Friday, November 23, 2012

Dear Promise for Haiti & Hopital Bienfaisance de Pignon - Haiti Supporters


May we say Merry Christmas and Happy 2013 Year to all our Supporters and all our fellow Believers in Christ.
The year 2012 has been a rewarding year in the sense that the Lord has put in our mission path, thousands of believers to support His work in the Hospital, in 9 Primary schools, in Teachers training, in Farm work, in Bible classes to the schools, etc... .

To all those supporters, we say THANKS, on behalf if the recipients in Pignon, Haiti.
More than 400 volunteers have visited us during the year 2012 and have worked as Medical resources at the Hospital, as volunteers, men and women, building benches, boards, desks, etc...  for the schools.
The students enjoy very much the amelioration of their conditions at the schools.

This 2012 year, it has been open at the " Hopital Bienfaisance de Pignon" a Prosthetics and Rehabilitation programand 56 Prosthetic Limbs have been delivered to handicapped patients.

This year  2012 , we have been blessed by the Lord who is using our Hospital as a training site for 24 Hospitals and Health Centers scattered all over Haiti : program consists in training hospital affiliated haitian technicians in medical equipments repair.  After their training, those workers will return to their hospital and repair the hospital materials.
For all those blessings, for all the prayers and financial help from our supporters, we say Praise the Lord and may we all continue to unite in Christ and work in support of those in need.
Dr. Guy D. Theodore
Dear All,
Attached is a picture (some Biomed students, 2 Biomed trainers and Pignon Rotarians, Pignon Adm staff) 
Thanks and God Bless.
Adele




   Dear All
24 Hospitals and Health Centers scatered all over Haitit have been sending 45 of threir Hpspital workers to Pignon to receive training in Hospital equipments repair Hospital sa Cange from PIH , Dr Paul Farmer , Hospital Albert Schweitzer , Brenda Stafford , Hopital Espoir , Hopital Beraca   , different public hospitals ; hopital Sacre -Coeur of Milot etc have benefited of this trainingHopital Birnfaisance of Pignon is helping structuring other hospital in Haiti 
The red dots with hallow represent the different  sites of Hospital  , all over Haiti ,covered by this program
Dr Guy

Thursday, November 15, 2012

HRFU Team Makes a Difference!



Hernia Repair For the Underserved

(submitted by Dr. Charles Filipi)

The team of Cynthia Ferris MD, Rachel Dowd RN, Theresa Alvarado RN, Bob Cusick MD, David Chen MD, Lesly Manigat MD in conjunction with Dr Paul Severson of "Project Haiti" did an outstanding job operating upon 36 patients and teaching 3 fully trained Haitian general surgeons to do Pediatric inguinal hernia repairs and the adult Lichtenstein repair for inguinal hernias. Eight demonstration cases with the trainee as first assistant were followed by 28 cases performed by the trainee with the proctor assisting or supervising. These physicians are satisfactorily trained and will be able to serve the people of Haiti for many years to come.
Data was kept on the operations performed and scores were tabulated on a new surgical technique rating form. This will be utilized for further analysis and publications.
Dr. Filipi, president of HRFU, and Dr. Chen will monitor by e-mail the mesh operations performed by the trainees. The trainees have utilized a small amount of mesh provided them, and now HRFU with the help of industry will provide monitored free mesh for the future.
Dr. Cusick, Dr. Chen, Dr. Manigat and Dr. Jeudy are now in discussion about hernia studies and the development of hernia centers of excellence. Hernia Repair for the Underserved will assist these projects.
All team members intend to return to Pignon to provide follow-up and training of other Haitian surgeons. The overall project appears to be a success if we can now facilitate the performance of the operations by the trained surgeons and keep records to document use of the training provided.

Sunday, November 11, 2012









Dear All

The Jaipur Prosthetics Center in Pignon is attracting patients from 
This Map below, with red dots with white hallo shows the 
geographical distribution of where patients in need of prosthetics limbs everywhere in Haiti.
You can see that we get patients coming from upper half of Haiti .
The reason the lower half of the Map is not covered is that there 3 Centers of 
Prosthetics Limbs in the South and West ans South-East of Haiti.
We have already given 53 prothesis ( Above knee , Below knee 
Dr.Guy

This Prosthetic Center is a combination effort of the Jaipur, the Rotary
and Hopital Bienfaisance/PFH..


