August - Boston Haitian Reporter
Transcription
August - Boston Haitian Reporter
BOSTON HAITIAN REPORTER Vol. 10, Issue 8 August 2011 FREE TOUGH START FOR MARTELLY Haitian president Michel Martelly is shown at a news conference in the Little Haiti neighborhood of Miami, Saturday, June 25, 2011. Martelly toured Miami and New York as part of Diaspora Appreciation Days, in his administration’s effort to strengthen the involvement of the diaspora in the development of Haiti. He did not come to Boston. Martelly was dealt a second significant set-back this month when his second nominee for Prime Minister, Bernard Gousse, was dismissed by the Haitian legislature. Page 2, 3 (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky) INSIDE THE REPORTER Forced Evictions Get Violent in Delmas Jean Henry Jean-Claude lies on the ground after being beaten in the head with the butt of a gun by the Haitian National Police on July 27, according to observers. Jean-Claude was one of the internally displaced people living at Camp Django in Delmas 17 who was forced to leave the camp by the mayor. Report, page 6. Photo by Bri Kouri Nouvel Gaye Serving community is Villarson’s calling Rachelle Villarson, above, was a key part of the National Urban League conference in Boston last month. Page 8 Haitian flavor on tap at poetry slam McKendy Fils-Aime will represent Boston in this month’s National Poetry Slam in Cambridge. Page 5 AFROPOLITAN CRUISE ON SEPT. 3 — PAGE 8 Page 2 BOSTON HAITIAN REPORTER August 2011 BostonHaitian.com Anger in Haiti as Martelly stumbles out of the gate By Trenton Daniel Associated Press PORT-AU-PRINCE— Haitian President Michel Martelly has styled himself as a man of the people, a showy former pop star who waded easily into adoring crowds. So the reception he received on his latest trip to his country’s north was a surprise: Protesters pelted his entourage with soft drink bottles and rocks. Martelly wasn’t injured during the unexpected protest on July 24 in Cap Haitien, the country’s second-largest city, and police haven’t determined a precise motive for the ruckus. But it is becoming increasingly apparent in a country overwhelmed by poverty, natural disasters, disease and decades of unfulfilled governmental promises that Haitians have little patience for politicians who don’t produce — even if it is a president who has been in office for less than three months. “Martelly made a lot of promises — but so far nothing,’’ said Frantz Nelson, a 34-year-old who voted for the former singer. Nelson said he had hoped Martelly would help get him and his family out of an encampment across from the National Palace where they have lived since a massive earthquake struck the country in January 2010. “We are impatient and our children are impatient.’’ One of the keys to Martelly’s success in last November’s election was his outsider status, which attracted voters apparently tired of the traditional, educated elite who tend toward higher office in the Caribbean country. He was a popular performer of a style of Haitian music known as compas, and was notorious for occasionally bawdy performances and foul-mouthed stage antics. Though he had been known to espouse political views, he came from a radically different mold than the country’s usual politicians. He ultimately won a race that at one point included a hand-picked successor to President Rene Preval and a former senator who was also a former first lady. His dearth of experience is partly what constrains him now, however: He lacks much of a power base beyond his music fans, and relies heavily on a tight-knit team of close friends who are also new to government. That he has failed to win over lawmakers to approve his choice for prime minister explains in part why he so far boasts of few accomplishments. He has almost no support in parliament, which flatly rejected his first pick for prime minister and appears ready to vote against his second choice as well. Consequently, he has made little progress on promises to build homes for the hundreds of thousands left homeless by the earthquake as well as to create jobs in a country with an unemployment rate of more than 50 percent. Martelly has also done little to provide free education in a country where half of all children didn’t attend school even before the quake. Martelly, aware of the growing signs of disenchantment, insists he’s still on track to achieve his lofty campaign pledges. “I promise to do this for the benefit of the masses and our citizens and create conditions for the recovery of our country,’’ he said at a meeting of the Interim Haiti Recovery Commission In this photo taken Thursday July 21, a security detail forms a human barricade around Haiti’s President Michel Martelly, center, during a tour of model homes in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Martelly has styled himself as a man of the people, a showy former pop star who waded easily into adoring crowds. Haitians are now griping that Martelly hasn’t brought much change during his three months in office. Many young people who supported him are now having second thoughts. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo) earlier this month. The president has made some attempts at progress: His administration launched a program that aims to put kids in school with fees collected from wire transfers and international phone calls, and presented a plan to relocate 30,000 people from six major earthquake encampments into repaired houses. Former U.S. President Bill Clinton, the U.N. Special Envoy to Haiti, announced last week that his foundation would kick in $1.25 million to help raise school funding, but the new fees have angered Haitians overseas because it raised the cost of calling and sending money back home for a largely working-class community. The administration also drew criticism for evicting people from one of the earthquake encampments before creating housing elsewhere. Even if it were to succeed, Martelly’s relocation plan would help a mere 5 percent of the displaced population. Mark Schneider of the U.S.-based think tank the International Crisis Group praised Martelly for the housing plan and for retaining the Interim Haiti Recovery Commission, an international review panel that oversees earthquake reconstruction aid that some Haitians view with resentment. But he also said the new president needs to learn how to work across party lines. “He needs to govern with a vision of national reconciliation and national reconstruction,’’ Schneider said. “That has to be his mantra.’’ Martelly’s biggest apparent misstep so far has been his picks for prime minister. His initial choice was rejected overwhelmingly by the Chamber of Deputies. They accused the nominee, businessman Daniel-Gerard Rouzier, of tax evasion and questioned his citizenship. Many believed the real reason for Rouzier’s rejection was that Martelly hadn’t done enough to win the lawmakers’ support beforehand. There are only three people from Martelly’s party in the 99-seat Chamber of Deputies and none in the 30-seat Senate. “He’s learning the hard way,’’ said Sen. Steven Benoit. “He’s realizing parliament is the number one power.’’ Martelly’s second pick, Bernard Gousse, has not yet come up for a vote but faces stronger opposition. Gousse served as justice minister under the interim government set up by the international community after the ouster of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide in 2004 and has been accused of persecuting supporters of the former president, who remains a popular figure in Haiti. “The prime minister-designate is politically dead, and when a person dies, there’s no choice but to bury him,” JeanCharles Moses, an opposition senator, told Radio Kiskeya. Martelly’s problems with parliament are not unique. Preval, his predecessor, oversaw a revolving door of prime ministers. Six held the post from 2004-2009, with some sacked by lawmakers. But the stakes are higher now as the country struggles to jump-start stalled earthquake reconstruction. “Martelly faces an immediate crisis in the growing frustrations of the victims in the camps and those with near identical unmet basic needs who remain in the urban slums,’’ the International Crisis Group remarked in a report issued last month. Martelly planned to take a 17-day tour through Europe to seek investment and appeal for more aid. He cut the trip short by a week because of the political drama at home and visited only Spain — a country that has not traditionally played a large business or political role in Haiti. “There is a bit of a learning curve,’’ said Thomas Adams, Haiti Special Coordinator for the U.S. State Department. A group of business leaders in the manufacturing sector issued a statement Monday in which it said the absence of a prime minister was blocking economic development and investment needed for creating jobs. So far, the main source of Martelly’s opposition had been in parliament and not on the streets — until he showed up in Cap-Haitien on Sunday as part of an effort to promote the country’s north in a weeklong focus on tourism. Police spokesman Frantz Lerebours said he could not comment because he didn’t have the full report, but witnesses said people threw rocks and soft drink bottles as the president walked through a shantytown near the airport. Hansy Mars, a correspondent for the weekly Le Nouvelliste and Radio Galaxie who was at the event, said security guards tried to escort Martelly into one of two slow-moving SUVs but he declined and kept walking. Police fired several shots in the air and, according to U.N. spokeswoman Barbara Mertz, Chilean troops from the U.N. military responded. “I had to take cover to protect myself,’’ Mars said. Mars said he saw police arrest 29 people, while U.N. police spokesman Raymond Lamarre said police arrested two people. Nobody was injured. On Monday and Tuesday nights, there were more arrests on unspecified charges in the same neighborhood as the protest, according to Fritz Joseph, Cap-Haitien’s deputy mayor. Joseph said Tuesday night that police officers went from house to house and arrested 15 men Monday night and five the next. “What the police are doing is completely arbitrary,” Joseph said by telephone. “What’s happening now is making the president look bad.’’ Lerebours couldn’t be reached for comment Tuesday night. In an earlier interview, he said he didn’t know what prompted the rock and bottle throwing — but it’s not uncommon in Haiti for politicians to hire protesters and troublemakers to do their dirty work for them. The president dismissed his critics after he returned from Spain, saying opponents were simply trying to undermine him — and he said they would not succeed. “I’m not going to quit,” he said. “I’m here for five years.” Haiti cops search for man seen with gun near Martelly By Trenton Daniel Associated Press PORT-AU-PRINCE— Police are searching for a man seen holding a rifle in a crowd as Haitian President Michel Martelly walked through a busy street in northern Haiti, a police official said on July 28. Joany Caneus, police director for Haiti’s northern region, said witnesses have told investigators that the gunman was standing among people watching Martelly pass by on foot on July 24 in Haiti’s second largest city, Cap-Haitien. Caneus said the man planned to assassinate Mar- telly, but declined to say how he knew that. Saying the investigation was continuing, he would say only that witnesses reported the man was carrying either an M-1 or an M-14 rifle. Inaugurated in May, Martelly showed up in CapHaitien on Sunday to promote tourism in the northern region. He unveiled plans for construction of a major road and extension of an airstrip at the city airport. No shots were reported fired at him, but the visit turned unruly. Protesters lobbed rocks and soda bottles at the new leader and his entourage as they walked through a street near the airport. Martelly’s escorts tried to get him to climb into one of two slow-moving SUVs but he declined and kept walking. Police fired shots in the air to break up the crowd and people scrambled for cover. Neither Martelly nor anyone else was injured. Caneus said Thursday that police had arrested 32 people and brought them to the Haitian capital for questioning on the stoning. Authorities haven’t determined a specific motive behind the incident. But many Haitians are growing increasingly angry at politicians who don’t quickly improve life in this nation burdened with poverty, natural disasters and disease — even if it is a president who has been in office for less than three months. (AP) BostonHaitian.com August 2011 BOSTON HAITIAN REPORTER Martelly wants changes in recovery panel By Trenton Daniel Associated Press PORT-AU-PRINCE— President Michel Martelly announced changes to the makeup of a recovery commission that he says will make it more effective as it tries to rebuild from Haiti’s devastating earthquake. Haiti’s new leader also asked for a yearlong extension on the mandate of the Interim Haiti Recovery Commission, which was set up months after the January 2010 disaster to better coordinate reconstruction. It is led by the U.N. special envoy for Haiti, former U.S. President Bill Clinton, and Haiti’s outgoing Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive. The mandate of the panel is due to expire in October and Martelly’s request for its extension could meet opposition when it goes before Haiti’s legislature for approval. Since he took office in May, Martelly has been at odds with the opposition-controlled parliament. Lawmakers rejected his first pick for prime minister and seem ready to turn down his second. At the commission’s meeting Friday, Martelly named Ann Valerie Timothee Milfort, former chief-ofstaff for the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, to serve as interim executive director. He also named six members of his inner circle as board members, replacing members who recently resigned as the previous administration handed over power to Martelly. The panel was set up to give international donors assurances that reconstruction would be orderly and free of the corruption that has long plagued Haiti. But it has come under heavy criticism for accomplishing little since its inception. To date, the commission has approved 87 projects with a total value of $3.26 billion, of which $1.8 billion is secured, according the U.N.’s Office of the Special Envoy. Martelly advisers presented a proposal Friday that aims to move 30,000 people living in six tent camps back into 16 neighborhoods to be redeveloped from the quake’s destruction. Among the six sites is a parking lot at a soccer stadium in downtown Port-au-Prince that was the center of controversy this week. The government drew criticism from the “I want to reiterate that my government is against forced evictions that do not respect human rights” - Michel Martelly President, Haiti United Nations and rights groups after a mayor began to pay several hundred people to leave the parking lot without providing them a right to adequate housing. ``I want to reiterate that my government is against forced evictions that do not respect human rights,’’ Martelly said at the commission meeting. After the session, the Haiti Reconstruction Fund, a World Bankrun group that allocates funds to projects approved by the recovery commission, agreed to set aside $30 million for the government’s relocation effort. ``What’s important is that the international community is showing its support for the president,’’ Josef Leitmann, manager of the Haiti Reconstruction Fund, told The Associated Press. ``They’re sending a signal to the president: We’re reserving the funds until we see a final proposal.’’ The government’s relocation plan is part of a larger effort to resettle some of the estimated 634,000 quake survivors still living in hundreds of tent-and-tarp settlements that sprang up in the capital and surrounding cities after the quake. The goal is to redevelop neighborhoods by providing loans so that residents can repair quakedamaged homes. The Haiti Reconstruction Fund also said that it has allocated $237 million to pay for 14 reconstruction projects. The amount represents 71 percent of the $335 million given by donors. (AP) Page 3 Martelly’s second choice for PM rejected PORT-AU-PRINCE— Haitian lawmakers rejected President Michel Martelly’s second pick for prime minister on Aug. 2, delivering a major blow to the new leader as he struggles to get a government in place almost three months after taking office. In a sometime raucous debate that began in the afternoon and lasted into the night, 16 senators voted against the nomination of Bernard Gousse, a controversial former justice minister. The rest of the 30-member Senate refrained from voting. The rejection of Gousse as Martelly’s second choice for Haiti’s No. 2 official means the president will begin the selection process all over again, which stands to push back the potential installation of a Cabinet by several weeks if not longer. Martelly’s first pick as prime minister, businessman Daniel-Gerard Rouzier, was turned down by the Chamber of Deputies because of questions over his citizenship and taxes. But Gousse, an attorney, seemed like a candidate who would meet even more opposition because he was so controversial. A local law firm filed a petition last month for the legislature to investigate Gousse. The lawyers alleged he was guilty of false imprisonment and being an accomplice to murder during his time as justice minister in the interim government that took office after a violent rebellion in 2004 drove then-President Jean-Bertrand Aristide into exile. Gousse resigned back then amid charges that he was persecuting Aristide supporters. Despite Gousse’s record, Martelly expressed confidence that lawmakers would approve his choice for prime minister but it wasn’t clear why. After Martelly submitted Gousse as a nominee, senators from different political parties got together and called themselves the Group of 16. They united over their opposition of Gousse as a potential prime minister. That same sentiment played out in the Senate debate Tuesday as lawmakers debated Gousse’s papers, qualifications, and whether he obtained a certificate showing he had a clean record as a public official from his time as justice minister. Before the vote late Tuesday night, it was clear how many of the senators felt. “The Group of 16 is going to vote against Gousse no matter what,” said Evalliere Beauplan, a member of the Group of 16. “He’s not going to make it through.” (AP) Page 4 BOSTON HAITIAN REPORTER Reporter Staff August 2011 BostonHaitian.com English language program helps survivors begin to rebuild On July 27, dozens of friends and family gathered to celebrate 67 Haitian graduates who completed the inaugural English for Advancement program at the Boston Missionary Baptist Church in Roxbury. The English for Advancement program is a joint effort coordinated by the Jewish Vocational Service (JVS) and the Greater Boston Interfaith Organization (GBIO). It started in October 2010 and is an English language program set up to help participants secure employment, enroll in a skills training program, or attend college. Patrips Fleurival arrived in the U.S. two years ago with his wife and son. As a result of his participation in the language program, he recently passed the entrance exam to JVS’ Certified Nursing Assistant (CNA) training program and plans to start in the fall. “Knowing English is an essential part of advancing through college, career training and employment,” said Jerry Rubin, CEO of JVS. “We knew there was a demand in Boston’s Haitian population and GBIO helped us connect our services with the community. The early results have been spectacular.” Many Haitians have been unable to enroll in education and skills training programs due to their lack of English skills and a shortage of available English classes in the greater Boston area. The partnership between JVS and GBIO has leveraged the educational resources of JVS and the community organizing and advocacy resources of GBIO to ensure adequate adult educational resources in the Haitian and other immigrant communities. Josue Dorfeuille, who came to the U.S. with his wife and three children one week after the earthquake in Haiti last January, said the program has helped him adjust and progress in his new life. “When I came here, it was a difficult situation. This class was very important for me because it was a first step… I want to master the English language so I can go to college.” The Norwood resident would like to continue to learn English From Left to right: Maria Rodrigues, Marie Claire-Rose Paul, and enroll in a higher-level class Marie Maryse Paul, Chermide Louis, Alaina Farabaugh, Gerard in the fall, with the ultimate goal Fortune, Patrips Fleurival. of attending Bunker Hill ComHaitian churches, including secured employment; 9 enrolled munity College. English for Advancement is the Boston Missionary Baptist in skills training programs; one funded by the Smith Family Church in Roxbury; the Church enrolled in JVS’ pre-college Foundation -- a private Boston- of God Christian Life Center program; and one enrolled in based foundation that funds a in Dorchester; and the Voice of college. The other students will host of issues including medical the Tabernacle and the Greater move on to higher-level English research, education reform and Boston Nazarene Compassionate classes in the fall. For more information, visit workforce development. Six Center, both in Mattapan. To date, 13 graduates have jvs-boston.org or gbio.org classes were offered at local Hunt on for survivors after boat sinks; 12 die Suspect in Jules murder is indicted by Grand Jury Reporter Staff A Dorchester man who was arrested in June for allegedly murdering a 24 year-old Haitian-American woman in 2004 has been indicted by a Suffolk County Grand Jury. Shabazz Augustine, 32, will face first-degree murder charges in the death of Julaine Jules, his former girlfriend, who disappeared in August 2004. Her body was discovered in the Charles River more than a month later. Augustine was an immediate suspect in the case, but was not arrested or charged in the case until June, after the Boston Police Cold Case Unit revisited the murder. Augustine, who had been working as a dental assistant in Roxbury since the murder, was ordered to be held without bail during an arraignment in June. Now that he has been officially indicted, Augustine will be arraigned again at Suffolk Superior Court on Aug. 29. Julaine Jules (above), was killed in 2004. PORT-AU-PRINCE—Authorities in Haiti say they are looking for survivors from a