i am herehttp://plantsarethestrangestpeople.blogspot.com/2011/04/incredible-hulk-schefflera-actinophylla.html
the scheffleera outside my third floor office window just went out of bloon
the birds ate most of the seeds
i do not feed them when it is in bloom
Thursday, December 27, 2012
My bragging wall
look.. i earned my own permanent press pass as a stringer to the United Nations office for interpressservice
Tuesday, December 25, 2012
Banned for your music
i do not know where i heard the story of when Mercedes Sosa performed in Buenas Aires
she was under a government ban to not siing
solo lo pide a dios
the plaza of the cinco de mayo was full
government snipers were on the roof tops
and sosa
turned to her band
and signaled
and they played
and she stood in front of the microphone
completely silent
as the crowd sang her
signature songhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SIrot1Flczg
when i told this story
to my friend
peggy seeger
she
said
imagine
being
banned
for
your
music
she was under a government ban to not siing
solo lo pide a dios
the plaza of the cinco de mayo was full
government snipers were on the roof tops
and sosa
turned to her band
and signaled
and they played
and she stood in front of the microphone
completely silent
as the crowd sang her
signature songhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SIrot1Flczg
when i told this story
to my friend
peggy seeger
she
said
imagine
being
banned
for
your
music
Moving South in Winter
I just read that the cost for student lving expenses at the University level for a Master;s Student, which is what I am and have been for the last forty years.. is seven hundred US per month
so no wonder i am feeling like a grande dona here in Santo Domingo with my
two thousand six hundred dollar retirement
no, please,
call me Dona... that is with the gngng letter n thing that i cannot find on my keyboard...
so no wonder i am feeling like a grande dona here in Santo Domingo with my
two thousand six hundred dollar retirement
no, please,
call me Dona... that is with the gngng letter n thing that i cannot find on my keyboard...
Monday, November 19, 2012
Full Disclosure
I need to now identify myslef for the sake of full disclosure
My legal name is
Elizabeth Parish Eames Roebling
Born New York City, April 15 1947
US Passport Number 71167776
Parents, Betty Waldo Parish, Society of Mayflower Descendants etcher and engraver, Richard Comyn Eames, New York Yacht Club
Educated Friends Seminary, Middlebury College, Hunter College, BA< Ecole du Montcel (Jouy-en/ Josas France) Escuela Francisco Marroquin, Antiqua Guatemala
Employed. InterPress Service
I adopted the name of Roebling in honor of my paternal great aunt Emily Roebling, wife of the engineer builder of the Brooklyn Bridge whose wedding veil I wore at my marriage. The Roeblings one of the founding families of the State of New Jersey. John Augustus emigrated from German at the beginning of the 18th Century.. settled in PA.. and started engineeering bridges. He had been trained in engineering in Germany but knew that the future of bridges was suspension and that the establishment in Germany would not let him build them thers.
I am a serving member of the Asheville Quaker Meeting, here on peace witness.
I was diagonosed with bipoler disorder after having served 40 days in a British prison for shooting my mouth off over the war in Ireland when it was under marshall law. I stayed in the same private mental hospital as Johan Nash for six weeks and was placed under lithium carbonate for 30 years.
With the help of my Quaker Meeting, I came off of lithium and went on to the new psychiatric medicinces.
I have smoked marijuana off and on since I was twenty years old. I have never found it to be addictive in that I could always stop. I have been somking tobacco since I was 14 and am completely addicted. But I have found that both marijuana and tobacco are medicinal medicines. The marijuana is the best psychiatric medicine that I know.
This war on drugs is merly a war between the north and the south the patent medicines pharma and hte
gnaga
look
we
can
work
this
out
really
we
can
build a bridge
we
do
we
not
something
in
lace
curtain
irish
My legal name is
Elizabeth Parish Eames Roebling
Born New York City, April 15 1947
US Passport Number 71167776
Parents, Betty Waldo Parish, Society of Mayflower Descendants etcher and engraver, Richard Comyn Eames, New York Yacht Club
Educated Friends Seminary, Middlebury College, Hunter College, BA< Ecole du Montcel (Jouy-en/ Josas France) Escuela Francisco Marroquin, Antiqua Guatemala
Employed. InterPress Service
I adopted the name of Roebling in honor of my paternal great aunt Emily Roebling, wife of the engineer builder of the Brooklyn Bridge whose wedding veil I wore at my marriage. The Roeblings one of the founding families of the State of New Jersey. John Augustus emigrated from German at the beginning of the 18th Century.. settled in PA.. and started engineeering bridges. He had been trained in engineering in Germany but knew that the future of bridges was suspension and that the establishment in Germany would not let him build them thers.
I am a serving member of the Asheville Quaker Meeting, here on peace witness.
I was diagonosed with bipoler disorder after having served 40 days in a British prison for shooting my mouth off over the war in Ireland when it was under marshall law. I stayed in the same private mental hospital as Johan Nash for six weeks and was placed under lithium carbonate for 30 years.
With the help of my Quaker Meeting, I came off of lithium and went on to the new psychiatric medicinces.
I have smoked marijuana off and on since I was twenty years old. I have never found it to be addictive in that I could always stop. I have been somking tobacco since I was 14 and am completely addicted. But I have found that both marijuana and tobacco are medicinal medicines. The marijuana is the best psychiatric medicine that I know.
This war on drugs is merly a war between the north and the south the patent medicines pharma and hte
gnaga
look
we
can
work
this
out
really
we
can
build a bridge
we
do
we
not
something
in
lace
curtain
irish
Saturday, November 17, 2012
Thursday, November 15, 2012
Haitian Oil exceeds that of Venezuela
http://www.worldoil.com/haiti_could_have_larger_oil_reserves_than_venezuela.html
Saturday, October 27, 2012
News of Relief work from Caritas
Haïti sous les effets de l'ouragan Sandy qui passe sur la Caraïbe depuis le mercredi 24 octobre
PORT-AU-PRINCE (25 octobre 2012) – La population haïtienne, particulièrement celle du Grand Sud du pays, subit depuis le mercredi 24 octobre 2012, les effets du mortel ouragan Sandy qui se déplace à une vitesse de 20 kilomètres par heure avec des vents pouvant souffler jusqu'à 130 km/h.
Les fortes pluies déversées sur diverses régions du pays ont fait trois morts dans la Grand ‘Anse et quatre dans le département du Sud, selon les informations des agents pastoraux de Caritas Haïti et d’autres sources dont la Direction de protection civile (DPC). Plusieurs régions sont encore sous la pluie. Selon le Centre National de météorologie d'Haïti et la Direction de la Protection Civile, il faut s’attendre à 300mm de pluie sur les plaines et près de 500 sur les massifs montagneux.
Déjà de nombreuses zones du pays sont inondées. "Les régions les plus touchées sont la Grande’Anse, le Sud et les Nippes", a constaté Jude Castra Pierre, responsable du Programme de Gestion des Risques et Désastres de Caritas Haïti. "Nos équipes sur le terrain partagent en permanence des informations avec les agents de la DPC sur la situation des populations dans les zones à risque.
Caritas Haïti félicite la DPC qui a pu évacuer plus de cinq mille personnes dans le Sud, les Nippes et la Grande’Anse. Mais les dégâts matériels sont nombreux : les eaux ont emporté les cultures et des têtes de bétails. Nos agents sur le terrain ont constaté que de nombreuses localités sont totalement sous les eaux à Petite-Rivière de Nippes, Baradères (Nippes), Solon (Sud), Carcasse (Grande-Anse). Plusieurs villes sont également isolées à cause des routes et des ponts coupés.
De nombreuses églises et presbytères sont inondés. Dans la localité de Solon, les eaux ont détruit le matériel scolaire et l'entrepôt de l'école presbytérale où était stocké les provisions de la cantine. Mais la population veille et prie.
Caritas Haïti, présente dans les dix départements du pays à travers près de 300 points locaux et dix directions diocésaines, continuer de suivre la situation. Elle est en train de mettre en place un plan d’intervention.
"L'institution a déjà contacté ses partenaires locaux afin de répondre aux besoins urgents des communautés. Elle félicite Catholic Relief Services qui met à sa disposition des kits d'hygiène et des kits de cuisine, Cordaid (Caritas Hollande) qui lui offre des bâches, des jerrycans et Trocaire pour son appui logistique. Ces matériels seront bientôt disponibles dans les Directions diocésaines concernées pour être distribués aux sinistrés", informe Mildrède Béliard, Directrice de Communication et de Coopération à Caritas Haïti.
