HAITI: Still in Crisis,
but No Longer in the News
By Marieke van Woerkom
Objectives
You will:
- Explore the needs of the people of Haiti after the January earthquake
- Learn about Maslow's "Pyramid of Needs"
- Read and discuss a blogpost from a relief worker in Haiti
- Become more media literate and savvy
Social and Emotional Skills:
- Empathy
- Exploring feelings connected to the Haitian crisis
- Exploring how feelings are connected to actions
To Begin...
Discussion: Think back to what happened in Haiti in January 2010. With a partner, discuss what "basic needs" for living are Haitians missing because of the earthquake. A "Basic Need" is something that we humans need to survive. Try to remember these things for the class discussion. You will have 2 minutes to talk this over.
Now let's discuss Maslow's Needs for Survival Pyramid--see chart below.

More Discussion: Take a look at the pyramid above. What do you notice as you go up the pyramid? Where do you think the Haitian people fit on this pyramid? Now, what about yourself--where do you fit on this pyramid? Where do the Haitians fit in right after the earthquake? Where do they fit in now?
Think about the following:
- How did you first find out about the earthquake in Haiti?
- When the earthquake first hit Haiti, how much media coverage was there? Why do you think that?
- A month after the quake, during what came to be known as the days of remembrance in Haiti, how much media coverage did the crisis receive? Why do you think that is?
- This week, how much media coverage is the crisis receiving? Why do you think that is?
- How did you feel about the crisis in Haiti when it had just happened? How about during the days of remembrance a month later? How about now? Do you think how we feel affects how we act? Do you think the media can affect this?
Most of the media outlets have left Haiti and only very few journalists are still reporting on what's happening. The world has moved on!
- Do you think Haitians have moved on?
- Do you think the country has recovered?
- Do you think the people's lives are back to normal?
- How do you think the people of Haiti feel?
Blogpost Read Aloud
Jounen Jèn ("Days of Remembrance"): Letters from Port au Prince
Blogpost by Sasha Kramer

Friday February 12, one month after the earthquake, the first day of Jounen Jèn, the days of mourning and remembrance, and we walked through the twisted iron and dusty shards of glass of the shattered National Cathedral. As we crossed through the open door and stared down the length of the cathedral it was as though the world had ended and even the wind had disappeared into the silence of the rubble. Just blocks away, in front of the crumbling palace, thousands of people dressed in white were singing songs of grief and praise, but inside the National Cathedral, on this national day of remembrance there was only the sky and the crumpled flowers from the alter scattered across the floor where so many feet once tread.
As we stepped gingerly through the cement dust, climbing towards where the alter once stood, I remembered the last time that I walked down this aisle, through the sunbeams and the wailing, walking to pay my last respects to Father Gerard Jean Juste in October 2009. This place has always broken my heart. So many voices that once sang in this church have been swallowed by the earthquake and I longed to hear Father Gerry’s voice, but I knew what he would have told me. He would tell me that those of us who survived have to sing louder, to work harder and to love each other more. As we left the cathedral and passed the crowd on Champ de Mars I could hear the crowd of thousands singing their sadness into salvation. I knew that Father Gerry was with them, under the tarp churches, marching through the streets, watering the parks of the city with their tears.
When we got home in the evening on Friday everyone at Matthew 25, where we are staying, gathered to read aloud a prayer for Haiti. Three quarters of the way through the prayer the tears began rolling down my cheeks. I could see the cathedral as they carried Father Gerry’s body down the aisle and the flowers buried in dust that we had walked through earlier. I cried for hours that night for the first time since coming to Port au Prince. Mine were only drops in the lake of tears that flowed through Haiti this weekend as people said goodbye to their loved ones and their lost city.
I end with an excerpt from the prayer that we read on the 12th.
“Raise up your people from the ash heap of destruction and give them strong hearts and hands, shore up their minds and spirits. Help them to bear this new burden”
This week with your donations we were able to provide a week’s worth of food to over 350 families, deliver 24,000 gallons of water to 5 communities, provide medicines to several mobile clinics, give over 4000 water sachets in churches during Jounen jèn and purchase 140 tarps, reaching over 5,000 people in Port au Prince. In Cap Haitien the SOL team provided food and medicines to victims of the earthquake that have been relocated out of the capital. SOIL is still small and though we cannot rebuild the National Cathedral, with your support we can help thousands of families in Port au Prince to bear this new burden.
It is the strength of the Haitian people that has helped me to rise from the ashes of my own fear and sadness, today on this final day of mourning I pray that I can treat the victims of this tragedy as they have treated me, with compassion, respect and dignity. I am so grateful to all of you who have helped to lighten Haiti’s load, this experience has helped us all to remember our humanity.
With love from Port au Prince,
Sasha
Assignment
In microlabs (small groups of four students) ask students to discuss: "What makes a news story?"
If the cameras and journalists are not there to report on what's happening, is it news? Is it the events that make the news, or the journalists covering the events that make the news? Who decides what to cover? Who decides what is news?
Does media affect our lives? Share your thoughts.
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