sailboat that sank off the country’s northern coast, killing at least 12 people. A July 29 statement from Interior Minister Paul-Antoine Bien-Aime says police have rescued at least 19 people. He says at least 21 passengers are still missing after Tuesday’s accident. Bien-Aime says officials are investigating what caused the boat to sink. It is unclear whether the boat was being used for public transportation. (AP) Wherever you’re going, whether it’s for business or pleasure, we are your gateway to the world. In fact, when you fly American Eagle®, you’re just a flight away from hundreds of worldwide destinations on American Airlines. Together, we serve more than 250 cities in 40 countries. So really, it’s just one small world. To book your travel, visit AA.com. Service totals include American Eagle. AmericanAirlines, American Eagle and AA.com are marks of American Airlines, Inc. oneworld is a mark of the oneworld Alliance, LLC. © 2011 American Airlines, Inc. All rights reserved. A0195-1_10x8.indd 1 6/9/11 4:12 PM BostonHaitian.com Friends of the Orphans opens office in Quincy One of the educational programs in Port-au-Prince run by Friends of the Orphans. By Manolia Charlotin Editor In June, Friends of the Orphans, an international children services network, opened a local office in Quincy. One of their largest programs is based in Haiti. They opened an office in the greater Boston area in hopes to work with and benefit from the support of the large Haitian population here. Their first Haiti “home” was opened in 1987. Since then, it has grown into a large orphanage called St. Hélène Foyer. It is situated just outside of Port-auPrince in the mountains of Kenscoff and is now home to 400 children. The program (also known in French as Nos Petits Frères et Soeurs) has over 10 main facilities, as it has expanded its services throughout the years. Their large hospitals and clinics Saint Damien Pediatric Hospital and Saint Philomena, provides health care (including cholera treatment) to several hundred families.Their large education program St. Don Bosco, serves about 250 youths who attend secondary, professional or vocational school. Jennifer Rayno, regional director in MidAtlantic/Northeast says most of the 1600 staff and volunteers are Haitian. Many of the former orphans now staff and run the programs.“One of the things that makes us different is that we raise the children with the philosophy of shared responsibility, we (Continued on Page 11) August 2011 BOSTON HAITIAN REPORTER Fils-Aime to represent Boston in national poetry slam Michael Caprio Special to the Reporter McKendy Fils-Aime first started writing poetry “like any high school kid does” – after being dumped by his high school sweetheart. Now, almost 10 years after his high school debut, he is one of five members of the Boston team at this year’s National Poetry Slam in Cambridge. Born in New York City to Haitian parents, Fils-Aime moved to New Hampshire when he was young and attended local high school, where he first began exploring the medium of poetry. “I said to myself, ‘I really like writing poetry, and I think I should start taking this more seriously,’” Fils-Aime said of his first experiences with writing. During the rest of his high school career, he began to hone the craft of spoken word poetry, concentrating on his delivery and performance style. He then began to enter poetry readings and local “slams,” which he continued doing when he got to the University of New Hampshire. Since his debut on the slam circuit, FilsAime has performed in the last three National Poetry Slams, for the Manchester, NH team in 2008, the Worcester team in 2009, and the Manchester team again in 2010. This year, he decided to take his craft to the bigger Boston slam clubs and made the Boston team, which will compete in Cambridge for the 2011 National Poetry Slam on August 9. The National Poetry Slam, which takes place every year in a different city, draws dozens of poetry teams, all of which are composed of some of the most acclaimed poets in their respective areas. For these teams, it’s a long, strange trip on the road to the National Poetry Slam, with some traveling from as far away as Australia to take their turn at the Mic. To get to that point, individuals have to perform well enough in several regional poetry slams and be sponsored by a local group, all the while footing their own travel costs and expenses. For his part, Fils-Aime McKendy Fils-Aime will represent Boston at this month’s National Poetry Slam. made a name on the poetry scene by traveling down the East Coast last year with his four-person poetry group “No More Ribcage,” hop scotching down the Atlantic by venues in Philadelphia, Pittsburg, New Jersey before ending the journey in Orlando, Fl. “I appreciated every part of the journey,” FilsAime said. “It was good to see what every poet was like, what every scene was like on its own turf. Sometimes there are poems that wouldn’t necessarily be received well on the national stage, Page 5 but when people perform them in their own places … and people recognize the poems, that’s great to see.” Fils-Aime draws inspiration from sources more close to home, too. His Haitian background has proven a ripe subject for exploration. Although his niche subject is mythology - one of his main poems is a re-telling of the story of Pandora – he does explore his Haitian roots in some of his writing in an open, expository way. “When I do write about being Haitian, I try to make people understand where I’m coming from,” he said. “When you’re writing something about cultural heritage, you have to do it precisely and honestly.” Fils-Aime hopes to become a teacher, a career choice he made after working in a writing workshop on weekends. He said he wants to keep writing poetry and serve as a mentor for up-and-coming poets as his own career advances. ••• Get updates about the Poetry Slamand other local events at bostonhaitian.com Page 6 BOSTON HAITIAN REPORTER August 2011 BostonHaitian.com Editorial Diaspora groups launch listening tour in Boston On July 14, a group of leaders from the Haitian diaspora launched a national listening tour in Boston. The Haitian Fund for Innovation and Reconstruction (HFIR) based in New York, Konbit for Haiti out of Florida, the Lambi Fund from Haiti, and Oxfam America headquartered in Boston with offices in DC - collaborated with the Boston Haitian Reporter – to convene a working meeting. The goal was to hear the diaspora perspective on issues that can be addressed through coordinated advocacy. About 25 local community leaders, entrepreneurs, human rights advocates and young professionals gathered to discuss priorities in setting an advocacy agenda. The group eagerly provided their input on the major sectors that need to be bolstered and prioritized, from education and governance to the justice system and Participants engage in brainstorm about advocacy priorities on July 14. infrastructure. Shortly after the January 2010 earthquake, many in the diaspora mobilized money, supplies, and their networks into action. The diaspora—which has long served as a major economic driver for the island, sending about $1 billion a year back home – responded swiftly to humanitarian needs. Over a year and half later, the flow of international aid for reconstruc- tion has been a slow, flawed process. A number of organizations, developed post-quake, have begun advocate for better US policy towards Haiti. However, relatively few of these efforts are led by the diaspora. In March 2010, more than 400 members of the diaspora responded to the Organization of American States’ (OAS) call for a meeting at their Headquarters in Washington DC. In the run-up to the international donor’s conference at United Nations (UN), the goal of this three-day event was to develop a coordinated strategy that addressed key issues in the recovery, reconstruction and development efforts in Haiti. The diaspora has since held a number of gatherings, dialogues and forums of Haiti’s recovery and construction. “This meeting is in the context of a series of other meetings that have taken place,” said Johnny Celestin, founder and director of HFIR. “This listening tour will [allow us] to… activate the powerful voice of Haitian-Americans.” Sophia Lafontant, lead organizer of Oxfam added this advocacy should be targeted to the US government, because many in the diaspora are US citizens. Over the next few Photo by The Reporter months, the tour will visit Miami and New York – the two cities with the largest population of Haitians in the US. The group plans to follow up with participants from these sessions to provide advocacy trainings and eventually craft a policy agenda for Haitians living abroad. — Manolia Charlotin Commentary Report: Government adds insult to injuries of displaced By Etant Dupain Special to the Reporter The Haitian Government is violating the rights of Haitians more seriously than the nongovernmental organiza- Etant Dupain tions (NGOS). During recent weeks, destroying the camps of the internally displaced people has become something normal. And now the Mayor Jean-Yves Jason of Port-au-Prince has evicted 514 families that were living in the Sylivo Cator soccer stadium, without respect to their rights or their dignity. This is yet another time that the Haitian Government has violated the International Convention on Human Rights, which recognizes the rights that all victims of natural catastrophes have to live with dignity. Mayor Jason of Portau-Prince declared: “The government doesn’t owe people anything, the 10,000 gourdes ($500 U.S.) the government gives is charity for them to restart their lives.” That is the kind of declaration we might expect to hear from the mouths of NGOs, not from those who govern - those to whom we have given a mandate to govern us. Of the 514 families BOSTON HAITIAN REPORTER “An Exploration of the Haitian-American Experience” A publication of Boston Neighborhood News Inc. 150 Mt. Vernon St., Suite 120 , Dorchester, MA 02125 Worldwide at www.bostonhaitian.com Mary Casey Forry, President (1983-2004) Edward W. Forry, Publisher William P. Forry, Managing Editor Manolia Charlotin, Business Manager/Editor Steve Desrosiers, Contributing Editor Yolette Ibokette, Contributing Editor News Room Phone : (617) 436-1222 Advertising : (617) 436-2217 E-mail: [email protected] Boston Haitian Reporter Reporter is not liable for errors appearing in advertisements beyond the cost of the space occupied by the error. The right is reserved by Boston Haitian Reporter to edit, reject or cut any copy without notice. Next Issue: September 2011 Next edition’s Deadline: Thursday, Sept. 1 at noon All contents © Copyright 2011 Boston Neighborhood News, Inc. Mail subscription rates $25.00 per year, payable in advance. Make payable to the Boston Haitian Reporter and mail to: Boston Haitian Reporter, 150 Mt. Vernon Street, Suite #120, Dorchester, MA 02125 A protest by civil society organizations against the presence of the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) was held on July 28, 2011, the 96th anniversary of the 1915 United States occupation of Haiti. Organizations are calling for justice for the UN soldiers bringing the cholera epidemic to Haiti and for the mission to withdraw. Photo by Bri Kouri Nouvèl Gaye Haiti that were living in the