Caritas Haïti profite de l’occasion pour présenter ses sympathies aux nombreuses familles sinistrées, aux victimes et parents des victimes de l’ouragan Sand. Elle appelle la population à respecter les consignes de sécurités de la DPC pour éviter que le bilan des dégâts soit plus lourd.
A propos de Caritas Haïti : Fondée en 1975 par la Conférence des Evêques d'Haïti, Caritas Haïti débute ses activités par des dons humanitaires. Nourriture, médicaments, moments de convivialité sont offerts et organisés pour secourir les exclus et les plus pauvres de la société. Les programmes et projets de Caritas Haïti s'adressent à des groupes organisés tels les groupements de femmes, groupements de planteurs, comités d’irrigants, groupes de crédit, mutuelles de solidarité, comité de santé, etc. Caritas est la seule institution humanitaire représenté dans tous les départements du pays et dans plus de 300 paroisses.
Mildrède Béliard
Directrice de Communication et de Coopération
31, Delmas 65 - B.P. # 13197 - Delmas, Haiti, W.I.
Téls: (509) 2813-1690 | 2249-0347 | 2249-1690
Fax: (509) 2249-0128
Cell: (509) 3804 0211
Labels:
Caritas Haiti,
Hurricane Sandy Haiti
Saturday, October 13, 2012
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Wanted Machine operators
Wanted Machine operators, excavators, Bobcats for demo crew in Haiti , We are in need of Owners of Mini and 200 series excavators and above. You will have Top priority consideration; our window on this demolition project is short. Start date is May 1st Window closes May 15th. This is a demo project will that will last 15 Months Please respond to the following Website at www.harborhouseunlimited.com or email at jamesjohnson472@ Hotmail.com. We also have need of ¾ ton Trucks 2500 and above for various catastrophe projects thru out the US . For more info contact James Johnson at 817-212-9383 or 1-888-832-1693 for more information. Only serious inquiries please.
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
Poison Fruit
I see the USA now through an electronic lens of print and video. I have not lived there for eight years now nor have I visited in two. So it is becoming a foreign country to me. But my heart is breaking to see and hear the pictures and news that are coming out of my homeland.
My friends are mostly marginal. Many of my family are marginal as well. No one is doing well. Even my more prosperous friends and family are concerned about the violence, and the prospects for their children.
From a distance, it looks like an even fight for the presidency between two qualified and reasonable men.
This is not the case.
Because the giant think tank that is behind Mitt Romney is organized, funded, and the very personification of corporate control. Read his economic plan. Then read Rand Paul's budget plan, which got 16 votes on the floor of the US Senate and understand that the intention of this wing of the Republican party is out to bankrupt and dismantle the Federal government.
They will not fund regulatory agencies. They will dismantle Medicare, Medicaid, Aid to Dependent Chirdren, privatize Social Security, institute a voucher system for private schools.
The Federal budget is only to be used for the defense of the nation.
I do not stand completely opposed to this.For instance, now with the Faith Based Initiavite, we are now federally funding Bible based Christian missionary agencies.
Except for the fact that Clear Channel, which is owned by Bain, supports voices like Rush Limbaugh who has been spewing hate speech over the America that I love for years.
I lived in the buckle of the Bible belt. We did a Listening Project from our Quaker meeting with the local pastors who came out so vehemently against gays/. I know a lot of these folks/ who i am sure flooded Chick Fil a in Asheville and are still '/// to be kind and good hearted and simple folk,,, tobacco farmers and banjo players.... not the sort of people who would have Rush Limbaugh to dinner.
I lived with them for 20 years. They are not evil people.
But there is this wierd twist in the word of God where it gets written down and then the Book of Revelation got included and folks do not seem to know their hearts any more.
I do not understand the Book of Mormon although I have read a bit of it.
I have met several Mormons here who definitely walk their walk. And others along my life who also appeared to be gentle and loving people.
So I am not questioning Mr Romney's religion, even though I do not understand it.
But it does appear that the fruits of Mr Romney's tree is poisonous.
My friends are mostly marginal. Many of my family are marginal as well. No one is doing well. Even my more prosperous friends and family are concerned about the violence, and the prospects for their children.
From a distance, it looks like an even fight for the presidency between two qualified and reasonable men.
This is not the case.
Because the giant think tank that is behind Mitt Romney is organized, funded, and the very personification of corporate control. Read his economic plan. Then read Rand Paul's budget plan, which got 16 votes on the floor of the US Senate and understand that the intention of this wing of the Republican party is out to bankrupt and dismantle the Federal government.
They will not fund regulatory agencies. They will dismantle Medicare, Medicaid, Aid to Dependent Chirdren, privatize Social Security, institute a voucher system for private schools.
The Federal budget is only to be used for the defense of the nation.
I do not stand completely opposed to this.For instance, now with the Faith Based Initiavite, we are now federally funding Bible based Christian missionary agencies.
Except for the fact that Clear Channel, which is owned by Bain, supports voices like Rush Limbaugh who has been spewing hate speech over the America that I love for years.
I lived in the buckle of the Bible belt. We did a Listening Project from our Quaker meeting with the local pastors who came out so vehemently against gays/. I know a lot of these folks/ who i am sure flooded Chick Fil a in Asheville and are still '/// to be kind and good hearted and simple folk,,, tobacco farmers and banjo players.... not the sort of people who would have Rush Limbaugh to dinner.
I lived with them for 20 years. They are not evil people.
But there is this wierd twist in the word of God where it gets written down and then the Book of Revelation got included and folks do not seem to know their hearts any more.
I do not understand the Book of Mormon although I have read a bit of it.
I have met several Mormons here who definitely walk their walk. And others along my life who also appeared to be gentle and loving people.
So I am not questioning Mr Romney's religion, even though I do not understand it.
But it does appear that the fruits of Mr Romney's tree is poisonous.
Labels:
Clear Channel,
hate speech,
Listening Project,
Mitt Romney,
Mormon,
Rand Paul,
Rush Limbaugh
Thursday, July 12, 2012
bonus paid to sugar workers
http://www.diariolibre.com/dlenglish/2012/07/12/i343566_central-romana-delivers-largest-bonus-ever.html
Large bonus paid to sugar workers in the Dominican Republic
Good work, team!
Note this is not the company which was featured in the film The Price of Sugar, I do not believe....
but another.
None of the sugar companies are held up here as models of employment yet.
But this is the result, really of the work of ONE MAN, Christopher Hartley
who had the courage to simply SPEAK TRUTH TO POWER
Well done
Father Hartley
my hat is off to Thee
Hartley asserted that the following conditions exist here
. In a letter to the directors of Tate & Lyle dated July 10, 2009, he asserted that
human rights violations
continue in the Dominican Republic, which include "daily and systematic disregard for fundamental human dignity in the forms of “statelessness” (and its inherent lack of civil liberties),
human trafficking,
extreme poverty,
child labor,
racial discrimination,
lack of education and healthcare, and
general squalor
I concur
Large bonus paid to sugar workers in the Dominican Republic
Good work, team!
Note this is not the company which was featured in the film The Price of Sugar, I do not believe....
but another.
None of the sugar companies are held up here as models of employment yet.
But this is the result, really of the work of ONE MAN, Christopher Hartley
who had the courage to simply SPEAK TRUTH TO POWER
Well done
Father Hartley
my hat is off to Thee
Hartley asserted that the following conditions exist here
. In a letter to the directors of Tate & Lyle dated July 10, 2009, he asserted that
human rights violations
continue in the Dominican Republic, which include "daily and systematic disregard for fundamental human dignity in the forms of “statelessness” (and its inherent lack of civil liberties),
human trafficking,
extreme poverty,
child labor,
racial discrimination,
lack of education and healthcare, and
general squalor
I concur
Camping for Carnival
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mark-schuller/sweeping-haitis-poor-back_b_1648209.html?utm_hp_ref=tw
Too Soon for Carnival: Sweeping Haiti's 400,000 Poor Back Under the Rug
Huffington Post - By Mark Schuller - July 8, 2012
For those who haven't been to Haiti for a while, or for those who have
never been but have seen the hell on earth portrayed in the media, the
fact that Champs-de-Mars and other plazas in Port-au-Prince are no
longer home to thousands of people is a symbol of progress.
Celebrating this "liberation" of public spaces, President Martelly is
planning a Carnival des Fleurs, a tradition under Duvalier, scheduled
to begin July 29, a day after the anniversary of the 1915 U.S.
invasion.
For the 390,276 people the International Organization for Migration
(IOM) estimates who are still under ripped sheets of plastic or tarp,
it's too soon to celebrate.
Many believe this relocation of camps on highly-visible areas is akin
to sweeping the garbage off the floor only to have it out of sight and
out of mind, in someone else's backyard. Where are people going?
