Haiti Earthquake Anniversary

Here’s an update on the situation in Haiti one year after the earthquake. This video highlights the work of Nuestros Pequeños Hermanos. If you have made a donation to help Fr. Rick in Haiti, these are the programs you have helped make possible.

Fr. Rick Frechette, C.P. is the Regional Director, Caribbean, Nuestros Pequeños Hermanos (NPH). The Passionists partner with NPH to support the work of Fr. Rick in Haiti.

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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Sun City Picture House – Haiti

SUN CITY PICTURE HOUSE TRAILER from David Darg on Vimeo.

.Here’s a new video about the work of Passionist Fr. Rick Frechette and partners in Haiti.

To learn more about Fr. Rick Frechette or to find out how you can help, visit: http://www.thepassionists.org/Haiti.html

Gaudete, in Domino semper!

Gaudete, in Domino semper!
Rejoice in the Lord, always!

These words that begin mass today, the third Sunday of Advent, give rise to the name “Gaudete Sunday”. Today is unusual in that it is one of only two Sundays of the year where the priest wears pink vestments.

Since the normal color for both Advent and Lent is purple, (for contrition, woundedness and preparation), we well might consider pink a “softer purple.” Its not the gold or white of the usual rejoicing, but rather there still is an element of the drudgery. And yet a happy escape from it too. “Christmas is close, the Savior is near, take a moment to breath, don’t weaken.”

I am up earlier than planned, at 1 am, because of the death of a child in our cholera camp. Our camp is called “St Philomena”, after Sister Philomena Perreault who helped us in Haiti for so many years. As we light the pink candle of the Advent wreath in a few more hours, we will also remember one more life that was snuffed out by a dreadful disease, and the tears and crying of the mother. We are all the poorer for this death, for every death.

Purple is also a part of the black and blue of the healing injury, the bleed under the skin. It’s a good color to represent the people of Haiti this year who have received more than their fair share of life’s blows.

Back to our camp. You have to try to imagine the 16 huge tents, spread out on gravel, extension chords bringing feeble power everywhere. Two washing machines under a tent, filled by buckets, dumping into a big dug hole, wash endless loads of sheets stained with deadly diarrhea. Twenty to thirty people a day are carried in, floppy bodies, by hook or by crook, even in these days of riots they somehow break through barricades. Rivers of Ringers Lactate flow through our endless tubing to revive them. Most do well. In fact, of almost 900 people who have come to us sick, only 15 have died of cholera. This is sad, yet we are encouraged that most people by far have fought and done well. None of our staff have contracted cholera after these many weeks of intense work, nor have we tracked it into our St. Damien or St. Luke hospital.

Still, our supplies run out, we can’t manage too much on site for emergencies, resuscitation, special medicines or tests, tensions run high, tight nerves in strained doctors and patients make for a good bit of drudgery. But, we put Tang in our re-hydration drinks, a Christmas tree and other lights try to make the nights a little festive, we have a big TV for those who are able to sit up and watch it and forget life for a while, and we try to keep everyone supplied with wonderful Christmas presents: a bar of soap, some toothpaste, a toothbrush, a towel.

I mentioned in a previous message the many medical challenges: the pregnant woman with cholera, the baby born in a cholera tent, the patients with heart disease who need loads of fluid fast and whose hearts can’t handle it. We had another unusual challenge: a prisoner with cholera was brought at midnight. The police wanted us to handcuff him to his cot. We refused. It is cruel to cuff a sick patient to a hospital bed. Crueler still to chain someone with massive diarrhea  to a bed.

So the police kept watch instead. During the following afternoon, the prisoner said to the police he had to go down to the toilets, and off he went with his hospital gown and carrying his IV bag high in the air. And he kept going, and going…and that was that, right out the gate. He escaped in a hospital gown with his IV in hand.

You have read of the riots these days. I spent two afternoons in the middle of them, driving around town picking up people we needed to help us. Imagine the problems riots bring in addition to being riots. You have 16 portable toilets for cholera-diarrhea and the honey truck can’t pass through the streets to empty them. It’s not pretty. Your doctors and nurses can’t get to work. Stores are closed for days, in case you need more toilette paper, soap, laundry detergent, food, Tang, or cash.

The way we got around the city was something. I made an arrangement with 20 thugs, for a day’s pay. They were leaders in the riots in our part of the city. Three went ahead of my truck on motorcycles, and 17 rode with us in the back. We drove through the burning and barricaded city, while they pushed barricades out of the way and tangled with anyone who tried to stop us. It worked so well, I also did it the next day. It’s how we got essential staff to the hospital and the tents. Needless to say from the burning tires and debris we were covered with soot, so hard to get out that even after three showers we looked like we were wearing mascara.

As if this weren’t trying enough, the skies turned gray for two days, and drizzled lightly, not enough to put out the fires but enough that our hundred of washed sheets wouldn’t dry. And when the sun finally did come out, so did small hornets, by the thousands, and they covered us. Sounds unbelievable, but it’s true. Ask Patty Rowland, who is back for a second round of 10 days to help at St. Philomena.

Purple?  Yes.
Just the right color.
Pink today?
Yes, very welcome.

Gaudete? Rejoice?
Yes, We still find the way.
I trust you do too.
Hope is the key, and it really does spring eternal.

As always, count on our thanks and prayers, in exchange for yours. Thanks for the help that keeps us going and not doing too badly. Merry Christmas as it gets very near.