stadium, there are 124 (about 600 people) that the Mayor agreed to relocate in another space. However, the other nearly 400 families were left in the streets with only 10,000 gourdes and no other assistance to find an alternative. The space the mayor of Port-au-Prince designated to put these homeless earthquake victims is worse than where the had been living; it doesn’t meet international standards for displaced people nor does it meet principles of human dignity. Eighteen months after the January 12th earthquake, the Haitian government is forcing people out from under their tents to go live under other tents, creating new camps without safe drinking water during a cholera epidemic. It appears the mayor has installed ten portable toilets near the road by the new camp. The majority of the homeless victims living there are children and women. In the past months, the lives of Haiti’s internally displaced have become increasingly difficult and it is more complicated than just the bad conditions in the camps. Authorities have declared that the victims actually have houses and big businesses, or they are criminals. The NGOs also seek to invalidate these homeless families by saying they stay in camps because they weren’t accustomed to getting getting the good services such as free water, food and health care that they receive in the camps now. In reality, most camps lack all of these basic services which are considered fundamental human rights. The mayor of Delmas and the police destroyed the camp at the Airport Intersection (Kafou Ayopo) at six o’clock in the morning, they said the camp was a home for criminals. Yet they arrested no one and didn’t find even one knife. If we consider what the government calls “social housing” (low income housing) and the declaration made by Mr. Martelly, then we can expect all 700,000 people living in the camps today to be evicted before long because there is no housing for the poor. There are victims who explain that they prefer the humiliation of liv- ing in the Dominican Republic where racism against Haitian is frequently overt, because in comparison the Haitian authorities are now treating them worse than foreigners do. This is especially true for the poor, who have nearly ceased to exist in the national dialogue beyond efforts to render them less visible since the election of Martelly. Etant Dupain is the director of Bri Kouri Nouvèl Gaye, an alternative Haitian media project. Supported by Let Haiti Live, a project of TransAfrica Forum, BKNG prints and distributes a free monthly newspaper to residents of camps and popular neighborhoods. Learn more at http:// brikourinouvelgaye.com BostonHaitian.com August 2011 BOSTON HAITIAN REPORTER Page 7 Commentary The case against Bernard Gousse goes beyond politics By Brian Concannon, Jr. On July 13, the Bureau des Avocats Internationaux (BAI) added a legal analysis to the debate over the ratification of President Michel Martelly’s nominee for Prime Minister, Bernard Gousse, by submitting a petition asking the Haitian parliament to conduct a trial of Mr. Gousse for crimes committed during his tenure as Minister of Justice under Haiti’s 2004-2006 interim regime. The BAI accuses Mr. Gousse of serving as the architect of a campaign of political repression that led to the deaths of thousands of suspected political dissidents and the illegal arrests of hundreds more. In Haiti, as in the United States, the constitution protects top officials, including Ministers, from prosecution by the regular courts. In both countries, if a top official is accused of a crime, the legislative branch, with the help of the courts, conducts a trial. If the accused is found guiltythrough impeachment in the United States and the Haute Cour de Justice (High Court of Justice) in Haiti – then the cases are referred to civilian courts for further proceedings. The lower house of Parliament, the Chambre des Deputés (equivalent to the House of Representatives in the U.S.), begins the prosecution by voting a formal accusation with a 2/3 majority. The case is then forwarded to the Senate, which acts as the Court, assisted by two justices of the Cour de Cassation (Supreme Court). If the Senate votes for a conviction by a 2/3 majority, it can sentence the convicted person to loss of their political office and a bar of up to fifteen years for public office. The convicted person can then be brought before a regular court for prosecution, which could lead to imprisonment upon conviction. The BAI accuses Minister Gousse of participating in four cases of political persecution. The first involves Catholic priest and political activist, Father Gérard Jean-Juste, who was arrested twice during Mr. Gousse’s term in office. There was never any evidence presented of wrongdoing by Fr. JeanJuste, yet he was held in prison for seven months, and denied treatment for leukemia. Mr. Gousse personally participated in the prosecution, by publicly urging the justice system to forcefully prosecute. When one of Haiti’s most respected judges, Judge Jean-Sénat Fleury, ordered Fr. JeanJuste released unless the government could present evidence, Mr. Gousse illegally forced Judge Fleury off the bench, flagrantly disrespecting Haiti’s separation of powers (see An Prensip, Boston Haitian Reporter, April 2005). The other three cases in the BAI’s petition involve killings by police officers. Abdias Jean, a journalist, was killed in the Village de Dieu neighborhood on January 14, 2005. Ederson Joseph, a schoolchild, was killed by a hooded police officer in the yard of his home in Fort National on January 17, 2005. Jimmy Charles, an employee of the stateoperated telecommunications company, TELECO, and member of the Fanmi Lavalas party, was arrested on January 5, 2005, and imprisoned. Eight days later, Mr. Charles’ family found his body in the state morgue, riddled with bullets. The BAI does not accuse Mr. Gousse of ordering or committing the killings. Instead, it asserts indirect liability for these killings on two grounds. First, Minister Gousse is alleged to have led a repressive security force that was designed to carry out these kinds of killings. One study conducted of Mr. Gousse’s time in office concluded that 8,000 people were killed in political violence in 22 months in Port-auPrince alone, and that police officers committed 20% of the killings. Second, Mr. Gousse is accused of covering up the murders by failing to fulfill his obligation to investigate them. The BAI petition notes that the families of all three victims filed legal complaints with Minister Gousse’s prosecutors, and that in one case the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights asked the Haitian government to investigate, all with no result. The Haitian Parliament has to date made no response to the BAI petition. In fact, Parliament has never instituted the Haute Cour de Justice in the twenty-four years since it has been authorized by the 1987 Constitution, despite numerous accusations of crimes by top officials over that span. On August 2, the Senate voted against Mr. Gousse’s nomination, a political response. Ironically, one of the Senators who voted against the nomination, Jocelerme Privert, was arrested personally by Minister Gousse in 2004 and thrown in jail, even though, as a former Min- ister of the Interior, he should not have been prosecuted by regular courts without proceeding through the Haute Cour de Justice. If the Parliamentarians’ goal was merely to stop Mr. Gousse from becoming Prime Minister, the political response was probably the easiest path. Rejecting the candidacy required only sixteen votes out of thirty Senators and did not require proof of anything, while conviction by the Haute Cour would have required twenty votes and proof of guilt. But by taking the easy road Parliament missed an opportunity to aim higher, to stop not a person, but a practice of political repression by top government officials in Haiti. A full trial of Mr. Gousse would have allowed his accusers to pres- © 2011 United Air Lines, Inc. All rights reserved. Port-au-Prince. Our latest stop on the way to becoming the world’s leading airline. Nonstop service between New York/Newark and Port-au-Prince, starting June 9th. ent the evidence against him, and allow Mr. Gousse to present his defense. Regardless of who prevailed, Parliament would have established a precedent that top officials accused of serious crimes would be pursued, and that they would be tried not in the rumor mill, but in a constitutional court providing fairness to the accuser and accused alike. Human rights lawyer Brian Concannon Jr. directs the Boston-based Institute for Justice & Democracy in Haiti, www. ijdh.org. He has represented several victims of political repression under Haiti’s 2004-2006 interim regime in international courts, including Abdias Jean and Jimmy Charles, along with the Bureau des Avocats Internationaux. Page 8 BOSTON HAITIAN REPORTER August 2011 BostonHaitian.com Rachelle Villarson’s commitment to service inspires peers By Manolia Charlotin Editor Last week’s National Urban League conference in Boston featured many nationally reknown figures from Soledad O’Brien, Henry Louis “Skip” Gates to Rev. Al Sharpton and Bill Gates. Many Bay State officials welcomed conference attendees including Gov Deval Patrick, Mayor Thomas Menino, several state representatives, administration leaders and members of the Boston city council. However, one key group that helped to ensure the smooth operations of the conference was the hard-working volunteers. And one dynamic leader responsible for recruiting, training, coordination and execution for volunteers for several main events was Rachelle Villarson. Villarson, who was born in Brooklyn and came to Boston as a teen, is a finance supervisor at Partners Healthcare. She was appointed to the board of Young Professionals Network of the Urban League of Eastern Massachusetts (YPNULEM), as co-chair of the community service committee last summer. She Rachelle Villarson (center front) with members of YPN-ULEM doing community service at Rosie’s Place, fall 2010. hit the ground running. Villarson spearheaded YPN-ULEM’s first campaign to increase awareness about homelessness within a few months of her tenure. The month-long Hunger and Homelessness Awareness Campaign in November 2010 provided a series of service opportunities that culminated with 145 people served hot meals, 100 donated backpacks of condoms and hygiene kits, along with donations of over 90 pounds of chicken and turkey, 25 pounds of rice and beans, and 12 pounds of vegetables. “Rachelle came into the role already prepared,” said Nancy Rachel Rousseau, President of YPN-ULEM. “Rachelle believes in community building. She is willing to see a project from beginning to end.” The commitment to serve her community began early in Villarson’s life. “I first got involved with community service as a child. I went to Catholic school all my life and service to and for the community was always a philosophy instilled in me from day one,” says Villarson. “My mother was also a role model in this aspect as she was always willing to help anyone in need...as evident in her chosen profession as a registered nurse. I [have] essentially been involved with community service all my life.” Villarson began her studies at Northeastern University and is now majoring in business management at the University of Phoenix. Charlene Luma, LICSW, is a Clinician at The Guidance Center’s Children with Voices who also currently serves as YPN-ULEM co-secretary. “As a child Rachelle was always fun to be around and a risk taker. As a person Rachelle is reliable, committed, trustworthy, strong-willed, and [has] an infectious laugh that captivates a room and brings people into her.” Luma recalls several of the volunteer efforts she’s worked with her cousin. “Rachelle and I have worked or volunteered with each other in [many] capacities, such as with the Prevention Now program at the Hennigan School, fashion shows at Northeastern University, and organizing a team for the Annual Lupus New England that we do in honor of my late twin sister.” “Rachelle is… also the older sister I’ve never had. This became even more so after losing my own twin sister,” said Luma. Villarson is the eldest of two siblings. She has a 20-year old brother. She credits her mother as her role model and key influence in her life. “My mother is someone who has persevered against all odds, even when people her told no,” she said. “She has been this defiant person from as early as I can remember. Not only has she been defiant when it came to her own personal life but when it came to the well being of her children, she was ever more defiant in making sure that her kids not only got what she felt they needed, but what they deserved.” Villarson’s mother, Gertrude Andre, RN, says the respect is mutual. “Rachelle is a leader. She was always outspoken as a child. I remember one time a pastor called her name in front of a church congregation. He pronounced it as ‘Rachel.’ Rachelle corrected him in front of everyone and said, ‘My name is Rachelle!’ When asked what she thinks of her daughter’s volunteer work, she teared up and said, “I’m very proud of her. My kids are my everything.” Andre volunteered throughout the conference, with her daughter as the lead volunteer coordinator for the young professionals events. During the 60-hour volunteer work-week, Villarson was in charge of 35 volunteers who staffed about 15 events. As she walked through the convention center, a steady flow of volunteers comes to her with questions about room assignments, shift changes and timing of meals. She effortlessly answers each one. “I couldn’t do this alone. I have a great team, especially my co-chair Kenya [Beaman] and committee members, who are there to let me know when the workload is too much or unrealistic. Some of my go-to people are Magalie Jean-Michel and Erika Inocencio.” Under Villarson and Beaman’s leadership, the community service committee had grown from about seven to 22 members and has put about 100 hours of planning and executing service events. The group has led the organization to log an impressive 700 hours of community service hours. “I have worked with a lot of people on various projects large and small and I would say Rachelle is definitely on her way,” said Beaman, who works for Tufts University’s School of Medicine. “I love that she takes public service very serious as it is very important to give (Continued on Page 15) Save the Date! Back-to-School Jamboree! Saturday, August 27, 2011 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. Boston City Hall Plaza Free BACkPACkS with school supplies for the first 1,500 BPS students! Questions? 617-635-9660 or -9661 [email protected] Sponsored by the Boston Public Schools Thomas M. Menino, Mayor • Boston School Committee Dr. Carol R. Johnson, Superintendent Event Producer: BostonHaitian.com By Steve Desrosiers Contributing Editor Confirmation Miami’s Nu-Look is back with a vengeance through the release of their latest album, the highly anticipated “Confirmation”. The album is an independent release featuring 11 original compositions. If there is one word that captures a part the Nu-Look experience in music, it is drama! “NuLook”, is singer/songwriter Arly Lariviere’s brainchild, the result of a messy break up with the band D-Zine, a group for which he served as maestro. Arly sealed Nu-Look’s early success by recruiting D-Zine’s talented lead singer, Gazzman Couleur as colead and part-owner. Of course this move sealed the demise of his former D-Zine band-mates. Arly and Gazzman then released a modest stream of hits that quickly shot Nu-Look to the top. Unfortunately, success didn’t keep drama at bay and while the music was good, the business side of things was troubled with reports of Arly’s chronic tardiness to shows, mismanagement of the band’s bookings and executive producers forced to shell out hefty studio fees for albums that took Arly far too long to finish. In time, the worst of Nu Look’s problems involved rumors of building tension between the band’s leaders. The crowd pleasing Gazzman had his fill of apparent disrespect August 2011 BOSTON HAITIAN REPORTER Nu-Look ‘confirms’ their star status with triumphant new release from the Haitian Sinatra –Arly. Gazzman eventually shocked the industry by leaving the group to form his own band - Disip! Not to be outdone, Arly quickly recruited crooner Edresse Stanis or “Pipo” from an up-and-coming Miami band (Beljazz) and set his ship asail again. The album, “Confirmation” is Arly’s quest to regain the ground he may have lost among fans of the NuLook a la Gazzman era. Can this release bring Nu-Look back from the abyss? “Confirmation” is an album fully equipped to meet the demands of the battlefield that is the Haitian music industry. The album’s triumphs include captivating numbers like, “Wasn’t meant to be” where Arly delivers astounding performances on keys and vocals with a melodic progression fashioned to affect every pore of his female fan base. The assault continues with the up-tempo, “Jou’m rencontre’w” where co-lead “Pipo” unfurls a stellar performance backed by some heated guitar work from Ralph Conde and more fine solos from Arly’s golden keys! Pipo’s great potential as Gazzman’s replacement and Arly’s second in command is clearly evident in the tunes, “Li Pa Normal” and “Destination Finale”. Carimi’s Michael Guirand and Mika Ben, formerly of Krezi Mizik join Arly in the midtempo, “Paske’m Jalou” where the three giants fuse their energies to deliver one of the album’s best commercial moments! L’union, after all, fait la force! Arly takes the reins on vocals in the thoughtfully composed, “Pays, Jeunesse, Futur” where a fine arrangement is met with equally fine songwriting and man oh man that voice of pure Gold. Nu-Look’s “Confirmation” truly lives up to the billing. Arly Lariviere fully confirms his command over Nu-Look’s destiny and he has clearly determined that it will be marked with success! Fans anticipated that Arly would rely heavily on Pipo’s prowess to pull off this come back without Gazzman but Arly carries the album on the number and strength of his own performances. One listens and feels the dynamic forces of Ralph Conde, Arly and Pipo at play here as “Confirmation” has to be Nu-Look’s most coherent and well performed album to date! On this release Arly de- livering his best on keys, freely exploring a modest variety of Keyboard tones, the horn arrangements are catchy and well placed and although Arly’s songwriting still suffers from extreme wordiness, this album shows considerable improvement in that department. Ralph Conde performs masterfully on lead and rhythm guitars throughout this release and is at his soulful best in his feature for the song, “Destination Finale”. What can I say? Nu-Look is back and the disciples may need to bow their heads on their way to “Confirmation”. This album’s been flying off the shelves and with good reason! Get yours today! The Reporter Thanks: Patrick St. Germain of International Perfumes and Discount for availing the CD for review. The releases are available at 860 Morton Street Dorchester, MA, 617825-6151. Tears, anger as student murdered in D.R. is laid to rest PORT-AU-PRINCE— Mourners have erupted in anger at the funeral of a Haitian student who was raped and killed in the Dominican Republic. More than 200 people broke out in chants of ``justice’’ at the service in the Haitian capital for 21-year-old Rooldine Lindor. The service on July 27 drew more than family and friends since the case has provoked outrage in Haiti. Lindor was killed on July 12 at a construction site in the Dominican Republic. The assailants robbed her of nearly $500. Police have detained two men on suspicion of murder including a member of the Dominican air force. An estimated 600,000 Haitians live in the Dominican Republic. Haitians face discrimination and abuse and accuse local authorities of doing little to protect them. (AP) BMC’s Shapiro Center has everything. Including appointments with Boston’s best doctors. This year, 60 doctors voted Boston’s best* came from Boston Medical Center. That’s impressive. So is our new Shapiro Center—the newest medical facility in Boston that has many of the outpatient services you need in a modern, convenient location. It’s also where many of Boston’s best doctors are seeing new patients. Call 877-930-2288 for an appointment, or visit BMC.org/Shapiro to learn more. Exceptional things are happening at Boston Medical Center. *Recognized as 2011 Top Doctors in Boston Magazine. Boston Medical Center is the primary teaching affiliate of Boston University School of Medicine. Page 9 Page 10 BOSTON HAITIAN REPORTER August 2011 BostonHaitian.com ‘State of Black Boston’ report unveiled By Gintautas Dumcius News Editor Gov. Deval Patrick was a Harvard University junior in 1976. The Cambridge campus was a “relatively safe and comfortable,” he recalled. “But you never knew then what you were going to get when you went off campus,” Patrick added. “The city … was totally engrossed, involved and riven over the question of public school busing,” he said. “Today, Boston is smarter, more diverse, younger, more dynamic, prettier in many respects. There are places that my niece and her pals hang out in the city that were just totally off limits in 1976.” The sheen of optimism Patrick projected to the crowd gathered at the Hynes Convention Center on Monday for the annual National Urban League conference, its first in Boston since 1976, is mirrored in the “State of Black Boston” report which is topped off with similar buoyancy. “Today interracial amity prevails in a city that is home to slightly more residents of color than white residents,” says the report, which was largely compiled by researchers and professors from UMass Boston, Tufts University, and the Boston Public Health Commission. “The peace that prevails between races and ethnic groups has social, psychological, and economic benefits for everyone who lives in the city.” But the 358-page report is also filled with grim statistics about the subjects the report tackles, from housing to education to criminal justice. Over 21.5 percent of blacks over When you NEED care, just walk right in. Walk-in re Ca t n e g r U ys a d 7 w no a week! Shapiro Center 725 Albany St. 9th Floor 617-414-4290 Option #3 During regular hours: You have a right to good health! Dorchester House. The best health care for you and the whole family. To make an appointment, call 617-288-3230. (Continued on Page 15) KlinikPublic Sante Piblik Health Clinic TèsSTD STD/avèk TestingTreman & Treatment - No/ Pa Problem SiNo ou