Haiti is starving (updated)

Update: if you read only one thing about Haiti, read this: Haiti, Reaping the Whirlwind

For the past several months, my lovely partner and I have been planning a trip to Haiti. Our parish has a partnership with a parish there, and we’re part of the group that works on the partnership. We’re meant to leave on Saturday, but as you might have (but probably haven’t) heard in the news last week, people are in the streets protesting and, in some instances, rioting.

Funny thing, what happens when people are starving. Eighty percent—four-fifths—of the people in Haiti live on less than US$2 per day, and many of those are in so-called abject poverty, living on less than US$1 per day. The cost of food in developing countries worldwide has as much as doubled in the past year, and in Haiti, many people are literally subsisting on cookies made of dirt.

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        If you're a praying sort, please include the people of Haiti in your prayers. If you're an activist type, call your congresspeople at the state and national levels. Here's some further reading to help you raise awareness:

Google News search for Haiti HAITI: Economy forces poor to eat dirt IMF warns rising food prices may spark more riots like Haiti Biofuels a factor as global food riots spread to Haiti

If you’re a charitable sort, consider donating to the UN World Food Programme mission in Haiti. It would take US$96 million to fully fund the WFP in Haiti, of which they have only received 13 percent.

That’s all for now. If we go, I’ll blog from the island if possible (there is at least e-mail access there).


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