For its part, the IOM is keeping track of people they have relocated
in the 16/6 program. But the 16/6 camps only account for 5 percent of
the total camp population.
And for the others? "Nou pa konnen." We don't know.
We do know that places like M?n Lopital are sites for thousands of new
residents inching ever farther up the mountainside, in crowded
shantytowns. Kanaran, a long stretch of desert land in the outskirts
of town, is still growing -- no one knows how many people live there.
I've heard estimates of 130,000 to 180,000 people but IOM has never
done a census.
Like piles of garbage swept aside and neglected, away from the main
plazas and busy thoroughfares are camps that are real, all too real.
And they are not going away any time soon.
Among the eight camps in my study last summer, for example, HANCHO,
Karade, and Kolonbi are already well on their way to becoming
shantytowns, the Cit? Soleils (which recently was upgraded to a
"yellow zone") of the next generation. Some residents are beginning to
erect walls or concrete foundations for their homes, some now made of
scrap metal instead of tarp. A common denominator is that they are all
hidden, on land that is relatively secure - many owned by former
military members long in exile -- and of no strategic interest to
investors or tourism promoters.
Unfortunately they also have in common an even increasing
deterioration of the ripped sheets of plastic that are people's homes
and primary services such as water. In Kolonbi, the IOM finally took
out the latrines that hadn't been cleaned for months in February (they
later opened a cholera treatment center). But new people -- arriving
as the 16/6 program began -- pitched their tent right on top of the
former site that still exudes a strong smell. The Red Cross's work to
reinforce the walls on the ravine, where people now throw their
excrement, has been stopped for several months.
Toilets have also been removed in HANCHO, as well as a few residents,
including the only family who sold hot meals. A walk through the
windy, dusty camp reveals most tents -- in much worse condition than
before -- occupied, with people singing, listening to the radio,
washing clothes, cooking, or reading. A former army officer is
reclaiming part of the space to build a factory; 15 families are at
imminent risk of forced relocation since last Tuesday. With no
relocation assistance or mediation from the IOM, they wait daily for
the order to move, hoping it won't come in the middle of the night and
accompanied by arson or machetes like other recent cases. Some may
pitch their tent somewhere else in the camp, clearing the weeds where
goats graze.
In Karade, trees planted since the earthquake are now higher than many
tents, offering some shade. And Frisline, whom I've known since 2003,
proudly shared a banana from her yard. But there is still no clinic
and it is still a 20 minute walk to get the water stationed outside
the camp and outside the Delmas city limits, in front of the
t-shelters installed by CRS for those displaced from St. Louis.
Frisline, who has had to twice buy new tarps, either suffocates in the
heat trapped inside the fraying tarps or opens a flap, inviting dust
to blow inside the tent. Karade is on a hill where the wind almost
constantly kicks up dust. Since no one has invested in roads, rains
mean a treacherous trek back home or even a mudslide. More than a
dozen tents have been moved because the rains have eroded the ground
by the ravine.
Kolonbi, HANCHO, and Karade are by no means unique. Large camps are
still tucked away among Port-au-Prince's teeming shantytowns,
hillsides or valleys, like Acra (there are four camps bearing the name
of this wealthy family), KID, Bourdon, Solino, M?n Silo, Cineas...
Given the more complex realities, not to mention living under sheets
of plastic ripped by another rainy season on top of the hottest summer
in recent memory, it's too soon to celebrate. Where are people going?
And are they living better than before? And what about those who
remain?
Individual solutions may work well for those who made it on the list,
but for the rest, only a collective social policy will be able to do
more than sweep the problem onto someone else's doorstep. On Monday,
an international campaign was launched to ask the Haitian government
and donors to build quality social housing and stop forced eviction
until said housing is built.
Labels:
Haiti displacement camps,
Mark Shuller
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
german speaking haitian tour guides needed
from voyageslumierehaiti@gmail.com
The tourism business is picking up and I'm happy to report
that the Germans might be coming!! They hopefully will do
a two centre holiday - part DR and part Haiti!!
Does anyone know any German speaking Haitian young people
who could act as guides both in Cap Haitian and in
Port-au-Prince. German is not one of the languages I
speak! They are insisting on having a German speaking guide as
not all Germans speak English.
So with all of you and your contacts I'm hoping someone will
know a bright personable German speaking person whom I can
train up as a tour guide.
Please reply to me offline on voyageslumierehaiti@gmail.com
Many thanks.
Jacqui Labrom
-- The New CD from the Chamber Orchestra :"*HAITIAN CLASSICS IN THE GARDEN*"
is now on sale. Contact me for details.
*LONELY PLANET GUIDE 2009 on SALE.*
Voyages Lumi?re SA
*YOUR PARTNER IN TOURISM IN HAITI*
*VOTRE PARTENAIRE EN TOURISME EN HAITI*
*
*email: voyageslumierehaiti@gmail.com
Tel: (00 509) Cellphones: (00 509) 3607-1321
Website : www.voyageslumiere.com
Journeys for the enlightened traveller
Los viajes para el turista lucido
Monday, April 30, 2012
Beltane
The team from the IOM went up to Las Terrenas last week with my friend Dieudonne and met with some of the Haitian ministers in town. Dieudonne reported that one of them said that I had not done anything for the Association of Haitians in Las Terrenas. And that he, himself, did not want to return to Haiti.
He said that then , one of the women from the congregation stood up and said "but I , I want to return to Haiti."
And then Dieudonne took up my cause and said that I had ORGANIZED the visit from the IOM.. that these people from the Capital in their bright shiny new van with the important logo, were only in town because I had gotten them there with my work.. and that I work EVERY DAY.. for the Haitians here. He said that the folks from the IOM nodded their heads in agreement.
And then he said that the IOM promised that ALL the Haitians in Las Terrenas who want to go back to Haiti, will go back to Haiti. With papers.. and everything!!
He said that then , one of the women from the congregation stood up and said "but I , I want to return to Haiti."
And then Dieudonne took up my cause and said that I had ORGANIZED the visit from the IOM.. that these people from the Capital in their bright shiny new van with the important logo, were only in town because I had gotten them there with my work.. and that I work EVERY DAY.. for the Haitians here. He said that the folks from the IOM nodded their heads in agreement.
And then he said that the IOM promised that ALL the Haitians in Las Terrenas who want to go back to Haiti, will go back to Haiti. With papers.. and everything!!
Thursday, April 19, 2012
Food Aid Needed
We are asking that food aid be delivered here in the Domnican Republic through the Haitian churches.
We have a new outbreak of cholera in Santiago among the Haitian population.
We have had kawisikoor in Samana.
The African Methodist Episcopal Zionist Church in Las Terreanas is the largest international church serving this population.
Rice, Beans, Oil, canned fish, sugar, dried milk, peanut butter, crackers
We have a new outbreak of cholera in Santiago among the Haitian population.
We have had kawisikoor in Samana.
The African Methodist Episcopal Zionist Church in Las Terreanas is the largest international church serving this population.
Rice, Beans, Oil, canned fish, sugar, dried milk, peanut butter, crackers
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
An now my ancestral home island
My godfather, The Rt Reverand Kenneth Riches, was the Bishop of Linclon. He and his family stayed with us in New Jersey for a summer. Then I went over to tour the land of my grandparents under the care of his daugther, Anne. We stayed with them at the Bishop's house behind the Cathedral. His youngest son, Christopher, used to sneak us into the church at night to run through the aisles. I called him The Bish.
Monday, April 16, 2012
One of my favorite places
I wanted to take you around my island a bit
to show you about a bit
so walk about with me
I love the border region.. the high central mountains
My favorite little town on this side is called
Matas de Farfan
it is in a flat gorgeous fertile cool high mountain valley
on a straight shoot ashpalt highway
about 20 minutes
to the border
then
15 minutes on a motor bike
to the border of Haiti
to the ancient capital city of Haiti, Belledaire, surely the most beautiful city in Haiti, untouched by earthquake damage
rents in Matas start at $100 a month
health care is provided by the Dominican State
You are all invited
to show you about a bit
so walk about with me
I love the border region.. the high central mountains
My favorite little town on this side is called
Matas de Farfan
it is in a flat gorgeous fertile cool high mountain valley
on a straight shoot ashpalt highway
about 20 minutes
to the border
then
15 minutes on a motor bike
to the border of Haiti
to the ancient capital city of Haiti, Belledaire, surely the most beautiful city in Haiti, untouched by earthquake damage
rents in Matas start at $100 a month
health care is provided by the Dominican State
You are all invited
Labels:
Hispaniola Quaker Witness,
Matas De Farfan
Aid to Haiti
Before the earthquake, the South East Regional Office of the American Friends Serivice Committee was working on a school kit project here
There were two boxes collected but we we reached an impasse at delivery since the traditional method for delivery had been through visiting Friends and there are few Friends visiting Haiti. I had wished for them to be shipped so that Friends who were making the contributions could also contribute the cost of the shipping.
