After the service, we went down to the clinic for about an hour to do some final "clean-up/put away" duties...(then it was time to say "good-bye" to the clinic for another yr....)
We went back to the house just long enough to change clothes and then off again....Willem was taking us down to Port Au Prince to see the "tent city" and the area that was hit the hardest by the earthquake....on our way down, we came across some road construction....to our suprise, we seen some of our U.S. troops...."directing traffic"! Not exactly what we thought they were doing down here according to the news coverage back home...(and not overly friendly to boot...but that' for another day...)
When we finally got to "tent city" I couldn't believe what I was looking at....in an area probably not much bigger than a shopping mall....virtually side by were tent after tent.....and then Willem told us that there were 60,000 people living in the area! Amazing as it sounded, we also came across another unbelievable site...as we were driving down the road, Willem stopped by a woman standing in front of a tent....he asked her how many people were living in it...she said "8"!
After that we went to another area that Willem said was the poorest area in Port Au Prince...and it was terrible....all of this made us all very disheartened to the fact that all the news reports we receive back home are just simply not reporting what is actually going on down here....these people are living in a terribly unsafe and unhealthy situation...we can't see where the millions upon millions of dollars that have been sent to aid these people have gone to...it' not visible in the areas that have been hit the hardest....having said that, the people of Haiti have to be the most resilient people on the face of the earth...they aren't just sitting around...they are trying to "patch work" together anything they can...it' absolutely humbling to see such a high level of zeal and hope in what appears to be a hopeless situation...(a lesson that we could learn to better appreciate back home and stop relying on the gov't to enable us constantly with their involvement ...but that too is for another day....) ;)
I can't imagine how they would begin to recover in the "city" areas...it doesn't have the infrastructure in place to make a "quick" recovery...it may be decades, if at all, before a visible difference will be made...
Finally, after seeing all of this, we made our way to the orphanage...a point of great joy...it really brought to perspective why we all truly come and are a part of Mountain Top Ministries...
God has shown us through the children that we can and are making a difference....please continue to pray for all of the people of Haiti...please remember Mountain Top in your prayers...and finally please remember all of us as we begin our journey home tomorrow...I hope this blog has helped you feel a part of what Deb, Matthew and I have been experiencing this past week...we are all looking forward to getting home.... :)
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