Lambi Fund who had to experience this with Easter around the corner. God was a witness and things happened as they did, thanks to God!

Nou menm ki se òganizasyon patnè LF travay nan latibonit lan nou endiye devan aksyon revòltan sa a, kòm pèp ki reve yon chanjman, kòm moun kap batay pou yon lòt sosyete, aksyon sa yo revòlte nou anpil e se konsekans move pratik politik ki trennen peyi a nan lawont ak desepsyon li twouve l la a.

The members of LF partner organizations in the Artibonite are indignant with regard to this revolting action; as people dreaming of change, as people struggling for a different kind of society, actions like this revolt us very much and are the consequence of bad political practices that drag our country down in the shame and deception it finds itself in today.

Zanmi nou yo kouraj, fòk nou kontinye lite pou chanjman reyèl la. Pa dekouraje òganizasyon baz yo makonnen fòs yo ak fòs pa nou pou n rive kwape fòs fè nwa yo bloke wout chanjman an. Kenbe pa lage!

Courage our friends because it is necessary that we continue to struggle for real change!

Do not get discouraged for we of the grassroots organizations join our forces with yours to overcome the forces of darkness that block the road to change. Keep the faith!


AFKB APS ODEPRIB APMR AGPGM

APCE OPB AJS SOFAMR POFGM

OPG OPHAT FAD KBS

OPT7M FEGACD COPAHB REPREZENTAN

Friday, September 02, 2005

Rebuilding After Hurricane Jeanne


Many of you responded to last year’s pleas to help re-build communities destroyed by Hurricane Jeanne. Thanks to your support, thousands of Haitians are on the road to recovery! Here’s how you helped:

Collaborative Rebuilding.

First, the Lambi Fund staff met with the impacted organizations to determine together what was in most need of repair or replacement. Working collectively, peasant groups prioritized what needed to be done.

Jump started the bean planting season.

Several organizations decided to focus their efforts on an Emergency Bean Planting project to jump start the planting season. Beans grow quickly in the area and it was the upcoming season for beans. It was critical that the fields were sowed and planted immediately. The Lambi Fund helped organizations purchase seeds, tools and materials to push the process forward. Eight peasant organizations planted black, red and white beans and got a viable crop started immediately. The organizations successfully harvested and sold the bean crops at the local markets. During a recent meeting with the Lambi Fund staff, the farmers stressed the importance of this effort and gave credit to the Lambi Fund for saving their lives following the hurricane. With your help, hundreds of farmers reclaimed their hope for the future and support for their families.

Provided Working Capital to Market Women. Your support helped the market women from ten peasant organizations purchase anew their market goods lost in the floods. They were quickly able to resume their market activities. These small investments made huge impacts. At an organizational meeting, the women expressed their gratitude, “You helped us get back on our feet.”

Replaced Farm Animals.

Lambi Fund gave seven peasant organizations small grants to buy 50 female goats for those families that lost goats in the floods. Lambi also provided grants to buy two billy goats to improve breeding quality. Lambi Fund staff met with representatives of each of the organizations to strategically plan how to best purchase and distribute goats to the community members without problems. Three committees have formed in each area to supervise the operation.

Repaired Irrigation Canals.

Your support enabled the Lambi Fund to repair irrigation systems for three organizations, permitting groups to continue essential farming activities. One peasant organization encountered difficulties when a large international aid organization began repairing the irrigation canal that Lambi Fund had helped construct without consulting either the local peasant organization or the Lambi Fund. As a result, they began work on the irrigation canal with improper specifications. Community members’ concerns prompted a meeting between the Lambi Fund engineer and the aid a recent meeting with the Lambi Fund staff, the farmers stressed the importance of this effort and gave credit to the Lambi Fund for saving their lives following the hurricane. With your help, hundreds of farmers reclaimed their hope for the future and support for their families. Collaborative meeting Harvesting beans A small market in Haiti organization to develop the proper approach to the canal repairs. Working in tandem with the aid organization, the Lambi Fund staff negotiated an estimate using the proper specifications and work recently began under Lambi Fund supervision to repair the canal in the correct manner. This story makes a great case for the grassroots collaborative approach that the Lambi Fund uses in everything it does Repairs and rebuilding are still underway in ravaged parts of the Artibonite Valley. We will give you progress reports as time goes on.

Thank you Lambi Fund donors for making a difference for the Hurricane Jeanne victims in the Artibonite Valley! Special thanks go to Public Welfare Foundation, Share Our Strength, American Jewish World Service, Christ Church, Unitarian Universalist Service Committee, First Data Western Union, Beyond Borders, Tides Foundation, Share Foundation, St Robert of Newminster Church, and Dougherty Foundation.