Insurance pa gen asirans gen pwoblèm by Appointment JisWalk-in antre ouorbyen vin sou randevou Illness doesn’t keep business hours which is why our Urgent Care is open for you 7 days a week. Mon-Thur 8am - 9pm Friday 8am - 5pm Saturday 9am - 1pm AND, weekend hours: Saturday until 3pm Sunday 9am - 1pm Lavi a Life’s kout Short Pran prekosyon! Play Safe 25 years old don’t have a high school diploma, a figure surpassed by Latinos (37 percent), and Asians (27 percent). Clocking in at $33,420, the media household income for blacks is $30,000 lower than the white median household income. And in Boston, according to the report, 58 percent of those arrested in 2008 were black. “Too often life ends in infancy, is spent in poverty, lasts fewer years, or is taken by violence,” the report says. “Student achievement lags even with the equal access to public schools that a federal court order guaranteed. Few Black busi¬nesses and cultural institutions thrive.” Bright spots dot the report as well. There were 717 black-owned businesses in Boston in 1972. In 2002, there were 3,544. The election and re-election of Deval Patrick, who lives in Milton, is also highlighted. Black students in Massachusetts frequently outscore black students elsewhere in the U.S. on standardized tests, the report notes. A third of all blacks in the Bay State live in Boston, according to the report, and make up 22 percent of the city’s population. The “heart” of the black community can be found in Roxbury and Dorchester, with Mattapan having the highest concentration. Caritas Carney Hospital is the largest employer in the black community, with more than 1,000 workers. The Stop & Shop in Grove Hall is another large employer, with 249 working there. Other large employers include Franklin Park Zoo, Roxbury Community College, a waste management High quality, friendly health care in your neighborhood. In Fields Corner 1353 Dorchester Avenue 617-288-3230 For more information, visit us on the web at www.dorchesterhouse.org BostonHaitian.com August 2011 BOSTON HAITIAN REPORTER Be prepared: Disease prevention starts with you By Eileen Rosado, RN Special to the Reporter The 2011-2012 school year begins in about six weeks and many parents may be wondering, “Is my child up to date with all immunizations? Does my child need a physical examination before school starts? Now is the time to check with your children’s pediatrician to make sure they are current with their immunizations and make an appointment for their routine physical. The following is an excerpt from a statement by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention explaining the importance of childhood immunizations: Disease Prevention-Protect Those Around You -- Disease prevention is the key to public health. It is always better to prevent a disease than to treat it. Vaccines prevent disease in the people who receive them and protect those who come into contact with unvaccinated individuals. Vaccines help prevent infectious diseases and save lives. Vaccines are responsible for the control of many infectious diseases that were once common in this country, including polio, measles, diphtheria, pertussis (whooping cough), rubella (German measles), mumps, tetanus, and Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib). Parents are always concerned about the health and safety of their children and take many steps to protect them. These steps range from child-proof door latches to child safety seats. In the same way, vaccines work to protect infants, children, and adults from illnesses and death caused by infectious diseases. While the US currently has record, or near record, low cases of vaccine-preventable diseases, the viruses and bacteria that cause them still exist. Even diseases that have been eliminated in this country, such as polio, are only a plane ride away. It and other infectious diseases can be passed on to people who are not protected by vaccines. Vaccine-preventable diseases have a costly impact, resulting in doctor’s visits, hospitalizations, and premature deaths. Sick children can also cause parents to lose time from work. Why are Childhood Vaccines So Important? -- It is true that newborn babies are immune to many diseases because they have antibodies they got from their mothers. However, the duration of this immunity may last from only a month to about a year. Further, young children do not have maternal immunity against some vaccine-preventable diseases, such as whooping cough. If a child is not vaccinated and is exposed to a disease germ, the child’s body may not be strong enough to fight the disease. Before vaccines, many children died from diseases that vaccines now prevent, such as whooping cough, measles, and polio. Those same germs exist today, but babies are now protected by vaccines, so we do not see them as often. Immunizing individual children also helps to protect the health of our community, especially those people who are not immunized. People who are not immunized include those who are too young to be vaccinated (e.g., children less than a year old cannot receive the measles vaccine but can be infected by the measles virus), those who cannot be vaccinated for medical reasons (e.g., children with leukemia), and those who cannot make an adequate response to vaccination. Also protected, therefore, are people who received a vaccine, but who have not developed immunity. In addition, people who are sick will be less likely to be exposed to disease germs that can be passed around by unvaccinated children. Immunization also slows down or stops disease outbreaks. All children from birth to age 17 may receive their immunizations free, especially if their clinic or doctor’s office receives the immunizations from the state Department of Public Health. So, once again, check your child’s immunization record to make sure it is up to date. Make an early appointment with a pediatric provider at Mattapan Community Health Center by calling 617-296-0061 before the school year starts in September. Eileen Rosado, RN, is the Clinical Nurse Supervisor at the Mattapan Community Health Center. Page 11 Friends of the Orphans opens office in Quincy (Continued from Page 5) unit in tact… taking the child as far as they can go,” says Rayno. “We support the children’s full education.” Some of the staff has New England roots. Father Rick Frechette, the priest who now runs the Haiti program, is from Connecticut. Following the earthquake, Friends’ worked with other international agencies including Partners In Health, to provide humanitarian relief. According to their reports, they serviced several hundred thousand families and provided food, water and distributed over 5,000 tents. “Whenever we see a need, and there is a hole to plug, we start a new program. Many of these programs have come after the earthquake,” said Rayno. To expand services and keep to their mission to support the communities they serve, Friends’ started the Francisville Bakery — which makes bread for the orphanages, day camps, schools and hospitals. “[The] concept was to build a trade school, looking at these schools as a service to the population and other NGO’s,” says Rayno. “We’re not westernizing, we’re there to help Haitians.” For more information, visit friendsoftheorphans.org Page 12 BOSTON HAITIAN REPORTER For hundreds of young people from Boston, Camp Harbor View offers an escape from the city in the hot summer months, a respite from neighborhoods struggling with violence and a chance to experience the peaceful, natural beauty of Boston’s Harbor Islands. The camp began in 2007 as a partnership between the City of Boston and the Boys and Girls Clubs of Boston, and Partners HealthCare has been a supporter of the camp since it started. The camp’s main goal is for youngsters to have fun, and there are many ways to meet that goal. Among the long list of activities, campers can bike, swim, climb the rock wall, kayak to a nearby island and tap into their creative sides with artistic activities. Beyond the fun, a dedicated staff of social workers, nurses and youth workers, helps campers to build critical life and leadership skills by using a curriculum that focuses on five key areas – sports and fitness, arts/creative expression, aquatics, a learning component called, knowledge is power and leadership. The leadership program, called Leaders-in-Training (LITs) is rich in positive reinforcement and peer learning. It has grown from 30 participants in 2008 to 71 this summer. The LITs must have attended the camp for at least one year and participate in an educational component each morning in areas that focus on English and Math. Some LITs work closely with group leaders while others work more independently with the campers. The LITs are teenagers who have chosen to enjoy their summer months at camp, but also decided to challenge themselves to reach new goals, enrich their learning and share new growth with their peers. Derrick Stone, a 17 year old LIT said, “I come from Roxbury and have seen some things, so I want these kids to appreciate Camp Harbor View. I don’t know where I’d be without it.” Kyidea Bowen, a 15 year old LIT originally from Philadelphia said, “This job has helped me to be more patient. I’ve learned to understand that I can be a friend to the campers, but I also have to know where to draw the line and be in charge too.” Both Derrick and Kyidea are working to earn spots as LITs during the Camp’s additional week Leader-in-Training Kyidea Brown in August this year - the Partners Health Explorers Program. The Health Explorers Program is an extra week of camp that helps to fill the gap between the end of summer and the beginning of the school year. The program is an opportunity for campers to participate in typical camp activities and learn about health careers from working professionals. Campers will take part in hands-on science experiments and participate in the Partners Health Club where they will participate in activities related to healthy eating, fitness and stress management. The Health Explorers Program helps kids to see the connections between education and careers in healthcare - all while having fun. Matt Fishman, Vice President for Community Health for Partners HealthCare said, “Our participation in Camp Harbor View, and now with the Health Explorers Program, is at the heart of our mission of community health. We are committed to the young people and the neighborhoods we serve, and hope the skills the campers learn this summer will enable them to make healthy choices as they move forward in their school Leader-in-Training Derrick Stone of Roxbury years and beyond.” Camp Harbor View also offers a year-round support system for its campers. Campers and their families have opportunities to connect with each other and camp staff each month throughout the year. These connections allow for sustained learning and growth. Ronald Carroll, Director of Leaders in Training for the camp said, “This is like a family. Once you come in, we put our arms around you and keep in touch.” Camp Harbor View is the brainchild of Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino and Philanthropist and Chairman of the Board for Partners HealthCare, Jack Connors. It is funded through the Camp Harbor View Foundation, a non-profit organization. To learn more, go to http://chvf.org/about-the-camp/. August 