The Lambi Fund in Haiti, here, works in the rural areas of Haiti, and shares Quaker values. They, had, at the time, agreed to work with AFSC in receiving donations in Haiti and helping to distribute them.
Although the primary need is always for money, I know that Friends prefer to involve their Meetings and particularly their First Day Schools in direct contact with materials and the recipients.
At the time of our initial discussions, with Patrick Lucien of the Edem Foundation, there was a request from Friends that the children in Haiti correspond with the donors in the United States. While this might be a lovely exchange, I would hope that it is not placed as a requirement upon the recipients, given their circumstances.
I would request that SERO, AFSC and all Quaker Meetings might consider this project as a way to reach out to the people of Haiti.
Thirty six percent of the population of Haiti is under the age of 14, as opposed to 13% of the United States under that age.
Mesi d'avant.
There were two boxes collected but we we reached an impasse at delivery since the traditional method for delivery had been through visiting Friends and there are few Friends visiting Haiti. I had wished for them to be shipped so that Friends who were making the contributions could also contribute the cost of the shipping.
The Lambi Fund in Haiti, here, works in the rural areas of Haiti, and shares Quaker values. They, had, at the time, agreed to work with AFSC in receiving donations in Haiti and helping to distribute them.
Although the primary need is always for money, I know that Friends prefer to involve their Meetings and particularly their First Day Schools in direct contact with materials and the recipients.
At the time of our initial discussions, with Patrick Lucien of the Edem Foundation, there was a request from Friends that the children in Haiti correspond with the donors in the United States. While this might be a lovely exchange, I would hope that it is not placed as a requirement upon the recipients, given their circumstances.
I would request that SERO, AFSC and all Quaker Meetings might consider this project as a way to reach out to the people of Haiti.
Thirty six percent of the population of Haiti is under the age of 14, as opposed to 13% of the United States under that age.
Mesi d'avant.
Sunday, April 15, 2012
Saving Turtle Island
It's only 4 pm and already it is the best birthday EVER
Woke up to snuggles of love ... hugs from all around
went with my fFriend Marcos to Unity
lunched in the Zona
ran into Luis.. MORE hugs
back to my little corner of AYATI here in Sainte Domingue
to read the wonderful news
That HEINEKEN has bought both Presidente (Dominican) and Prestige(Haitian) breweries
and that DIGICEL
from Ireland.. which revolutionized communications in Haiti a few years back by taking it wireless.. has just bought VIVA.. an internet provider there and about second in the market here
so
if
we
could
now
have
some
tree hugging
birkenstock
wearing
goddess worshipping
members of the
eco feminista
teamsters union
who would like to spend their winters in the tropics
come and join me on the hills of SAMANA
i
think that
we
might
just
SAVE TURTLE ISLAND
many many thanks to all for the generous contributions of gold and rubies and light and love
caught the high wind from Jamaica
now running free
Woke up to snuggles of love ... hugs from all around
went with my fFriend Marcos to Unity
lunched in the Zona
ran into Luis.. MORE hugs
back to my little corner of AYATI here in Sainte Domingue
to read the wonderful news
That HEINEKEN has bought both Presidente (Dominican) and Prestige(Haitian) breweries
and that DIGICEL
from Ireland.. which revolutionized communications in Haiti a few years back by taking it wireless.. has just bought VIVA.. an internet provider there and about second in the market here
so
if
we
could
now
have
some
tree hugging
birkenstock
wearing
goddess worshipping
members of the
eco feminista
teamsters union
who would like to spend their winters in the tropics
come and join me on the hills of SAMANA
i
think that
we
might
just
SAVE TURTLE ISLAND
many many thanks to all for the generous contributions of gold and rubies and light and love
caught the high wind from Jamaica
now running free
Friday, April 13, 2012
Why Other Nations must help Haiti.. NOT the USA
I am much assisted now by the many new readers of the blog from the international team with whom I worked on the narcotrafficante story. Every morning I can check the out clicks on the blog here and find that they have left me a question by which blog entry they click out from , or sometimes just an uplift.. by referring me back to a time where I was more optimistic and happy.
This morning's question's from Finland, refers back to logistics.. to this post.. here wrutten by Michael Keizer. Now at the time of that post, there was essentially no functioning government in Haiti. Now there is.
Haiti has long suffered from a lack of confidence in its government and a manipulation and sabatoge of its electoral process by the interntional community.
Since I lived and worked in Haiti 30 years ago with a diving operation, I have always watched what was going on there.
When Aristide was elected President in 1990, the very first democratically elected president, I remember listening to a US State Department official being interviewed,, perhaps on NPR. He said something along the lines that the US did not like his rhetoric, his talk that perhaps he was going to nationalize the banks, and that the US was, therefore, going to withhold aid and adopt a "wait and see" attitude.
Now at the time,as it is still, the Haitian government was almost completely aid dependent - primarily on the US. I do not know the actual percentage but the US has always been the major donor to Haiti. I do not know if the US actually withheld aid to Aristide or was simply very sloooow in paying out or simpy funded the military opposition or let it be known that it would not object to a coup against the fiery leftest priest but within a year, he was gone.
For a full run down on what happened with Aristide, with Clinton, with the behind the scenes politics that went on.. I recommend Michael Deibert's book, Notes from the Last Testament, I have read the book four times and given away ten copies, one to the former ambassador here to the OAS, although I was shocked that he had not already read it.
It should be required reading for everyone who is working in Haiti now.
Rather than fund the government, the United States delivered its funding through various non governmental organizations, who are registered with USAID, and located around the Washington beltway. We refer to them as the Beltway Bandits. They are known for extremely rigourous accounting. For a USAID grant, one must account for every pencil, every jot, every tittle.
What one does not actually have to account for is the efficacy and the results of the project -- simply that the money was not stolen and used for personal use.
I believe this is changing now .. that projects must now show that they actually had some impact - as it is for projects for the World Bank and the International Bank for Development.. but slowly.
The lastest and best idea from the US for the development of Haiti is a Korean textile factory which is to be placed on agricultural land, displace farmers, house the workers with pit toilets without running water, and put the polluted run off from the factory into the surrounding mangrove swamp.
The Haitian intellectuals very calmly and politely point out, in perfect French, in their one remaining daily newspaper, that while indeed they do not wish to appear to be unwelcoming to foreign investment, especially when the International Bank of Development is involved, but the mangrove swamps are an environmental treasure and extremely valuable for tourism and perhaps there might be another place that the factory might be located?
USAID has constructed some of the ugliest houses ever seen. Without kitchens. Without latrines. abominations.. really, hideous.
The grant that was given to the IOM is so stringent that we cannot get the very qualified Haitian builders who are here in the DR back to Haiti with $400 worth of tools. So I would also ask the international community to give grant money to the IOM so that they might be able to help us do that.
We are penny wise and pound foolish.
Under President Bush, the US Congress passed what some would call a breach of our founding principles in the form of the Faith Based Initiative, so that funding from the government is now given to many religious groups in Haiti, the majority of whom are Christian, some of whom consider that Haiti's traditional African religion Satanic
The Friends Committee on National Legislation opposed this legislation as a breach of the Constitution of the United States. Quaker organization will not accept government money in any circumstances.
The United States thus created in Haiti what is called The Republic of NGOs. Rather than fund the government itself, which leaned closer to Castro and Chavez than Bush, it delivered aid through a patchwork of NGOs, reportable to no one except USAID. Grants were micro designed in DC, with no centralized planning. While there was a certain courteous ballet dance around the authority of the Haitian government, it was the US Embassy which had and has the purse strings.
That is why it is so URGENT that the international community make good on its funding to the GOVERNMENT of HAITI.
Former President Aristide is back in Haiti and there has been more than one demonstration in his favor. Although many of his cabinet and close associates are in jail in the US on drug dealing, there have been no charges against him. Despite the fact that he lost the confidence of many of his former followers, he speaks the truth about the oppression and exploitation of the poor in Haiti. His apparent willingness to do business with narcotrafficers does not bode well for the future stability of the island.
This morning's question's from Finland, refers back to logistics.. to this post.. here wrutten by Michael Keizer. Now at the time of that post, there was essentially no functioning government in Haiti. Now there is.