Thursday, November 8, 2012

Submitted by Kathy Roozeboom who is currently serving with PFH/HELP in Pignon, Haiti.


 Today is Wednesday and we started the day with our devotions on the deck with goat, chcken, duck, music and street noices of all kinds. This is our final day and  we all have such mixed emotions. We all miss our loved ones and are so ready to reunite with them at home, but on the other hand we feel so called to love those all here in Haiti, and continue to bring the love of Jesus to them. We had a wonderful breakfast with pancakes and the best homemade juice and boiled eggs and of course coffee. We had the wonderful priveledge of delivering 37 desks to different schools that we had made during the course of the time that we were here. Did we see a lot of excitement amongst the children. We also handed out a book on John from the Bible and told them how much we loved them. We prayed with the teachers, students and the school. We were so touched when a class sung in the English language “Today is the day that the Lord has made” tears of joy ran down our cheeks. We came back and had lunch consisting of sweet potatoes, yum, coleslaw and rice and beans. Our cooks have been wonderful. We have been so blessed with our meals. In the afternoon we shopped to help the locals that had their merchandise on the side of the street. They were appreciative for our support, and this brings food to their tables. Their handiwork was beautiful. We then left with John who operates the Five Loaves center and took us to the country side where the poverty is the worst of the worst. We had clothing and toys for the family. The tears of joy that we experienced in the morning became tears of great sadness. It is something that is unexplainable. Dirt floors to sleep on, very dirty clothing, water very difficult to get, starvation, and a home itself is in poorest conditions. But as we prayed with each family we could hear their week voices responding to our prayers. Our heads hang low as we sit in the back of our pickup. We cry to God and say Lord give us direction, show us how we can better ourselves to be the hands and feet of Jesus and then our teenage interperter was singing “My God is so good”. As we draw a close to the day, we again had a wonderful meal and discussed our day journey and what the day meant to us. We praise God for keeping us safe as we rode in the back of the pickup on the worst bumpy  roads and the entire week none of us fell out.  We priase God for keeping each of us healthy. We thank God for all the hymns that we heard for hours from area churches. We praise God for the beatiful creation in Haiti. The mountains proclaim the glory of God. We praise God for putting a few smiles on God’s children in Haiti. We praise God for giving us new visions. We praise God for the lows and highs of the week. As I close this blog I ask those reading this to continue to pray for the poverty in the world, and that God will touch each one of us in some way so we can live fully to honor and praise God’s name in our walk 

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Submitted by Marcena Schwab



It’s Tuesday evening, at the end of another day of work, fellowship, and blessings...flowing from us and to us.  Flexibility is key to any venture in Haiti, and the last couple days have required a fair amount of that.  On Monday, the plan was that part of the group would go to Pella Christian school to distribute gifts of school supplies and fellowship with the kids.  That part went fine.  The other group would go to Salt & Light school at La Belle Mere to take photos of sponsored children in the morning and paint in the afternoon.  That was Plan A.  But we learned that the river was too high for us to cross so we couldn’t go to Salt & Light.  We would go to Sonshine school instead, to do the same things.  That was Plan B.  We finally got to Sonshine (in a rented pickup with no suspension system and every light on the dashboard lit up) and realized that the computer program we needed to take photos of sponsored children was missing.  So...let’s go back to Meredith school (where we had painted a couple days before) and take photos of sponsored children there, and then come back to Sonshine in the afternoon to paint.  Ok, that was Plan C.  So we backtracked over the rough road to Meredith and finished our morning taking photos and handing out the Book of John booklets to each child, along with a bookmark.  That was fun!  It’s always fun being around the children.  When we were done there, we loaded everything back into the pickup and drove back to Sonshine.  The gate was open, but the doors to the classrooms were all locked.  We had told the principal we would be back, but now we were locked out.  Were we doomed to going to Plan D?  We spread out our lunch of granola bars, trail mix, cheesy crackers and sour gummy worms for dessert, and each of us silently prayed for God to send the key for the locks.  Bev told God that He had five more minutes or we were leaving, and lo and behold!!! the gatekeeper showed up four minutes later!  Woo-hoo!!!  We were able to get into all the classrooms and paint number lines, alphabet lines, multi-colored shapes and other stencils on the walls.  The chalkboards all got a new coat of paint, as well, so the teachers and students would be thrilled when they got to school the next day!  It  all comes together in God’s timing!  It ended up being a day that we got a lot done.

