Fr. Rick Frechette, “The cholera is way up again . . .”

Passionist Fr. Rick Frechette prays over the body of a person who succumbed to cholera the night before, during morning Mass at the chapel at St. Damian’s Hospital in Port-au-Prince. “The cholera is way up again,” said Fr. Rick, who oversees the children’s hospital. “The place is filling up, my God.”

Can you help?

A suffering child can receive life saving treatment for as little as $22.  This includes administering the drug azithromycin as well as hydration IV fluids.  A very small price to pay when the life of a helpless, suffering child is at stake.

Help us today.  Simply go to the donation page and make your gift to save the life of a child for as little as $22.  Or help save that child’s mother for an additional gift of $20.

Please make checks payable to PASSIONIST MISSIONARIES.

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

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

 

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The Tragedy of Haiti is Still With Us

Cholera is now an epidemic.

We all held our breath as the news reported that Tropical Storm Emily was heading for Haiti.

Thankfully, the winds were not at hurricane level, but the storm dropped a great deal of rain on this already suffering country.  One of the casualties of the rain was a cholera treatment center.

Cholera in Haiti has reached epidemic proportions and the time to help is now.

A suffering child can receive life saving treatment for as little as $22.  This includes administering the drug azithromycin as well as hydration IV fluids.  A very small price to pay when the life of a helpless, suffering child is at stake.

Help us today.  Simply go to the donation page and make your gift to save the life of a child for as little as $22.  Or help save that child’s mother for an additional gift of $20.

Whatever you decide to give, we are very grateful.  Our Father Rick Frechette is in Haiti, working tirelessly to bring help and hope to the many who still suffer…who remain without permanent homes…who cannot find enough food to eat.   Now that the spread of cholera is almost out of control, we need to give him the supplies and the support necessary to help.

We are counting on you…please give whatever you can, but make your gift today.

Please make checks payable to PASSIONIST MISSIONARIES.

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

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

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Universal Healing

Dear Friends,

Here in Haiti, our flowers never faded or died, our trees were never naked or subject to the harsh winds of winter, nor did the birds ever stopped singing.

Maybe your flowers will soon return, popping up through the melting snow. Your trees will begin to show a hint of green before they are magnificently cloaked once again in full leaf and to those same trees will the robin soon return.

Together we rejoice, both in the tropics and to the north and south, that sun’s light and warmth, the flower’s beauty and the bird’s melody, tell of God’s glory and faithfulness!

We have had a different kind of chilling, a different kind of stilling of life. Here we have known the harsh illnesses of the body and the harsh winters of many hearts in mourning, and the harsher winters still of the stunned soul.

Yet at Easter we rejoice in the universal healing won by Our Lord’s resurrection. For the body, the mind, the spirit and for all of creation!

The signs of the Risen Christ are foretold. The blind will see, the lame will walk, the mute will sing.

We in Haiti rejoice for the children saved from the rubble of the earthquake, the devastation of cholera, the relentless poverty and homelessness.

We have seen the blind and the mute advance in our St. Joan School, where we set our sights high for these children, even seeking ways to help them learn computers and Internet!

The Fr. Wasson Angles of Light team strives to help children move beyond the horrible memories of January 12, 2010 and aim toward a brighter future.

The dedicated staff of Kay St. Germaine have worked tirelessly to fit and refit limbs, and to help children walk with help, toward their own homes and toward tomorrow.

Our hospital has introduced neurosurgery, saving small children who would otherwise be ravaged by the cruelty of hydrocephalus. Instead, they face a bright future thanks to a technique that is anatomical and avoids the use of shunts.

We have so many examples of God’s greatness at work. You have yours as well. With shared faith we give thanks to God.

At Easter and always we hold you in prayer, and wish every blessing from God for you and your families!

Fr. Rick Frechette CP

Please consider a donation to help the Passionists in their ministry to people living in poverty: Please make checks payable to PASSIONIST MISSIONARIES.

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

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


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Francisville – New Work City

Here’s a video about Francisville, a project sponsored by NPH Italy – Fondazione Francesca Rava under the direction of Passionist Father Rick Frechette.

The project seeks to:

  • Provide jobs and training to people with disabilities and to boys and girls once out of the orphanages and the street schools of Port au Prince — Haiti,
  • Create sustainability, in order for the project to be able to maintain itself. The income could be also useful to help the development of other charity activities and Father Rick’s relief activities like construction, water delivery, “tap tap” transportation service,
  • Empower human resources by creating a professional school which will form secondary level students with high standards and the possibility to get diplomas recognized abroad. The idea is to guarantee access to foreign universities in Europe and USA.
  • At the ?training center people are trained “on the job” Programs include: mechanical workshop, bakery (bread and pizza), pasta maker, soap factory, leather (for sandals, bags and belts), and others.
  • Francisville will be visited by the project “OUT OF THE MUD” on weekends, by the children coming from the street schools in the slums, so that they can realize what they can achieve and how their future can be brighter out of the mud and violence of the slums. Father Rick had this idea to inspire the orphans to work toward a better future, by showing them that they could be the next students of the school in Francisville.
  • Hopefully, the Francisville project will be soon be relocated to a new campus in an area of 20.000 squared meters in Tabarre, in the outskirts of Port Au Prince — Haiti. There, Francisville will create all possible synergies with the nearby Saint Damien Children’s Hospital and Kay Germain rehabilitation center, in terms of manpower, utilities, services and security.