2011 BostonHaitian.com Boston Medical Center awarded more than $1M to expand HIV/AIDS services Reporter Staff Boston Medical Center (BMC) has been awarded a $1.1 million grant by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health (MDPH) to provide funding for HIV/AIDS patient care services. The grant allows BMC’s HIV clinic to expand and provide more care to a larger number or patients. BMC’s HIV clinic — one of the largest in the state — serves a high proportion of inner-city, low-income patients, as well as the highest number of women living with HIV. Services include medical care coordination, referrals, assistance processing insurance claims and counseling. Jonathan Hall, the director of operations for the department of Infectious Diseases at BMC, says those services require significant financial resources. “This grant will allow us to continue providing the essential, comprehensive services that our patients need,” said Hall. Over the past several years, patients with HIV/AIDS have had to seek services in two locations — the infectious diseases and primary care departments. Last spring the Shapiro Ambulatory Care Center opened and now houses the two departments, which the providers saw as a great opportunity for patients to receive care in one location. “We will now have a full and comprehensive continuum for HIV/AIDS case management services,” said Hall, who said that there will now be a case manager within the department of primary care. “The goal is to continue to increase the number of patients that we serve in the new ambulatory space , which combines primary care and infectious diseases into one health care support system.” The grant also will support peer navigation services for HIV/AIDS patients, which enables patients to build a support network to interact with other patients with similar experiences. For more information on BMC’s HIV/AIDS support please visit: http://www.bmc.org/infectiousdiseases.htm Read the Reporter online each month at bostonhaitian.com Plis bagay nan sa nou bezwen yo. Si w se yon manm nan MassHealth e si w gen kesyon konsènan opsyon plan sante w, tanpri rele. Sant sèvis kliyantèl MassHealth la nan 1-800-841-2900 (Malantandan : 1-800-497-4648), lendi a vandredi koumanse 8:00 am rive 5:00 pm. Resevwa chèz machin pou tibebe GRATIS nan NHP. Kòm paran ou vle pou pitit ou an sekirite. Nou kapab ede w fè sa. NHP pral ofri bay tout manm yo chèz machin pou tibebe ak chèz pou mete timoun yo chita pi wo. Kòm yon manm w ap reseva plis bagay: Nimewo gratis pou yon enfimyè ba w konsèy 24 è sou 24 Pwogram pou sispann fimen Ekonomize jiska $130 sou klas pou akouchman Ranbousman $50 pou yon abònman sal jimnastik* Rabè sou kask pou bisiklèt ak pwodwi pou sekirite nan kay la Aksè a youn nan pi gwo rezo founisè asirans sante bon kalite nan Eta a * Nan etablisman ki kalifye. Si w vle jwenn plis enfòmasyon sou gwo benefis nou yo, ale nan nhp.org oswa rele 1-800-462-5449. BostonHaitian.com August 2011 BOSTON HAITIAN REPORTER Page 13 Sobering trip to homeland brings heartache, rewards By Yolette Ibokette Special to the Reporter My trip to Haiti last month was one of the most difficult but rewarding experiences I have ever had. As anyone who has travelled to and from Haiti will attest to, such a trip takes a physical, psychological and emotional toll. I must also admit that it has been a long time since I last visited my native country. I was not prepared for what I experienced. I was a volunteer interpreter for a missionary organization that invites doctors to come to Haiti to treat patients at outdoor clinics. We were in a couple of villages near Cap Haitien. Since these clinics are offered once a year, we saw between 100 – 150 men, women and children every day. We always had to turn people away because we couldn’t see everyone who showed up. The most difficult aspect of the trip was seeing people suffering from various preventable, poverty-related ailments. While I was helping as an interpreter, I wished that I could do more, especially for the children. They stole my heart, these beautiful children. Almost every one of them was malnour- If families manage to survive in Haiti, it is due to the women. Yolette Ibokette, bottom right, is pictured with a group of volunteers from the Evangelical Missionary Project of Par Dieux, near Cap Haitien, during a side trip to the Citadel. Inset, right: Yolette Ibokette. ished, with distended bellies and diagnosed with parasites. Some were handicapped; others orphaned. All were hungry. When I was leaving, some said, “Please take me with you.” It was heart-wrenching to explain why I couldn’t. It was also very hard to say goodbye to Peterson, Lovely and the other children. If families manage to survive in Haiti, it is due to the women. Most are mothers. When asked about the father of the children, the usual answers were: “Se mwen k papa ak manman” (I’m both mother and father) or “Li nan Panyol,” (He’s in the Dominican Re- public). These women dressed themselves and their kids in their Sunday bests in order to come to the clinics. If they don’t have shoes, they don’t come. Some showed up as early as 6 a.m. to make sure they receive a much-coveted number in order to be seen that day. After all, there won’t be another clinic until next year. Many came in the hopes that they and their kids would also be fed, but we couldn’t feed them. Others hoped to receive some items of clothing, but they were also disappointed. Many of these women were thin and looked much older than their biological years. Some care for their children by selling home-made foods or other items on the side of the roads or at the marketplace. Others provide services such as hair-braiding. The women were also selfless and supportive of one another. The doctors insisted on parents bringing their kids in to ensure correct diagnoses and to receive instructions on how to give the prescribed medicines, which we also provided. However, if a mother was working or sick — most parents were mothers— and couldn’t bring in a child, a neighbor or relative claimed to be that child’s mother to ensure that s/he is seen. Yes, they lied, but they saw it as a worthy cause. Perfect strangers also gave up their numbers to a sicker mother or child who arrived after all the numbers were distributed. The women often had their own ailments. Yet they soldiered on, warriors in a never-ending struggle. The night before I left, I told a large group of men, women and children that had come to pray for our safe voyage that I would return soon. I won’t disappoint them. Yolette Ibokette is a contributing editor to the BHR and a monthly columnist. She is originally from Port-au-Prince. LE Mwen an sante, !"#$%&'()*%+,'-,%./0'!,&/,+' ' 12,'!%+,'3,4%+/$,&/ Mwen Kapab FE Tout Bagay. 5!!16789:'91;'6578197( ;,'0%<,'=/%/,>"?>/0,>%+/'#@%A&"=/@B',)*@4$,&/' /"'0,.4'$%&%A,':.%*B"$%'%&#'3@%C,/@B'4%/@,&/=D' 5&&*%.',2,',E%$= 6,#@%/+@B'=4,B@%./2'B%+, (4,B@%./2'B"&/%B/'.,&='F//@&A= '7+,%/$,&/'%&#'$%&%A,$,&/'"?',2,'#@=,%=, G4/@B%.'(0"4'>'4*+B0%=,'2"*+'A.%==,='"&'=@/,' POSIBILITE POU OU AJI !"#$$%&'()*(#*#+(,-#,.#/(0&/(12*%&'(('40++#+(0$($-#( 5#04$-(6#&$#7(30+(#0+*(0&/(,8&9#&%#&$:; 68/)0&(<=207#(5#04$-(6#&$#7( >?@(A87,-#+$#7(B9#C(A87,-#+$#7C(DB(EFGFH >G@IJFFIJF@G(K((333:,8/)0&:87' Ak èd BMC HealthNet Plan. ChooseBMCHP.com Kontakte BMC HealthNet Plan nan 800-792-4355 oswa sou Entènèt. Pou’ w kapab okouran tout opsyon ou genyen nan MassHealth, rele 800-841-2900, Lendi a Vandredi, 8 a.m. – 5 p.m. (TTY: 800-497-4648). Pou’ w kapab okouran tout opsyon ou genyen pou plan nan Commonwealth Care, vizite mahealthconnector.org oubyen rele 877-623-6765 (TTY: 877-623-7773), Lendi a Vandredi, 8 a.m. – 5 p.m. Page 14 BOSTON HAITIAN REPORTER August 2011 BostonHaitian.com In Remembrance of Lenord Fortune, “Azor” By Steve Desrosiers Contributing Editor The old saying is Tanbou frappe, Haitien kanpe —or “when the drum’s struck, Haitians stand!” That’s been the case for us throughout the many years that Racine percussionist Lenord Fortune, or “Azor”, used his talents in music to carve a national and international path for Haiti’s roots tradition. The Island does not lack for talented percussionists but Azor - like his renowned predecessor, “Ti Roro”- could make the drums talk, sing, scream, shout and - sometimes, even whisper. His amazing ability with a hand drum was only matched by his astounding talent as a vocalist. His videos were celebrations of the sounds, colors and movements of the African in Haitians. He set his scenes on Haiti’s lush mountains and its vibrant waterfalls and sung the trials and tribulations of his native land in plain-worded truths. He was a rarity among his kind – a “tambourineur” who was as comfortable in an “all vocals” acoustic setting and equally at peace with the best of Haiti’s electric music traditions. Azor was a musician’s musician who never lost sight of the need to keep his audience at the center of a performance. He could often be found in a circle of artists that included Haiti’s best - Boulot Valcourt, Eddy Prophete, the Widmaer brothers and many more. His technical prowess was such that he completely consumed the percussive space when performing with these heavyweights. In watching this giant of a musician perform one could see that a part of his playing was meant to meet the challenge of a sophisticated arrangement and another was for the delight of his audience. The latter moment often infused with the robust spirit of his fine voice. The world rushed to recognize this talent from the slums of Port-auPrince’s Bel-Air neighborhood. Azor’s recordings were celebrated and honored by the American Smithsonian Institute, he received Japan’s Golden Medallion award and performed on stages all over the Caribbean and in Europe’s major arts centers. It is with sadness that we join in mourning the passing of this great artist. On July 16, 2011, Lenord Fortune, the great “Azor”, succumbed to complications arising from years of struggle with diabetes and hypertension. He was only 46! He died in his native Haiti and was honored with a State funeral. It was just last July that we, at the Reporter, celebrated his accomplishments with a feature story, which we are pleased to re-publish this month. We are lucky to have been among those who celebrated his legacy while he was still alive. Azor’s drum has been silenced! We are tempted to rest, to sit a while and reflect on the triumphant life of this great “Mapou”. Yet, we stand! We are always standing really, because in Haiti the echo of the drum never rests! ••• In 1791, African slaves united at a locale in the North of Haiti known as “Bois Cayman”. There, a fusion of their diverse religious traditions served as the starting point of the Haitian revolution. The African who presided over the meeting– Boukman - both cemented a liberation movement and helped establish the Haitian Vodou tradition. In the span of a decade, Haiti became the first and only Island to liberate itself from several European superpowers through diplomacy and force. The African religious and political traditions that created Haitian Vodou originated from the Bantus of the Congo, Guineans from the Gold Coast, the Senegalese who were of Sudanese and Tuareg ancestry and the Aradas of Dahomey. The spiritual legacy of these diverse cultures is the treasure of Haitians whose