Jan
29
2010

Haiti’s Bad Reputation …

Oftentimes Haiti and Haitians give portrayed and stereotyped in a malicious way by the American media.  Certainly there is chaos sometimes and desperation, but this is only a small portion of what is actually going on in Haiti with Haitians.  Here are a few articles that we have found through a friend which tells a truer story of Haiti and Haitians, and so we strongly encourage you to check them out:

An article called “Haiti Haters”by Amy Wilentz   http://www.thenation.com/doc/20100208/wilentzSome American missionaries in Port-au-Prince we know have a lot of great insight in Haiti, the problems it faces, the bad portrayal within the media, and the redevelopment and rebuilding process.  In fact, Alexis wrote a “Letter to the Editor” to the Wall Street Journal about their negative coverage of the Haiti Situation.  I wanted to share it with you:

Dear Editor,

Down the street from the house where I have lived in Port-Au-Prince for a year and a half (which thankfully survived the earthquake unscathed, though most of my neighbors homes did not), is an IDP (internally displaced people) camp. As in camps all over the city, residents of this camp began to organize themselves immediately after the earthquake. A residents’ committee is securing food and relief supplies for the 400 people there, digging latrines and building temporary shelters. Food distributions to this camp and hundreds of others like it have been respectful of residents’ dignity. Decision-making is done through community-selected leaders.

Articles like Gina Chon’s “UN Faces Mobs at Food Aid Sites” not only do not reflect the greater reality of what is currently happening in Haiti, but stereotype victims of this mind-numbing tragedy as criminals. Food distributions that do not respect local and communal structures rob disaster victims of their dignity and incite the kind of sporadic violence that the media portrays as the norm.

It’s unfortunate that images of looting, fighting at food distributions and reports of violence make for sexier news than people helping each other survive. This kind of reporting insinuates that the situation in Haiti is somehow the fault of Haitians. On the contrary, Haiti has long been subjected to external interventions such as international trade policies, food dumping, military interventions and paternalistic charity that have perpetuated the nation’s structural poverty.

We have never seen such a staggering outpouring of solidarity as we have over the last two weeks.Our neighbors rescued each other, comfort each other and share with one another. Most of the Haitians that have been rescued from damaged buildings, received food aid and been given shelter have been helped by other Haitians. I would ask that in your coverage of this catastrophe, The Wall Street Journal tell these stories. Please do not cast Haitians as criminals. Instead represent them fairly and tell their stories with the dignity they deserve.

Sincerely,

Alexis Erkert Depp

Please check out their blog if you want to know what’s really going on in Port-au-Prince and see some pictures and some stories of people who actually lived through and our living through this crisis.

Ben & Alexis Depp’s Blog – www.blexi.blogspot.com

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