Haiti has long suffered from a lack of confidence in its government and a manipulation and sabatoge of its electoral process by the interntional community.
Since I lived and worked in Haiti 30 years ago with a diving operation, I have always watched what was going on there.
When Aristide was elected President in 1990, the very first democratically elected president, I remember listening to a US State Department official being interviewed,, perhaps on NPR. He said something along the lines that the US did not like his rhetoric, his talk that perhaps he was going to nationalize the banks, and that the US was, therefore, going to withhold aid and adopt a "wait and see" attitude.
Now at the time,as it is still, the Haitian government was almost completely aid dependent - primarily on the US. I do not know the actual percentage but the US has always been the major donor to Haiti. I do not know if the US actually withheld aid to Aristide or was simply very sloooow in paying out or simpy funded the military opposition or let it be known that it would not object to a coup against the fiery leftest priest but within a year, he was gone.
For a full run down on what happened with Aristide, with Clinton, with the behind the scenes politics that went on.. I recommend Michael Deibert's book, Notes from the Last Testament, I have read the book four times and given away ten copies, one to the former ambassador here to the OAS, although I was shocked that he had not already read it.
It should be required reading for everyone who is working in Haiti now.
Rather than fund the government, the United States delivered its funding through various non governmental organizations, who are registered with USAID, and located around the Washington beltway. We refer to them as the Beltway Bandits. They are known for extremely rigourous accounting. For a USAID grant, one must account for every pencil, every jot, every tittle.
What one does not actually have to account for is the efficacy and the results of the project -- simply that the money was not stolen and used for personal use.
I believe this is changing now .. that projects must now show that they actually had some impact - as it is for projects for the World Bank and the International Bank for Development.. but slowly.
The lastest and best idea from the US for the development of Haiti is a Korean textile factory which is to be placed on agricultural land, displace farmers, house the workers with pit toilets without running water, and put the polluted run off from the factory into the surrounding mangrove swamp.
The Haitian intellectuals very calmly and politely point out, in perfect French, in their one remaining daily newspaper, that while indeed they do not wish to appear to be unwelcoming to foreign investment, especially when the International Bank of Development is involved, but the mangrove swamps are an environmental treasure and extremely valuable for tourism and perhaps there might be another place that the factory might be located?
USAID has constructed some of the ugliest houses ever seen. Without kitchens. Without latrines. abominations.. really, hideous.
The grant that was given to the IOM is so stringent that we cannot get the very qualified Haitian builders who are here in the DR back to Haiti with $400 worth of tools. So I would also ask the international community to give grant money to the IOM so that they might be able to help us do that.
We are penny wise and pound foolish.
Under President Bush, the US Congress passed what some would call a breach of our founding principles in the form of the Faith Based Initiative, so that funding from the government is now given to many religious groups in Haiti, the majority of whom are Christian, some of whom consider that Haiti's traditional African religion Satanic
The Friends Committee on National Legislation opposed this legislation as a breach of the Constitution of the United States. Quaker organization will not accept government money in any circumstances.
The United States thus created in Haiti what is called The Republic of NGOs. Rather than fund the government itself, which leaned closer to Castro and Chavez than Bush, it delivered aid through a patchwork of NGOs, reportable to no one except USAID. Grants were micro designed in DC, with no centralized planning. While there was a certain courteous ballet dance around the authority of the Haitian government, it was the US Embassy which had and has the purse strings.
That is why it is so URGENT that the international community make good on its funding to the GOVERNMENT of HAITI.
Former President Aristide is back in Haiti and there has been more than one demonstration in his favor. Although many of his cabinet and close associates are in jail in the US on drug dealing, there have been no charges against him. Despite the fact that he lost the confidence of many of his former followers, he speaks the truth about the oppression and exploitation of the poor in Haiti. His apparent willingness to do business with narcotrafficers does not bode well for the future stability of the island.
Labels:
Aid to Haiti,
Faith Based Initiative,
FCNL,
ISIAD. IOM,
Michael Deibert
Thursday, April 12, 2012
We Promised them, didn't we?
Before the earthquake in 2012, Haiti was the poorest country in the hemisphere.
It is also the second oldest independent nation in the hemisphere.
The first black republic.
The first nation in the world to break the chains of slavery.
After the quake, we, that is the rest of the world, poured out our hearts. Estimates are that one of every two Americans, for instance, pledged or gave money. You had telethons, and dance contents and concerts.
Here in the DR every single church, business, and grocery store raised collections and sent aid.
But now looking at the international pledges, the big donations from governments, I see that only 11% of the money has been given
And I ask you.. What are you waiting for? Are you waiting for the tottering remnants of the extremely fragile government to collapse?
The Presiden is doing his best. He is perhaps conducting the country's business in a circus tent left over from Cirque du Soleil. The Nevada real estate developer who contributed it got a tax write off of five million dollars.
Is this the best that the international community can do?
A UN force that brings cholera then refuses responsibility for it, rapes both young boys and girls and points its weapons at the peaceful residents.
Grant money that is so restrictive that it does not take into account conditions on the ground.
And no money for the government....
Every Embassy in the world is there and watching.
Do you think that they can rebuild their country with air?
Please send THEM the money.
You did PLEDGE it, did you not?
TWO years ago, was it not?
HELP
THE COUNTRY IS FALLING
THEY HAVE NO MONEY
Just give them the money,
please
before we lose the entire island to the cartels
http://elizabetheames.blogspot.com/2012/02/haiti-get-back-up-ayiti-leve-kanpe.html
It is also the second oldest independent nation in the hemisphere.
The first black republic.
The first nation in the world to break the chains of slavery.
After the quake, we, that is the rest of the world, poured out our hearts. Estimates are that one of every two Americans, for instance, pledged or gave money. You had telethons, and dance contents and concerts.
Here in the DR every single church, business, and grocery store raised collections and sent aid.
But now looking at the international pledges, the big donations from governments, I see that only 11% of the money has been given
And I ask you.. What are you waiting for? Are you waiting for the tottering remnants of the extremely fragile government to collapse?
The Presiden is doing his best. He is perhaps conducting the country's business in a circus tent left over from Cirque du Soleil. The Nevada real estate developer who contributed it got a tax write off of five million dollars.
Is this the best that the international community can do?
A UN force that brings cholera then refuses responsibility for it, rapes both young boys and girls and points its weapons at the peaceful residents.
Grant money that is so restrictive that it does not take into account conditions on the ground.
And no money for the government....
Every Embassy in the world is there and watching.
Do you think that they can rebuild their country with air?
Please send THEM the money.
You did PLEDGE it, did you not?
TWO years ago, was it not?
HELP
THE COUNTRY IS FALLING
THEY HAVE NO MONEY
Just give them the money,
please
before we lose the entire island to the cartels
http://elizabetheames.blogspot.com/2012/02/haiti-get-back-up-ayiti-leve-kanpe.html
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
A note on Mother England
Lest all the blame fall on the United States for failures here in the Caribean, I would like to take my spyglass and pen to another of the imperial power here in the basin, Great Britian. While I was great friends with the last British Ambassador here, Ian Worthington, I was appalled that the Foreign Office would send an Ambassador to a foreign country with a woman who was not his wife
What has happened to one's standards?
In another incident, a British company, Biwater, had to leave the country after bribery allegations.
Standards, again, Gentlemen.
After my service in the Fastnet race, Lord Mountbattan was executed by the IRA and I heard the Seaman's Hymn for the second time in my life. I was tucked in safely with friends in Scotland but sorely distressed in body and soul. I went to Findhorn for a long scheduled two week sojourn. Then bought an old car and went out to search for the peace community.
On the way I stopped to load up on books on the what one title amusingly called "Ireland's English Question". At the St Andrew's bookshop, I was unable to find one single copy of the United States Constitution, despite finding shelves full of Marx and Engels. I told my sales clerk, who quite ressembled the White Rabbit, that he ought to be ashamed. He acknowledged that he was.
I then repaired to Brighton to the America's Cup trials, where my friends were sailing on Lionheart. I occupied the press tent with an ever growing table, discussing not the America's Cup, although I did do that, but rather The War in Ireland.
The Marina tried to have me expelled, tried to have my visa pulled. We Yanks did not need a visa for the UK then.
In the end, they were successful and I ended up in Holloway Prison, then, after sentancing to deportation, was transfered to Cookham Wood which was a facility long term prisoners. After the governor told me that they did not take deportees.. I really became scared. Finally I was visited by a representative of the US Embassy.
And even better, by the wife of my godfather, the Lord Bishop of Lincoln, who worked on reducing my sentance to an escorted departure, so that I might be able to return to the land of my foremothers should I ever wish to.