God is definitely here in Haiti, but that doesn’t mean that He has made things comfortable for His believers.  It is very difficult to live in Haiti, with many homes having dirt floors and walls made of sticks and mud.  People walk to get water, and carry it back in buckets on their heads.  Everyone on our team comments on the joy that they see in the Haitians that we come in contact with.  Has our society, with all of our advances, destroyed our joy and replaced it with hurried schedules, too much stuff to get done, and too much pressure to succeed?  I have not heard anyone on our team say, “I really miss my cell phone.”  We even commented that no one had the “end of the weekend blues”, when you know you have to go to work on Monday. 

We’re all working hard, whether it’s working at the schools or making school desks at the compound to be delivered to the schools.  But we are having so much fun, getting to know each other, letting our vulnerabilities show, supporting each other as we wrestle with all those emotions that go along with serving on a mission trip.  We have time in the mornings and evenings to gather together and really commune with each other.  What a blessing it is to be a blessing to each other!

.submitted by Will VanWyngarden


.submitted by Will VanWyngarden on a current mission trip with PFH/HELP mission to Pignon

Today was a day of many highlights.  The hustle and bustle of the work we had done thus far was over, and we had our day of Sabbath rest.  However, today was more jam-packed with moments of emotional impact than any day thus far.  It would not be an exaggeration to say that it was one of the most important of my life.

Before I get into the day’s activities, I must describe a moment of levity from the previous night.  It just happened to be Daylight Savings Time, so we knew we had to turn our clocks back.   However, the concept is new in Haiti.  It hasn’t been around for very long and it often takes a few days for it to take effect.  We knew we had to be at church at 7:30 a.m., but we were unsure as to whether the church would start at the old 7:30 or the new!  There was lively discussion as to when we should wake up, when we should go to church, or whether we would be late or early.  We still hadn’t decided by Sunday morning, but we found out that Daylight Savings Time would be observed and we got to church on time.

We went to church with Zeke and Baby, two locals who are involved with the organization.  We knew going in that we would be at a loss as to what was going on, as the service would be in Creole.   Zeke would provide some translating, but he wouldn’t be able to do a complete play-by-play.  But the pastor announced they would have a guest minister.  A tall black man stood up and said “Good Morning” in perfect English!  He then told the congregation that he was from Tennessee!  So we got to hear a sermon in English.  That was certainly a blessing.

But the biggest blessing was the message he gave.  He spoke of how our actions and our lives reflect Jesus in us.  We represent Christ to the world.  And that is what we are trying to do in our time here in Haiti.  We had been discussing that topic in our evening times.  At the end of the sermon, the American pastor told us that he had not intended on preaching that sermon this morning.  God was certainly at work!

It was an amazing feeling to sing familiar songs like “Beautiful Savior,” and “The Old Rugged Cross.”  Though we weren’t singing in the same language, we were singing the same words, praising God together, a perfect picture of eternity.  The music also brought some much-needed familiarity, even though they were accompanied by a band consisting of three trombones, two trumpets, and a clarinet in addition to the piano!  We also were privileged to take Communion with them.  Again, the Church universal was evident this morning as we enjoyed the Lord’s Supper with the Haitian people.  It also may be the only time I take Communion with oyster crackers as the bread and Coke as the wine!

After lunch a few of us hiked up the mountain to the Pignon sign.  It is visible from our compound and about halfway up the peak.  The view from the sign was incredible.  The town sprawled out before us and we had a breath-taking view of the countryside.

After our walk we got a chance to see the orphanage.  40 kids were housed there, on a beautiful campus with many nice, new buildings.  The children there were full of such joy.  They loved to play with us; however, it is safe to say that we enjoyed playing with them more.  This orphanage visit was the highlight of my week thus far.