ancestors numbered among those who threw themselves before canon balls to aid the cause of their children’s liberation. Although all Haitians benefited from Haiti’s liberation, only a few would enjoy its fruits. The bitter reality today is that the descendants of those who fought hardest to free the Island have only the erudition and legacy of Vodou as a reward. It may seem a small thing but that gift includes a strong spiritual link to their African ancestors, knowledge of their traditional rhythms, dances and metaphysical philosophy, as well as a supernatural resilience necessary to survive poor, abused, unwelcome and dispossessed in a place like Haiti. Vodou musician Leonard Fortune, who is also known by his artistic name, “Azor”, founder of the group “Racine Mapou de Azor” comes from Haiti’s dispossessed. He was born in Bel-Air Port-au-Prince, a lower class neighborhood that has been home to many talented and self taught Haitian artists. Azor was born to a family of singers and performers who based their craft on the teachings and wisdom of the Vodou religion. The family was itself a performing group. By age 12, Azor was already revered as a master Vodou percussionist. Azor sharpened his talent by taking advantage of every opportunity to play percussion. He consistently took part in Port-au-Prince’s celebrated “walking bands” (bands a-pied) Carnival tradition where percussionists and horn players representing their respective “hoods” play and walk for hours through the city’s streets airing vibrant chants and rhythms as dancers and revelers follow. He played Conga in Konpa bands like Scorpio and SS-One. He played for Haitian folklore group Bakoulou for a time. And before starting his own group, he played as a member of Racine group, “Racine Kanga de Wawa” partnering with group founder Jacques Maurice Fortere (Wawa) to bring pure Vodou music out of its seclusion in Houmforts (Ceremonial huts) on the outskirts of Haitian towns to the masses. Azor’s time in Racine Kanga was short but he pursued the quest to bring pure Vodou music to the world by founding his own group, Racine Mapou de Azor. Racine Mapou is probably the first group to professionalize and popularize pure Vodou music for popular consumption. Pure Vodou music consists of what the enslaved Boukman probably heard during the African meeting at Bois Cayman: An orchestra of percussion instruments accompanied by singers airing their grievances in call and response chants. It is a style that starkly contrasts with commercial Vodou bands like Boukman Eksperyans which use electronic instruments, modern song arrangement practices and more to deliver. Racine Mapou’s first release “Samba Move” showcased not only Azor’s fine drum technique but also his sonorous voice. The album earned him immediate acclaim in Haiti for its catchy and truthful chants. The popularity of “Samba Move” led to a first victory for Azor and his group; Haitian Racine was now allowed an official spot in Port-au-Prince’s Konpa-band dominated Carnival tradition. “Samba Move” also earned Racine Mapou international acclaim when the group received Japan’s Golden Medallion (Continued on next page) BostonHaitian.com August 2011 award. The band has since enjoyed the patronage of not only Japan but Mexico, America’s Smithsonian Institute, Martinique, Switzerland and France among many other places. Racine Mapou’s music is all about the preservation of an outcast but vibrant tradition. Mapou’s releases are made for native Haitians and initiates of Vodou who are used to long running “Petro” drumming and an endless stream of African call and response chants. These “arrangements” rely on powerful voices, powerful drumming and heartfelt messages not too dissimilar from those of Haiti’s slaves: “We come from Guinee, we have no mother, we have no father, Marassa Eyo! Papa Damballah show us Dahomey again”. In explaining his band’s name, Azor relates that, “Racine is the rhythm of our culture, while the tree Mapou represents the strongest of all roots, the sacred tree whose imposing roots accommodate the spirits.” Azor is renowned for his work with Racine JOHN C. GALLAGHER Insurance Agency HOME & AUTO INSURANCE Specializing in Homeowners and Automobile Insurance for over a half century of reliable service to the Dorchester community. Mapou in Vodou music however; he has also recorded important works of fusion as a solo artist with Haiti’s best musicians. He has recorded collaborations with Boulot Valcourt of Caribbean Sextet fame, and respected pianist Eddy Prophete in the acclaimed live release, “Kreyol Jazz in Japan”. He has also worked with the Widmaer brothers (founders of Zekle) in numerous international showcases of Haitian music. In this capacity, Azor also serves as the ambassador of traditional Haitian Racine music; one sees the artist attempting to make a case for the compatibility of Vodou rhythms in Jazz and other forms of music. The release that best demonstrates this is “Azor et Ses Amis” a live recording of the artist in Japan accompanied by Boulot Valcourt and Joel Widmaer among others. Azor and his band, Racine Mapou have their work cut out for them. Powerful anti-African sentiment is a lingering legacy of the success of the Haitian revolution. We can recall that before Jazz was respected by “intellectuals” it was called jungle music. Seven albums after the classic “Samba Move”, Azor and the members of Racine Mapou are poised to positively influence the regard the world will someday have for the music of Haiti’s “slaves.” Steve Desrosiers has been contributing editor for the Boston Haitian Reporter. His columns have appeared monthly in the BHR since 2001. BOSTON HAITIAN REPORTER Villarson committed to serve (Continued from previous page) (Continued from Page 8) back.” of kindness. And while At the conference, the doing community service national young profession- is always much more fun als awarded the Boston with company, you don’t chapter with the National have to [be] part of a group Day of Service Award for to serve.” the community health fair As she reflects on her exorganized perience, she on June 11, shares this. by both the “I am alcommunity ways learnservice and ing. I am alpublic health ways trying committees. to improve. “Both comI am always mittees met trying to every other grow. I have week leadlearned how ing up to the to motivate. I event with have learned additional that you don’t outreach always have days that to have all were schedthe answers uled as the all the time. I event drew have learned near,” said Rachelle Villarson how to be a Jennease leader.” Hyatt who co-chairs the What’s Rachelle VilPublic Health committee. larson’s favorite Haitian “There were [about] 200 proverb? hours of preparation for “Sonje lapwi ki leve this event. Through this mayi w. Remember the process, I was able to build rain that made your corn a closer relationship with grow. My aunt used to Rachelle. She [stands] out say it to me all the time. I as a person who is willing think what she was trying to do whatever it takes to to instill in me to rememget the job done. ber where you come from, Ateesha Jackson, co- who you are, how you got chair of the Public Health there, and where your committee agrees that blessings come from.” Villarson stands out as a leader. “She is always willing to step up and lead.” When asked what advice she has for other young Haitian professionals looking to serve, Villarson says, “The best advice…is simple: just go and do it! It doesn’t take much to do one act COME IN AND LOOK AROUND ... YOUR ONE STOP COSMETICS STORE New Accounts Welcome 1471 Dorchester Ave. at Fields Corner MBTA Phone: 265-8600 “We Get Your Plates” BOOKS LEATHER BAGS FRENCH PRODUCTS HAITIAN PRODUCTS 383 Somerville Ave. Somerville, MA 02143 Phone & Fax: 617-776-5829 FRENCH PERFUME CDs, DVDs Compas - Evangelique - Zouk - French - Haitian and African Movies } National Poetry Slam 20 Coming to Cambridge and Boston August 9th - 13th The biggest competition for performance poetry is here! 76 teams of writers from all around the country will fight for the title of champion in the longest week of their lives. They will make you laugh, weep, and jeer the five randomly selected judges chosen to score their art. Will you be there to witness art in motion? For more information visit: nps2011.com Page 15 ‘State of Black Boston’ report unveiled (Continued from Page 9) company in Grove Hall, and a construction company in Roxbury. The report also found that the three districts that cover the majority of the black community – B-2, which includes Roxbury and Mission Hill; B-3, which includes Mattapan and part of Dorchester; and C-11, which includes most of Dorchester – have some of the city’s highest crime rates. “The three districts combined accounted for 50 percent of violent crimes and 28 percent of property crimes reported to the police in 2008,” the report states. “63 percent of homicides in 2008 occurred in these three districts, along with 52 percent of rob¬beries and 51 percent of aggravated assaults.” While the districts have seen declines in reported crime since 2004, each decline is below the city average, according to the report. The report bills itself as a “statistical and analytical snapshot” of the black community and seeks to offer solutions to many of the issues it raises. “It will take a community-wide effort by existing organizations, perhaps new ones, concerned individuals, and all levels of representative government,” the report says. “Ide¬ally, many will take up the challenge and take responsibility for implementing specific recommended action steps or launching an initiative of their own directed at achieving the same goals.” Complete Dell Computer Systems with LCD Monitor and Wi-Fi for $175.00 For the Caribbean Market / Will pack and ship - Includes iTunes Music Player Loaded with Caribbean Flavored Music! (Kompa, Zouk, Reggae, Soca & More.) - CD & Mp3 Player/Converter - Word processing & AntiVirus Software - Flat screen LCD monitors starting at $35.00 - Computer Dust/Clean and Tuneup while you wait $85.00 - CMOS Clock/BIOS Battery change for $25.00 - Memory upgrades starting at $40.00 E-mail: [email protected] Call or Text (617) 322-7022 Page 16 BOSTON HAITIAN REPORTER August 2011 BostonHaitian.com SummerWorks Youth Jobs Program SummerWorks Youth Jobs Program ABCD 2011 Community Awards Dinner Gala! October 27 at the Seaport World Trade Center The Annual Celebration of People and Neighborhoods – Honoring our Community Volunteers for 37 Years! DON’T MISS IT! Call today to reserve tickets, sponsorships and advertising space 617-348-6238 www.bostonabcd.org Give to ABCD HELP US KEEP PROGRAMS RUNNING AT ABCD NEIGHBORHOOD SITES! Please donate to the ABCD Neighborhood Fund to help the programs that support our community in so many ways. ABCD continues to combat proposed federal funding cuts to our neighborhood programs. Please help us stay in place, providing food pantries, fuel assistance, summer jobs, education, elder services and so much more! Your donation can make a difference for a child, a working mom, a frail senior who needs assistance. You can make a donation online at www.bostonabcd.org or send a check to your neighborhood center, cited above. Please call 617-348-6238 for more information! Action for Boston Community Development, Inc. www.bostonabcd.org