A New School in the Slums of Port-au-Prince, Haiti

Artists for Peace and Justice (APJ) is thrilled to announce the opening of the first free middle and high school to serve the children of the slums of Port-au-Prince, Haiti. On October 18, 2010, 50 grade seven students were welcomed into their new classrooms at The Academy for Peace and Justice. The school is managed by pioneering doctor and priest Father Rick Frechette and St. Luc, a program that provides education and meals in the poorest areas of Haiti.

A fundraising effort founded by Oscar-winning writer/director Paul Haggis and friends in 2008, APJ has been working towards this day for more than two years. While education is the priority at the school, food, drinking water and medical care are also being provided to every student-making the campus a much-needed source of comfort and security.

“Haiti has, by far, the lowest enrollment, completion, and literacy rates of any country in the Western Hemisphere,” says Haggis. “Up until this point, if you were a child born in Cite Soleil or surrounding slums and you were lucky enough to go to school-which maybe 20% of kids were-you could go as far as grade six, and that was it. Then you were out on the street, with almost no chance of getting a job or making a decent living.”

APJ hopes to change this by making higher education accessible to the children from the slums. “No child will ever be turned away from the Academy because they don’t have the money,” says Haggis. “Father Rick has found that education is valued more if it’s earned, and so many of the families will ‘pay’ for their child’s tuition by picking up trash or plastic bags.”

The Academy is fully dependent on private donations to APJ from individuals, corporations and organizations. “We are thrilled to be partnering with We Are The World Foundation, which is funding the Quincy Jones/Lionel Richie Music Academy,” says Haggis. The music school is currently in the design and planning stages, with the goal of breaking ground in the next few months.

The students at the Academy for Peace and Justice were selected from APJ-supported street schools and St. Luc primary schools. In addition to the required Haitian curriculum, the school will provide additional programs in music, art, film, computers, as well as vocational training in agriculture, accounting and medical support. Each class is expected to have between 250 and 400 students for a student body that will grow to roughly 2,800 over the coming years (additional students may be enrolled in arts and vocational programs). When construction is complete, the school will utilize solar and wind energy, and include an amphitheater, basketball courts and an edible garden.

The Academy of Peace and Justice is not only giving the youth of Port-au-Prince brighter futures but, because the campus is being built by a team of Haitian architects and construction teams, the local economy is experiencing a boost and a new group of skilled workers is being created. Even the school’s uniforms are being made on campus at the vocational school.

“There is an urgency to help Haitians rebuild their country,” says Dr. Reza Nabavian, executive director of APJ. “We strongly believe that education is the key to a sustainable recovery of this devastated nation and that this school will serve as a best-practice model for the ongoing education initiatives in Haiti.”

Major contributors include: Simon Baker + Rebecca Rigg, Javier Bardem, Josh Brolin, Jackson Browne, Gerard Butler, Jim & Kristy Clark, Daniel Craig, Russell Crowe + Danielle Spencer, Penelope Cruz, Clint + Dina Eastwood, Gale Anne Hurd, Ryan Kavanaugh, Nicole Kidman + Keith Urban, Diane Lane, Susan Sarandon, Lehka Singh, Ben Stiller, Barbara Streisand and Charlize Theron, and Amy Pascal & Gary Martin and the employees of Sony Pictures.

Enhanced by Zemanta

Update from Fr. Rick Frechette in Haiti

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Hello Friends,

After driving by night to Kennedy Airport January 12th, and flying to the Dominican Republic January 13th, Conan and I arrived to Haiti this morning in the helicopter of the President of the Dominican Republic. This ride was due to the reputation of NPH in the Dominican Republic, NPH Italy, a reputation enhanced in the DR by Andrea Bocelli not long ago.

Our first tasks were the medical evacuation of one of our American volunteers, the medical evacuation of one of our Cuban doctors and the evacuation of the body if one of our American visitors. The search still continues in the rubble for another missing American volunteer, Molly.

We also had 18 funerals today. One for John who works at our St Luke program. We miss John very much. He often stopped to at my door to tell me the milestone of his developing baby, which delighted him no end. John ran our computerized language lab. Another was for Johanne’s mother. Joanne is one of the Directors of the St Luke program. All the others were of unknown people who were sadly rotting by the wayside.

Other sadnesses…the death of Immacula, our only physician assistant, who worked at our huge outpatient side of our hospital. The death of ALL but one of Jacques’ brothers and sisters, the death of the husband of Jacqueline Gautier as he was visiting a school which fell and all the students (all died), the death of our ex-pequeno Wilfrid Altisme who was in his 5th year of seminary for priesthood. Other stories of deaths of people who are dear to us keep coming in.

We spent the rest of the time managing the countless people with serious and severe wounds, coming to our hospital. We are doing our best for them, under trees and in the parking lot with ever diminishing supplies. We will work throughout the night and beyond. No stores are open, no banks are open. Diesel is running out. Will be out in two days if we don’t find a solution, which will mean no power at all. The hospital is without water since there is some broken line between the well and the water tower.

Structural damages to the hospital seem superficial at first glance, but about half the outer perimeter walls have fallen. The old hospital in Petionville is in ruins, and teams of workers, led by Gilles, and been digging for Molly non-stop around the clock.

WE HAVE NO INTERNET. OUR PHONES DO NOT WORK. IF A CALL DOES GET THROUGH WE CAN’T HEAR OR BE HEARD. Robin has internet access through a satellite. I asked her to send this message for me, and to read my emails and answer them as best she can for now.

Please continue to pray for us. We pray for you too.

Fr. Rick Frechette

See also: http://abcnews.go.com/Video/playerIndex?id=9570839

Please consider a donation to help Fr. Rick help the people of Haiti: Please make checks payable to PASSIONIST MISSIONARIES.

Passionist Missionaries Inc.
526 Monastery Place
Union City NJ 07087-3398
Tel: 888/806-6606
E-mail: DLisotta@cpprov.org

Donate on-line by clicking the button below.
The link for our Donate Now will redirect you to Caring Habits, Inc. (CHI) which is the credit card processing company for The Passionist Missionaries website.

Enhanced by Zemanta