We then walked to Zeke and Baby’s house for supper.  You must understand how honored they felt to have us in their home.  But the pleasure was truly ours.  It was humbling to hear them say how much they loved us and were honored by our presence.  It is unusual for white people to venture into a Haitian home.  But we were truly blessed by the experience.  Zeke and Baby went to some expense to provide a meal for us and they were gracious hosts.  Again, it was truly an amazing picture of our heavenly goal.  There will be no need for interpreters, for we will all understand each other.  Today I think we all experienced a little bit of heaven.q

Sunday, November 4, 2012

HELP update


Today we went down to the river and witnessed the place where the people go to wash their clothes, trucks, motorcycles, and themselves.  There were also men drawing sand from the river to sell to the contractors working in town.  The river is the lifeblood of the community.  It is a source for drinking as well as cleansing.  However, if you are downstream, the odds are you are drinking and cleaning yourself in someone else’s filth.

From the river we went down to the market.  The best way I can describe it is that it was a mass of humanity.  The streets were teeming with literally thousands of Haitians.  There were vendors selling everything from homemade soap, to articles of clothing, to fruits and vegetables they had produced, to nearly any edible animal, dead or alive.  There were scenes that would make many Americans’ stomachs turn-bowls and bowls of raw meat, often buzzing with flies.

Along the way we were accompanied by many of Haiti’s helpless innocents.  Whenever we venture out we are followed by a gaggle of young boys and girls.  Many of them held our hands as we wandered the streets of Pignon.  Their English consists of being able to ask us for a dollar, but I suspect all they really want from us is a loving hand to hold. 

This is the third day in Haiti for me.  The first evening we were here the group sat down and we discussed our feelings.  I could sum up my feelings with one word: overwhelmed.  To see this extreme poverty simply makes oneself feel helpless.  To look into the eyes of someone sick and suffering in a hospital bed is heartwrenching.  In Haiti, most people only go to the doctor if their situation is dire; they simply can’t afford it.  Thus, many of them don’t make it out alive.

Many of them live in conditions that are worse than those we afford our pets.  Yet they seem to find happiness.  Perhaps we Americans are too dependent on stuff.  That fact struck me as I gazed on the town from the balcony of our dorm.  What do these people do without stuff?  All they have to do is exist.  They have very few possessions.  I can get bored with TV, so I go read a book.  Then that gets boring, so I go surf the Web.  Then I sit on the couch and wonder what to do.  But it is all just stuff.  It certainly isn’t the key to happiness

Saturday, November 3, 2012

HELP in Pignon.


Submitted by Bev Brand with the PFH/HELP team currently serving in Haiti 1/312

Its Saturday morning and we were awakened by the beautiful singing coming from the church next door.  As the sun rose slowly and peacefully the music drifted over our compound and gently enveloped our thoughts and turned them to the God of all creation.  We are praising and thanking him this morning for a safe trip, for the new friends we have made, for the sights and sounds we are experiencing, for health and for the many new questions we are wrestling with as this trip unfolds.  

Yesterday was a holiday - Holy Day - in Haiti.  All Saints weekend is a national holiday and is celebrated by going to church.  We heard heightened activity with all the voodoo drums during the night on Friday coming from the mountains and this morning the singing and ringing of church bells proclaiming Jesus is Lord of all! What a contrast.   We are thankful for our brothers and sisters in Christ who are claiming the power of Jesus over darkness and are no longer fearful when witch doctors demand penance for protection from the spirits that they fear roam at night.  (the bearing of drums and chanting are believed to keep the evil spirits away)

Yesterday was a full day.  Part of the group worked on getting the desks for the schools organized and started.  There were assorted pieces of desks in various places, so they assessed what we had and started cutting new pieces and assembling the next set of new schools desks that we will deliver at the end of our stay.  The other half of the group went out to Rocky Christian School to upgrade the classrooms.  They painted the front wall of the rooms, stenciled number and letter lines, added shapes of color to walls and painted all the chalkboard with chalkboard paint.  The principal showed us the condition most of the chalkboards were in (we would not use them at home!) and so decided to make and install 6 new chalkboards.  They look GREAT!  What a surprise when the teachers and principal return on Monday!