But, my mother land, much as I respect your sense of law and justice, you are racist.
You have produced the harshest form of racism in the world in the apartheid states of South Africa and America.
You are monolingual and unimginative. You are running a slave camp up there in the Bahamas and the Turks and Caicos, putting the natives in service to the white folks of the one percent with their fancy yachts.
When I chose to emigrate, I decided not to be in an English colony, because I wished not be within your form of racism again. The Catholics, at least, converted and married them.
Ah, we all have our shadows. No one is perfect.
least of all me
We are just works in progress.
l
What has happened to one's standards?
In another incident, a British company, Biwater, had to leave the country after bribery allegations.
Standards, again, Gentlemen.
After my service in the Fastnet race, Lord Mountbattan was executed by the IRA and I heard the Seaman's Hymn for the second time in my life. I was tucked in safely with friends in Scotland but sorely distressed in body and soul. I went to Findhorn for a long scheduled two week sojourn. Then bought an old car and went out to search for the peace community.
On the way I stopped to load up on books on the what one title amusingly called "Ireland's English Question". At the St Andrew's bookshop, I was unable to find one single copy of the United States Constitution, despite finding shelves full of Marx and Engels. I told my sales clerk, who quite ressembled the White Rabbit, that he ought to be ashamed. He acknowledged that he was.
I then repaired to Brighton to the America's Cup trials, where my friends were sailing on Lionheart. I occupied the press tent with an ever growing table, discussing not the America's Cup, although I did do that, but rather The War in Ireland.
The Marina tried to have me expelled, tried to have my visa pulled. We Yanks did not need a visa for the UK then.
In the end, they were successful and I ended up in Holloway Prison, then, after sentancing to deportation, was transfered to Cookham Wood which was a facility long term prisoners. After the governor told me that they did not take deportees.. I really became scared. Finally I was visited by a representative of the US Embassy.
And even better, by the wife of my godfather, the Lord Bishop of Lincoln, who worked on reducing my sentance to an escorted departure, so that I might be able to return to the land of my foremothers should I ever wish to.
But, my mother land, much as I respect your sense of law and justice, you are racist.
You have produced the harshest form of racism in the world in the apartheid states of South Africa and America.
You are monolingual and unimginative. You are running a slave camp up there in the Bahamas and the Turks and Caicos, putting the natives in service to the white folks of the one percent with their fancy yachts.
When I chose to emigrate, I decided not to be in an English colony, because I wished not be within your form of racism again. The Catholics, at least, converted and married them.
Ah, we all have our shadows. No one is perfect.
least of all me
We are just works in progress.
l
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Quaker Ageing and Retirement
I will be turning the big 65 next week and have to decide whether or not to buy into Medicare. I do not have the requisite 48 quarters of certified employment, having worked mostly as a volunteer and at struggling start up enterprises. So it will cost me $450 a month to buy Part A. Then another $115 or so for Part B, Then another $40 for Part D, even though I really avoid pharmaceuticals if I can.
I have no idea what Part C is.
If I do not buy the policies within the next three months, there is a penalty for each year that I do not buy.
Now I have always held the dream of ending up in one of those lovely retirement homes, like so many of the Quakers in my Meeting in Asheville lived in. There was one in Black Mountain that I visited when I was 55.. when my friends Polly Parker and Chris and Ollie Ahrens lived there. I really wanted to live there with them, playing Scrabble in the afternoon, worship sharing, hanging out in the library.
Quakers have a long history of concern of the elderly. But perhaps, like our idea of the penetentiary, we may not have gotten it quite right on the ground now and should revisit the issue. I see that the Kendall corporation, reknown in the field of elder care, has opened a new facility in NY which would be close to my cousin's family and my roots... I checked it out here
Was it worth it? I am sure it is. I am sure that everyone is paid a fair and just wage and that the care is top notch.
Could I afford it? Barely. Maybe. Perhaps.
It would mean paying into Medicare for propbably 10 or 15 years for services that I would not use. Money that I would use better here on the ground. I am surrounded by people who have nothing. And I do, indeed mean NOTHING.
On the way back from the dentist's office, I passed one of the local shoe shine boys with his shorts with no zipper.. now I have known him for five years and used to at least give him water but the local donas stopped me since they are just beggers.. he said he was hungry.. but I pinched his puffy cheeks with love. He was well fed..
But I know plenty of Haitians who are skin and bones. Death masks.
But more than that, it would LEAVE nothing in my estate. Nothing to leave to Friends Seminary which educated me so well and provided a safe haven amidst my family's divorcing, nothing for my small Asheville Meeting, nothing for Friends Journal which carries the word of Quakers far and wide.
Frankly, I just do not think that I am worth it. Not compared to good that the money could do elsewhere. This is not money that I earned. It is money that came from the genius of my great uncle, John Roebling, who engineered the Brooklyn Bridge. I have just tried to be a proper steward.
And I doubt that there would actually be any Quakers in those fancy "Quaker" homes. But I do want to thank them for their support of the Journal over all these years!
No Quakers that I know actually have any money at all. They serve as teachers and librarians and doctors. OK .. perhaps there would be a few.. but not the bulk. Many of the folks down at the Asheville Meeting are missing teeth. Just did not have the money for the dentistry what with the kids going to Earlharm or Guilford.
For myself, having lost my group Blue Cross coverage when I moved from Rhode Island to North Carolina and being denied coverage for a pre existing condition, I lived in great fear for years without medical coverage. I was actually relieved when I sold my house that they would not have anything to seize. I loathe the American health system.
When I decided to emigrate here, seven years ago, I thought my money would go further. I tought I could get someone to look after me if I needed it and whatever care I might need. Both my brother's had died young, at 52 and 69. I thought I might have a useful few years left, in which I might contribute. And that perhaps I might find a dancing teacher who looked like Antonio Banderas. Still looking for the dancing teacher but I have found all the rest.
Here there is only one medical insurance policy which covers one after 70. It only pays out $150,000 and costs $200 a month. When I asked the agent about the limit he explained that if you spend that much in this country, you are dying.
The Clinic Abreu, where the US Embassy sends its personnel, overlooks the sea and has actual suites and fine tiled bathrooms. I have been in there twice already and have already picked out my last room.
(That is if I do not actually get so discouraged that I do move to the sand spit of the Turks and Caicos where I would be provided with National Health courtesy of the British Government since I would teach English to the Hatians // the population there is 90% black)
I live on the third floor as do lots of folks since elevators are rare. I do not have a car since they are expensive. Now I have a little place near the beach so I can be near the Haitians I am working with.. and my friends up there -- since it is hard to meet folks in the city... and my dog really loves it there since it is a French town and she gets to go into the restuarants...
They really need elders up there. Most of the population is under 15.
Apartments start at about $200 a month.
Oh How I Would Love A Quaker Meeting Here!
Please consider this as an alternate retirement option.
I have no idea what Part C is.
If I do not buy the policies within the next three months, there is a penalty for each year that I do not buy.
Now I have always held the dream of ending up in one of those lovely retirement homes, like so many of the Quakers in my Meeting in Asheville lived in. There was one in Black Mountain that I visited when I was 55.. when my friends Polly Parker and Chris and Ollie Ahrens lived there. I really wanted to live there with them, playing Scrabble in the afternoon, worship sharing, hanging out in the library.
Quakers have a long history of concern of the elderly. But perhaps, like our idea of the penetentiary, we may not have gotten it quite right on the ground now and should revisit the issue. I see that the Kendall corporation, reknown in the field of elder care, has opened a new facility in NY which would be close to my cousin's family and my roots... I checked it out here
Was it worth it? I am sure it is. I am sure that everyone is paid a fair and just wage and that the care is top notch.
Could I afford it? Barely. Maybe. Perhaps.
It would mean paying into Medicare for propbably 10 or 15 years for services that I would not use. Money that I would use better here on the ground. I am surrounded by people who have nothing. And I do, indeed mean NOTHING.
On the way back from the dentist's office, I passed one of the local shoe shine boys with his shorts with no zipper.. now I have known him for five years and used to at least give him water but the local donas stopped me since they are just beggers.. he said he was hungry.. but I pinched his puffy cheeks with love. He was well fed..
But I know plenty of Haitians who are skin and bones. Death masks.
But more than that, it would LEAVE nothing in my estate. Nothing to leave to Friends Seminary which educated me so well and provided a safe haven amidst my family's divorcing, nothing for my small Asheville Meeting, nothing for Friends Journal which carries the word of Quakers far and wide.
Frankly, I just do not think that I am worth it. Not compared to good that the money could do elsewhere. This is not money that I earned. It is money that came from the genius of my great uncle, John Roebling, who engineered the Brooklyn Bridge. I have just tried to be a proper steward.
