Forum Haiti : Des Idées et des Débats sur l'Avenir d'Haiti


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Forum Haiti : Des Idées et des Débats sur l'Avenir d'Haiti
Forum Haiti : Des Idées et des Débats sur l'Avenir d'Haiti
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Gen bon travay ki ap fet an Ayiti wi !!!! Chapo ba Chavann Janbatis !

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Gen bon travay ki ap fet an Ayiti wi !!!! Chapo ba Chavann Janbatis ! Empty Gen bon travay ki ap fet an Ayiti wi !!!! Chapo ba Chavann Janbatis !

Message  Sasaye Mar 19 Aoû 2008 - 13:37

Mobilizing Against Hunger in Haiti
August 18, 2008
Salena Tramel, Grassroots International


OneWorld.net note: In notoriously hunger-stricken Haiti, a grassroots movement is revitalizing deforested land, conserving rainwater, and leading discussions on the root causes of the ongoing food crisis.

"Beginning early April, Haiti was gripped by a nation-wide mobilization to protest high food prices, reaching a crescendo on Thursday the 10th, as thousands of people took to the streets," writes Mark Schuller for the Americas Policy Program. Haiti is the poorest nation in the Americas and also struggles to cope with the region's highest rates of malnutrition, child and infant mortality, and HIV/AIDS. Up to 40 percent of Haitians are unable to purchase adequate food, says the OneWorld UK country guide on Haiti (last edited in February 2008).

The Peasant Movement of Papay (MPP), "Haiti's largest and oldest peasant organization, works in the Central Plateau to organize peasant farmers and farm workers and mobilizes them to be strong advocates for change and have a voice in Haiti's development," writes the U.S.-based group Grassroots International, a partner organization of MPP.

To combat food insecurity, MPP provides local small farmers and community members with lessons in environmentally sustainable agriculture, alternative income generation projects, cooperatives, integrated health care, and leadership training.

Dispatch from Haiti: "We Are Forming Ourselves"
Posted on August 13th, 2008 by Salena Tramel

"N'ap forme" are the first words that I hear after stepping into an open-air training center high in Haiti's Central Plateau after a nail-biting plane ride across the mountains in a four-seater Cessna. The training center is run by the Peasant Movement of Papay (MPP), a Grassroots International partner.

N'ap forme is the Kreyol way of saying we are training, literally, we are forming ourselves.

Chavannes Jean Baptiste, the longtime leader of MPP and a fixture in the Haitian fight for resource rights, greets me as he would a member of his own family, even though it is the first time we have met face-to-face.

The center is buzzing with activity - peasant leaders from all but two of Haiti's 10 departments have travelled long distances to bring their people's concerns to the table and figure out solutions to the root causes of economic hardship in their broken country.

I take long walks and motorcycle rides around the area, visiting some of the many projects that the MPP has pursued in their 35 years of organizing - during nearly half of which they have been a partner of Grassroots International.

Even the land itself impresses me, with young forests and farms growing in what used to be a wasteland. Like much of Haiti today, the Papay region was so deforested that people were unable to live off the land and were defenseless in the face of natural disaster.

Now Papay is rich with various fruit and forest cover, a humble paradise at the crossroads of hardship.

A new friend from the MPP tells me, "It is us who have to undertake the work necessary to create such a place." His dream is to look out over the mountains in 10 years and see Haiti as it once was.

On the way to a local water source, where one of the projects supported by Grassroots International is in full swing, we stop to talk to the mayor.

His Kreyol is thick and dense, but I understand the immediate importance of our solidarity with the community in conserving rainwater in this untypically arid corner of Haiti. Peasants come to work here, creating a sort of terracing with intricate rock walls in order to manage mountain runoffs. This allows rainwater to permanently pool, and fish are abundant.

Trees are being planted everywhere. People tell me that while some international groups haphazardly plant random seeds, MPP agronomists are constantly studying which trees are native to Haiti and making every effort possible to recreate the natural landscape.

Back at the center, everything happens in the spirit of community and sustainability. We drink local coffee, eat from the plentiful gardens, and compost waste. Peasants grow vegetables in recycled tires and plastic tubes. Farmers come from far away to bring seedlings back to their lands that will both grow into trees and provide food for their families. A women's group busily harvests medicinal plants and a young people's group creates a new banana field.

This is movement building and food sovereignty in action.

I join the training of peasant leaders for their afternoon meetings that run late into the night. Their analysis of the internal and external forces that plague Haiti is astonishing.

We make lists on an old blackboard of macro-economic policies aimed at trade liberalization and privatization of resources that have sent Haiti on a downward spiral. It feels like one of my graduate-level seminars on the politics of globalization.

The rain is so loud that we can barely hear one another. We huddle together and keep exploring - keep believing that another Haiti is possible.
N'ap forme - We are forming ourselves.

To read more about Haitian grassroots movements against food insecurity, visit Grassroots International
Sasaye
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Message  ed428 Mar 19 Aoû 2008 - 16:44

Did Mr. Jean- Baptiste ever give an account of what he did with, or how he spent the million of dollars he received from the Ford Foundation?

ed428
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Message  Sasaye Mar 19 Aoû 2008 - 16:50

I have no idea about Ford Foundation or whoever.
But from many reports Mr. Jean-Baptiste is doing a fantastic job with his MPP organization.

He has something to show for whatever money he received.
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Message  Rodlam Sans Malice Mar 19 Aoû 2008 - 21:10

mwen soutni sa Sassaye di ya.siman Chavannes jean baptisite pat pase damiens li pa ka genyen tout prestij sa yo.se politik panye krab la depi m pa ka soti nan panye ou pa dwe soti tou.map ba w tout non pou m avili w.Komatiboulout.
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