Needless to say, we had lots of help from kids in the area!  Some helped us wash down walls, others helped us tape stencils, and some just sang and played and made the time fly by.  Marcena was able to meet the child she sponsors through HELP, a little 5 year old who has no mother or father and lives with her aunt.  They were so excited to meet her sponsor and Marcena was delighted to meet them.  What a joy to see that we can really make a difference in a child's life and that someday, this little girl may make a real difference for her family and even her country.

Last night, we had some great questions, much wrestling with what we Americans do with all our "stuff" and what God is really laying on our hearts.  This morning most of the group is off to the river and then to the market.  This afternoon we will upgrade the Meredith Christian School and others will work on desks.  Sunday we will go to Zeke's wife's church (Babe's church) and then have dinner at her parents house.  This will be a real treat for us and they are excited to be able to invite us.

We will be thinking of our families back home as we worship and pray with our Haitian friends knowing that we all are worshipping the same God.  What an honor and privilege to serve our awesome God.

The Lord is clearly leading - and we are blessed to serve him in Haiti.

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Greetings from Denny Brand


Pignon's Progress!
(A word from Denny Brand, Promise For Haiti Executive Director)

denny   
Greetings:

As I sit down to write this article today, I would just like to express that there is a lot to be thankful for and excited about as we look at what has been done in Pignon and with Promise for Haiti.

The streets in Pignon have just about all been paved. While this has caused some stress for some folks and especially those people who had some of their houses damaged, I think overall there is a good feeling among the citizens of Pignon about what has been accomplished. There has also been a very beautiful city park erected that is a great sense of pride for the citizens of Pignon. Speaking of roads, there is also great anticipation about the road that is being built from Port au Prince to Cap Haitian. Right now it is done from Port to Hinche. This road could be the answer to economic development of the area as there will be a good road connecting Port to Cap.

Another project that is causing excitement is that of electric poles being strung into Pignon and other cities in Haiti. I don't think at this time we can say what this means for the citizens of Haiti, but the possibility of electricity coming to these areas is exciting. Along with electricity, there is still a water project going on - wow if the area could have electricity and water, what a difference that would make for everybody.

Thanks to Rotary, the new septic system for the hospital is about to become a reality. This system will be a gravity fed system and should require little if any maintenance. The plan right now is to still keep the old system as a back up, but chances are we will never need it. Thank you Rotary for the grant and thank you to so many who have had a huge part in making this happen. A special thank you to Larry Madole and Herb Sikkink for overseeing the actual work of getting it done.

The Jaipur clinic is also now a reality. Patients are being seen and are being fitted for new limbs. When I was there in August there were 5 patients staying in the patient dorm who were there to get these life changing limbs. Words cannot probably express what a difference this will make in the life of those Haitians who have experienced this great gift. Again we have to give thanks to Rotary.

If you get the privilege of coming to Haiti with a team this year, please notice that most of the buildings including the hospital have all been painted. Everything looks fantastic.

When you look at the schedule, you will also notice that there are many teams scheduled to come to Pignon this year. We are so thankful for all the volunteers who come and serve this great mission.

The schools in Haiti opened on October 3. We are excited about all the schools that we support in Haiti, but especially for the 9 Christian schools that have been built by so many great groups who have a special heart for the children of Haiti. We had an unbelievable teacher training that took place this past August. There we around 70 teachers who were blessed for four days with just great teaching. They were also introduced to text books that are going to be used in the schools for the first time since the schools have been started. A big thank you to H.E.L.P. and Joanne Schafer and Bev Brand for making this happen. They have put together a marvelous 3 year plan for school improvement.

I also want to thank all of you who so generously contribute to this great mission. Your gifts are greatly appreciated and are not overlooked. I would like to say that we are at a good place financially but that would be misleading. We need your help to keep everything going in Pignon. Anything that you can help us with right now would be greatly appreciated. I would ask that you go to (www.promiseforhaiti.org) and click the button that gives you the information about the Health Development Account. This is a way in which you can make the hospital sustainable and it also really is a way to bless the people around the Pignon area who need health care.

The Lord has been so good to us over the last 30 years of this mission. There is so much to be thankful for. The mission is serving the Lord and also serving the people of the greater Pignon area. I know that all of you who have been associated with this mission truly do love it and the people that we serve. May we continue to ask the Lord for his blessing at this time as we walk together in ministry.

Denny Brand, Executive Director

Promise for Haiti Inc.