Port town in Haiti finds steady support from Fairfield nonprofit

FAIRFIELD — Susan Whitcomb still remembers witnessing the devastation of the 7.0 magnitude earthquake that brought buildings to a crumble of rubble in 2010 in Haiti, killing as many as a reported 220,000 people. 

Whitcomb had been teaching English and French as an aid worker to students whose homes were destroyed by the earthquake in the port town of Jacmel. That experience pushed her to establish Haitian Educational Initiatives back in Fairfield as another means of support for the families reeling from the economic conditions in the country, especially the impacts on education.

“The schools had been destroyed, the houses were destroyed, people were digging out piles of rubble, and the poorest areas were the ones that had the most displaced children and orphan children,” Whitcomb said.

Whitcomb said she formed a staff of community leaders in Haiti to distribute aid from Connecticut in hopes of feeding and educating children living around Jacmel, where a low literacy rate poses a major barrier for families experiencing the country’s poverty. About 58.5 percent of Haiti’s population lives below the poverty line, according to the Central Intelligence Agency.

She said food remains the organization’s largest expense because of the lack of agriculture across the mountainous terrain and gang-controlled roads blocking food access. Whitcomb said the cost of attainable food has meanwhile skyrocketed because of the short supply, but U.S. dollars make a major difference and guarantee families at least one cooked meal a week.

“Kids may only have a meal of cornmeal mush a day if they’re lucky,” she said. 

Whitcomb said donations from HEI have totaled about $1.25 million since its founding in 2010, and a majority of the financial support has come from Connecticut. She said the nonprofit, which has about has about 10 volunteers, looks for donations from a group of about 500 people and has received several grants from Trinity Episcopal Church in Southport among other contributions from local businesses and family foundations in the Fairfield area. 

Crédito: Link de origem

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