Please consider a donation to help the Passionists in their ministry to people living in poverty: Please make checks payable to PASSIONIST MISSIONARIES.

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

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


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Another Dead Man

For a few minutes he was just another dead man.
That was the easiest way for me.

For me?  Strange.
He’s dead, and somehow the focus is on me.

It all happened so fast. I was in Cite Soleil
Waiting for Isaac, Rene and Conan. We were about to meet with  the community leaders to make three community centers,  in three different parts of Cite Soleil, with cybercafé, adult education, clinic and housing.

I was standing, lost in thought and planning, and some tough guys said to me
“You should stand somewhere else, Mon Pere.”

I didn’t pay attention to them. I am used to their tough ways.
“I will stand right here, thank you. I am waiting for someone.”

Suddenly, a car came down the road, six of the tough guys drew their guns and surrounded it, and the driver and the car were kidnapped.

I stood in disbelief. It had happened so fast. Suddenly again, another car, this one for a non-profit organization, came down the road. I could see a white woman in the passenger seat and a Haitian driver. I saw them well.  I was standing right on the road.

Guns were drawn again. The white woman looked at me. I thought, “she sees me standing here, unafraid, as if I am part of this gang.”

I shouted at the gunmen, “Back off!  Leave them alone!”
The driver burned rubber, and squealing tires drove over the curb. They aimed their guns to fire at the escaping vehicle, but they were looking me. No shot was fired.  Arnaud said,
“Those people were lucky you were here. They didn’t shoot the car because of you.”

The tough guys, who I do not know, came to me and said, “Go stand somewhere else.”

Before I could even answer, a truck full of people heading to Cape Haitian came along. Guns were drawn again. The thieves took all the luggage, bags and packages.

It seems the car that got away a few minutes earlier told the police down the road what happened. Now the police were racing toward us, open fire, shooting left and right. They chased the thieves, who split up to run. When they split up, the population was no longer afraid of them, and large crowds chased them like lions chase a deer they were able to separate from the herd.

They were throwing stones to kill them. One thief ran in front of me, toward our St Patrick School. The crowd followed. The thief turned toward us to shoot at the people hurling stones.

Next to me was a man making pots. He heated old scraps of aluminium and melted them, then poured the molten metal into clay moulds. His children went to our St Patrick school. He was worried about them. He heard the shots.  He stood up from his pots and started to cross the street to reach his children. Just as the thief was turning  to fire his gun.

Three shots.

Two entered his belly. One whizzed by my ear.
He was down on the ground. I ran to him, calling Gaston on the phone, who could not get into the area because of the stampedes of people running away.  I told him to find any way to make his way in, that there was a man down, and we had to rush him to our hospital.

Before I could finish any sentence, I could see he was dead.

Just another dead man.
It was easier that way.

Until I took our my holy oils, and anointed his forehead, still warm, and furrowed with concern for his children.

Until I anointed his hands, rough from the work he did  to provide for them, and stained with blood and clay.

He was just another dead man, I told myself, as his friends and fellow pot-makers came, sullen and shocked, calling out to him. “Jean Louis! Jean Louis!”

It was easier that way.

I led them in prayer. “Jean Louis, go to God. Follow the light, the blessed light. God, free him from confusion and doubt, from fear and worry, forgive him any sin. Let him find you, and let Yourself be found by him.”

Now he wasn’t quite just another dead man.
Not as I watched the grief of his friends, heard their laments,
Not as I was pierced by the wailing of his approaching wife.
Not as I watched the children he had set out to gather and protect, now gathered in front of their lifeless father, fully unprotected. Their braided hair, their school uniforms so clean, dad on the dirt, covered in blood, already ants and flies galore.

He wasn’t just another dead man at all,
as I walked with his friends who wanted to show me his unfinished pots, the tools he had put aside just minutes before, because he heard shooting and thought for his children.

No, he wasn’t at all just another dead man, as I went to his house to console his family, to sit quietly in the face of their grief, and to offer help to bury him.

Another prayer. Another blessing.  “Strength, faith, hope, love, may they be deep in you and with you.”

Why were my hands shaking?

Because Jean Louis is not just another dead man. He is my brother. And yours. And his death is our loss.

Please pray for Jean Louis and his family in this moment of anguish. I thank you for it.

Fr Rick Frechette CP
Port au Prince
February 21, 2011

Please consider a donation to help Fr. Rick: Please make checks payable to PASSIONIST MISSIONARIES.

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

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


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