And I doubt that there would actually be any Quakers in those fancy "Quaker" homes. But I do want to thank them for their support of the Journal over all these years!
No Quakers that I know actually have any money at all. They serve as teachers and librarians and doctors. OK .. perhaps there would be a few.. but not the bulk. Many of the folks down at the Asheville Meeting are missing teeth. Just did not have the money for the dentistry what with the kids going to Earlharm or Guilford.
For myself, having lost my group Blue Cross coverage when I moved from Rhode Island to North Carolina and being denied coverage for a pre existing condition, I lived in great fear for years without medical coverage. I was actually relieved when I sold my house that they would not have anything to seize. I loathe the American health system.
When I decided to emigrate here, seven years ago, I thought my money would go further. I tought I could get someone to look after me if I needed it and whatever care I might need. Both my brother's had died young, at 52 and 69. I thought I might have a useful few years left, in which I might contribute. And that perhaps I might find a dancing teacher who looked like Antonio Banderas. Still looking for the dancing teacher but I have found all the rest.
Here there is only one medical insurance policy which covers one after 70. It only pays out $150,000 and costs $200 a month. When I asked the agent about the limit he explained that if you spend that much in this country, you are dying.
The Clinic Abreu, where the US Embassy sends its personnel, overlooks the sea and has actual suites and fine tiled bathrooms. I have been in there twice already and have already picked out my last room.
(That is if I do not actually get so discouraged that I do move to the sand spit of the Turks and Caicos where I would be provided with National Health courtesy of the British Government since I would teach English to the Hatians // the population there is 90% black)
I live on the third floor as do lots of folks since elevators are rare. I do not have a car since they are expensive. Now I have a little place near the beach so I can be near the Haitians I am working with.. and my friends up there -- since it is hard to meet folks in the city... and my dog really loves it there since it is a French town and she gets to go into the restuarants...
They really need elders up there. Most of the population is under 15.
Apartments start at about $200 a month.
Oh How I Would Love A Quaker Meeting Here!
Please consider this as an alternate retirement option.
Labels:
Kendal,
Las Terrenas,
Quakers on Aging
Monday, April 9, 2012
The Ayati Game
Five years ago
I made this post
http://elizabetheames.blogspot.com/2007/05/play-ayati-game.html
I would recommend now
as I did then
that someone figure out how to get these people on their feet
it really does not take that much
RUNNING WATER
VITAMIN TABLETS
PEANUT BUTTER
CRACKERS
Note please that this game was on the UNICEF web page five years ago
the head of UNICEF here, who was also responsible for Haiti and who lived in a sumptous home with a lovely enclosed pool, did not know it was there
I would suggest that everyone STOP
collecting money for UNICEF
I made this post
http://elizabetheames.blogspot.com/2007/05/play-ayati-game.html
I would recommend now
as I did then
that someone figure out how to get these people on their feet
it really does not take that much
RUNNING WATER
VITAMIN TABLETS
PEANUT BUTTER
CRACKERS
Note please that this game was on the UNICEF web page five years ago
the head of UNICEF here, who was also responsible for Haiti and who lived in a sumptous home with a lovely enclosed pool, did not know it was there
I would suggest that everyone STOP
collecting money for UNICEF
Buyng my Boat
if you follow along the time line of my blog you will see that i was working first with the Haitians up in LT who had kwashikoor last summer.. then with Interpol on the narcotrafficantes from August til Dec... so I really had had no time to check on Haiti . I just assumed what with all that talent and brains and money combined, some sort of progress was being made.
But I can never underestimate the stupidity of men sitting inside of rectangles. Instead of progress, we have moved backwards.
Now we have the sole figure of the remants of the Haitian state tottering.
Cholera.
About 15000 armed, uniformed, unidentified mercenary reportable to no known person roaming the streets and the entries to public buildings
and the Haitian government is launching a logo campaign for tourism
The radical leftest priest is rumbling revolution again
the drug dealer trained in Ecuador is right beside him
MINUSTAH having brought Cholera to the Island, continues to deny any responsiblity and continues to occupy at great international expense, importing its food from the Dominican Republic, occupying the best hotels in Ft Liberte, flirting on the internet,
Relief net posts ALL the cholera treatment centers from all aid workers who are set up in place to deal with the victims who will surely come
the red cross used its 10 million dollar donation to buy prime land downtown where it plans to build a hotel to ensure its income stream
the top missionary is selling recycled garbage clothing on vogue
the best plan so far is for a korean sweat shop with workers housing with pit toilets
damn!!
sure is lucky that none of that aid money fell into the hands of WYCLEF
he might have misued it
But I can never underestimate the stupidity of men sitting inside of rectangles. Instead of progress, we have moved backwards.
Now we have the sole figure of the remants of the Haitian state tottering.
Cholera.
About 15000 armed, uniformed, unidentified mercenary reportable to no known person roaming the streets and the entries to public buildings
and the Haitian government is launching a logo campaign for tourism
The radical leftest priest is rumbling revolution again
the drug dealer trained in Ecuador is right beside him
MINUSTAH having brought Cholera to the Island, continues to deny any responsiblity and continues to occupy at great international expense, importing its food from the Dominican Republic, occupying the best hotels in Ft Liberte, flirting on the internet,
Relief net posts ALL the cholera treatment centers from all aid workers who are set up in place to deal with the victims who will surely come
the red cross used its 10 million dollar donation to buy prime land downtown where it plans to build a hotel to ensure its income stream
the top missionary is selling recycled garbage clothing on vogue
the best plan so far is for a korean sweat shop with workers housing with pit toilets
damn!!
sure is lucky that none of that aid money fell into the hands of WYCLEF
he might have misued it
Labels:
Aid to Haiti,
Red Cross,
Wyclef Jean
Sunday, April 8, 2012
it doesn't feel much like Easter here
despite this being the first Christian nation in the hemisphere
and a supposedly devout Catholic country\
it doesnt feel a lot like Easter here
no bonnets no celebrations at dawn no hidden eggs no chocolate no bunnies no empty tomb no secrets revealed no astonishment and wonder
the city is dead
there are no church bells
of course it did not feel a lot like Christmas here either
no Kings came through town in majesty and wonder
astonishing the litte children at dawn with the gifts for the sacred child
as they do on the neighboring island of Puerto Rico
and a supposedly devout Catholic country\
it doesnt feel a lot like Easter here
no bonnets no celebrations at dawn no hidden eggs no chocolate no bunnies no empty tomb no secrets revealed no astonishment and wonder
the city is dead
there are no church bells
of course it did not feel a lot like Christmas here either
no Kings came through town in majesty and wonder
astonishing the litte children at dawn with the gifts for the sacred child
as they do on the neighboring island of Puerto Rico
Saturday, April 7, 2012
For Services Rendered
For those Dominicans and Haitians
who would prefer that I stay here on the back on the Turtle
and work with you on your island
my BanReservas Dollar Account
number is 290 dash 243 dash 8
I already submitted a bill to Ron Anejo for services rendered in defense of his tattered flag in identifying both the narcotrafficantes in Las Terrenas and Pedernales and Constanza
It has not been paid
I have amassed a $10,000 debt on my American Express Card in doing that work and in feeding the Haitians in Las Terrenas who were coming down with kwashikoor.
So if there is no gratitude from you for my service, I shall make plans to depart.
who would prefer that I stay here on the back on the Turtle
and work with you on your island
my BanReservas Dollar Account
number is 290 dash 243 dash 8
I already submitted a bill to Ron Anejo for services rendered in defense of his tattered flag in identifying both the narcotrafficantes in Las Terrenas and Pedernales and Constanza
It has not been paid
I have amassed a $10,000 debt on my American Express Card in doing that work and in feeding the Haitians in Las Terrenas who were coming down with kwashikoor.
So if there is no gratitude from you for my service, I shall make plans to depart.
who is speaking?
sometimes in the Silence
I channel the voices of the ancestors
like my 10 great aunts
from Shropshire
Shrewsbury
from the 12th Century Meeson Hall
I channel the voices of the ancestors
like my 10 great aunts
from Shropshire
Shrewsbury
from the 12th Century Meeson Hall
Bermuda Triangle
The back story behind that race was that Condor of Bermuda sailed by men in the water. The skipper refused to stop and resuce. The crew was on the verge of mutiny when they docked. None of the Class A boats either stopped or returned to sea to rescue. None of the yachties volunteered with the Royal Navy Lifeboat volunteers. They simply sat at their hotels and got on with their race stuff.
I manned the volunteer desk in French. The British, I believe, set out to conquer the world due to their inability to learn another language. By the end of the second day, I was turning over operations to the night crew.
We had 19 deaths.
It was the largest peace time sea loss ever registered.
In lieu of the awards service, we had a memorial service.
There was no press on the docks.
The only reporter who even came out was someone from the Reader's Digest.
One woman that I spoke to.. when I asked her what would happened to the skipper of Condor .. if the allegations proved true...
"well, it's all true. We all know it is true. But it will all be forgotten."
And I said
"Not as long as I live"
So I would like to call on you... you of the Royal Ocean Racing Club, of the New York Yacht Club, of the Southern Ocean Racing Circuit.. you of the 1%
You -- \Ted Turner
who has the gall to be showing MAIN SAIL
on CNN and
devoting you entire news channel to the dog and pony show of the US elections instead of bring the American people the news of the world and visa versa]
why not bring the boats to Haiti?
There is so VERY attractive real estate here...
I mean some very serious and beautiful land
And some gorgeous people
Jamaica, for instance.. only has 3 million people on it... check that one out...
only three million people on an island that size
now if we were to have a yacht race that went from ..
well
say
key west
to
kingston
to
santo domingo
could we not have a party
in jacmel
I manned the volunteer desk in French. The British, I believe, set out to conquer the world due to their inability to learn another language. By the end of the second day, I was turning over operations to the night crew.
We had 19 deaths.
It was the largest peace time sea loss ever registered.
In lieu of the awards service, we had a memorial service.
There was no press on the docks.
The only reporter who even came out was someone from the Reader's Digest.
One woman that I spoke to.. when I asked her what would happened to the skipper of Condor .. if the allegations proved true...
"well, it's all true. We all know it is true. But it will all be forgotten."
And I said
"Not as long as I live"
So I would like to call on you... you of the Royal Ocean Racing Club, of the New York Yacht Club, of the Southern Ocean Racing Circuit.. you of the 1%
You -- \Ted Turner
who has the gall to be showing MAIN SAIL
on CNN and
devoting you entire news channel to the dog and pony show of the US elections instead of bring the American people the news of the world and visa versa]
why not bring the boats to Haiti?
There is so VERY attractive real estate here...
I mean some very serious and beautiful land
And some gorgeous people
Jamaica, for instance.. only has 3 million people on it... check that one out...
only three million people on an island that size
now if we were to have a yacht race that went from ..
well
say
key west
to
kingston
to
santo domingo
could we not have a party
in jacmel
Hyde Park Corner
I have been sitting here in my very comfortable apartment in Santo Dominigo, comtemplating my very lovely upcoming birthday party on the beach on the Samana Peninusla.
Sadly, however, I have just had to write to my friend, the former Ambassador from Great Britian, to ask for the protection of the Crown to assist on my relocation, that of me and my dog, for I do not believe that this island will be secured in my lifetime.
My reflections brought me to the start of my career, back in 1979, when I started serving as a volunteer for God, offering myself for service in whatever way I could be most useful. I was first sent to report an oil spill in Oyster Bay harbor on the fourth of July in 1979 and then directly over the England for the 1979 Fastnet Race.
Being a child of great privilege, I knew the men of the Royal Ocean Racing Club and they had invited me to come sail with thim in Cowes. I had worked my way up to an invite down to Cowes, by crewing on a boat in Themes Ditton. I was invited to crew on a following boat .. from Cowes to Plymouth. We started the race in Cowes and spent the storm in Salcombe Harbor.
I was thrown off my bunk at 2 Am. The entire boat woke up. The French boat next to anchor down us. Being a British boat, we made tea. And turned on the wireless. Reports came in. Dismastings….. sightings… weather reports.. it was the storm of the century.. it was three days before any of the men on our boat went to shore. And all of the men on our boat had crossed the Atlantic. And we were two miles upriver.
When we got to Plymouth..
There was a party.
Ted Turner was celebrating his victory in winning the toughest race of the century
And the men of the royal ocean racing club were having cocktails up at the duke of York hotel
While people were dying at sea
And now
As I sit here in santo domingo
And look out over
Port au prince
I would like to say
Gentlemen
You are fucking up
At
Hyde park corner
Once again
Monday, April 2, 2012
White Hispanic Treyvon and Zimmerman
Welcome to my world, America!
I heard George Will on one of the Sunday morning talk shows (yes, I get the three major networks, plus CNN, plus HBO plus the news from France, Germany, Italy, and what there is of it from Venezuela)... referring to George Zimmerman as a "white Hispanic" -- he did so with a sneer in his voice, as if such a thing were not possible.
George Will is usually an eloquent commentator. I respect him even though our political points of view are radically different. But with this broadcast, my opinion of him dropped a few notches. He has not met many folks from Argentina. Or perhaps he simply does not consider Spaniards "white". United Staters really need to travel about more.
Francis Robles, an excellent journalist now at the Miami Herald, did a wonderful series on Afro Latinos. The piece on the Dominican Republic, here, might help inform Americans about the delicate and broad issues of race in the hemisphere.. and particularly the Spanish - African issue that is now coming to light in the States.
Undoing the bonds of slavery is our collective legacy, our history since Africans were first imported to the hemisphere - starting here on Hispaniola in the early 1500s. We have discussions here over who left a worse legacy - the British, the French, the Spanish, the Portugese?
Heretofore, we collectively have only dealt with the British legacy, which created the apartheid like structure inside the US colonies.
Here is a primer on the French system, put in place in Saint Domingue.
Never too late to learn, George. Never too late.
It is not just black and white ... but rather shades of brown.
I heard George Will on one of the Sunday morning talk shows (yes, I get the three major networks, plus CNN, plus HBO plus the news from France, Germany, Italy, and what there is of it from Venezuela)... referring to George Zimmerman as a "white Hispanic" -- he did so with a sneer in his voice, as if such a thing were not possible.
George Will is usually an eloquent commentator. I respect him even though our political points of view are radically different. But with this broadcast, my opinion of him dropped a few notches. He has not met many folks from Argentina. Or perhaps he simply does not consider Spaniards "white". United Staters really need to travel about more.
Francis Robles, an excellent journalist now at the Miami Herald, did a wonderful series on Afro Latinos. The piece on the Dominican Republic, here, might help inform Americans about the delicate and broad issues of race in the hemisphere.. and particularly the Spanish - African issue that is now coming to light in the States.
Undoing the bonds of slavery is our collective legacy, our history since Africans were first imported to the hemisphere - starting here on Hispaniola in the early 1500s. We have discussions here over who left a worse legacy - the British, the French, the Spanish, the Portugese?
Heretofore, we collectively have only dealt with the British legacy, which created the apartheid like structure inside the US colonies.
Here is a primer on the French system, put in place in Saint Domingue.
Never too late to learn, George. Never too late.
It is not just black and white ... but rather shades of brown.
Thursday, March 29, 2012
The Front Porch of the Hotel Oloffson
To Richard Morse, Advisor to President Martelly of Haiti
From Elizabeth Roebling, Regent to the Queen of Quiskeya
Just to report that there are now a 2 million Haitians here in the Dominican Republic. Add to those numbers about 15% of the Dominican population which has no papers – some , many of Dominican Haitian descent. So this numbers more than 10% of the population on this island. Who have no state papers Therefore, we are going to offer them all temporary papers under the Fundacion Zile, run by Edwin Paraison, so that they can be Quiskeyans. Or, Kikans, if you will We have decided to be ruled by a queen who will be elected by the children and the dogs (I have been lobbying for the dogs to have two votes but the cats have very rightly point out that then should have three—this seems just to me since there are so very few cats here. Most have been eaten. But this is just to show you that there are election problems all over. However, we have found out now that both the dogs and the Haitians here are psychic as are we... so things should move on a lot faster now) The grandmothers will chose the chieftans We are declaring the waters surrounding this sacred island as a Marine Sanctuary And are hereby banning spear fishing I ask for your personal assistance in this matter. We may be hungry but we are not stupid. Our coral reefs are our main tourist attraction. No more coral jewelry. No more spear fishing I do hope that you will make some sort of very public announcement on this -- something cool at Cayman Bois with the conch... and that you will come visit me at my beach place in Las Terrenas, Samana which is on the front (or hind) flipper of the Great Turtle, I would also love to see some very high end beach towels made here at the ONLY certified sweat shop free CERTIFIED factory in the world - at Altagracia.. A map that shows the ENTIRE ISLAND ARCHIPELAGO,please. since we only have maps of our side of the island.. may have to take to small boats for outlying islands and make camps over there with y'all. My happiest memories are from your front porch Hugs Kembe la e |
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