Fr Rick Frechette CP

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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St Philomena, pray for us!

Thanks to the presence of  teams from Haiti, Italy, Germany and the USA to help at our cholera camp, I was able to sneak out of Haiti today for three days to visit my father.  As I left, Wynn was drilling a catheter into the leg bone of a near dead child, as a last effort to help Gabrielle and Pierre give fluids to this small victim of cholera and malnutrition.  Michel walked to a corner of the room with head bowed, as it is very hard to watch all this suffering.  Poverty is already a terrible reality, and cholera is a terrible disease. We are running out of corners to hide in.

We call our cholera tent center “St Philomena Hospital”. We don’t mention cholera so as not to stigmatize the people there. We forbid pictures to protect their dignity. Signs leading to it say “rehydration center”. It’s amazing how fast we put up this facility that is made of 16 huge tents with the capacity of 17 beds each. Imagine setting up a water system, laundry, logistics, beds, electricity, a charting system, a supply tent, a simple meal service so fast for a 130 bed field hospital…even with Christmas lights to brighten things  up a bit. We have set up 130 beds so far, but as I mentioned the capacity so far is about 250 beds..

Just the supplies are an enormous challenge. We need on an average 12 liters of IV fluids for each adult patient. As you can imagine, our field hospital  is far from perfect and a den of frustration,  but up to now we have received over 400 patients and half of them would have died without this help. We have only lost 14 people, and even this with deep regret.

And it gets complicated. I went over to the tents at 3am the other day for a baby  born in the cholera tents,  and I could not really bring the mom and babe anywhere else so as not to spread cholera. But the baby developed respiratory problems due the complete absence of abdominal muscles, and the mother kept bleeding persistently after the delivery of the placenta. So we had two emergencies in the middle of a disaster at 3am. Some of the other cholera patients are very sick with TB, malaria, typhoid, and problems that only surgery can correct. It is an impossible situation.

But overall, it is very rewarding to see people rebound with IV fluids given vigorously, after being nearly dead. It is also disheartening to see people visiting them in the tents fall sick to the same disease. The deaths are especially hard to take. There was a young mother with her two young children, all three sick. The mom, whose name was Hortense, died but the kids were in the next tent improving, with no idea their mom had died. Serge is 5 and Gilbert is 4.

We had a funeral mass for Hortense in our small chapel. An aunt dressed up the two small kids and brought them over to the funeral. We were all heartbroken at the scene. Gilbert looked like quite the little man, with an ill-fitting blue suit his family had found for him somewhere. He stood at attention as I rang the bell for mass, and stared reverently at his mother. It reminded me of the small John Kennedy when we watched the funeral of President Kennedy on TV many years ago. Then I realized all the ways it was nothing like the Kennedy funeral. Horace was on a floor in a simple body bag with flowers on it, Godson was in a suit that didn’t fit. The world was not watching.

I sat with the children at their bench  instead of in the priest chair, I read the gospel to them with them on my lap, I explained to them the beauty of the incense and prayers, and had them look around at all us us,  true friends to them, who tried to save their mother and now shared their sorrow and faith.

During the mass, I also decided to adopt them. Not legally, of course, but I told them I want them to visit me the first Monday of every month. We will have something to drink and talk a bit, I will treat them to ice cream now and then and help their aunt with school and food bills. I hope Hortense rests a little bit more in peace knowing I will watch over her children as long as I am alive.

The official numbers refer to 40,000 sick and 3,000 dead, with the expectation of 400,000 sick before there is a decline. We have had less admissions over the past few days. Maybe because of election turmoil. But other centers report the same decrease. The high hope is that there is already a decline. But cries from missionaries and healthcare workers around Haiti continue, as they beg for help and supplies.

Thanks for your prayers and donations to help. A special thanks to those who have come to help. Sorry most of us cannot get too often to the office or the email. We are encouraged by your encouragement to us, and your prayers.

Fr Rick Frechette

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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Cholera and Riots: An Update from Fr. Rick Frechette

Dear Friends,

It is closer to midnight than not, and I just came back from our cholera tent hospital after delivering more IV needles that get drilled directly into the bone, and after trying to find more gasoline for the generator. The inter osseous IV catheters have saved the lives of the most dehydrated patients. The moon is nearly full, directly over head. You need to bend your head fully back to see its beauty. Full, like God’s eye watching us. Full, like God’s heart holding us.

Our tents also glow, like the moon. Five of them so far, with 16 cots each. Four more tents are dark, but vigilant and ready. The lit tents look pretty from far away, but they house quite a scary struggle. Most come away victorious. if not limping.

In the short time since we opened, 167 people have found help here, all with bad diarrheas, most of them consistent with cholera. Ten have died, and of these three were already dead when they reached our gate. That’s almost a 6% death rate. Let’s aim toward zero.

We have buried many dead that are not our own: thirty on Thursday, and we will bury another fifty in the morning, all from the public morgue. Destitute dead, for whose bodies and souls we offer a last and essential care. The word care is from a Latin word, cura, which also means treatment. It is a last treatment, a last good treatment, both for us and for them.

A few nights ago, when we had the funeral of one of the children that died of cholera, the children from our St Louis Home came to the mass and sang. These are children who are victims of the earthquake. In the candlelight chapel, small victims of the earthquake sang for small victims of cholera. Life is a circle, whose center is everywhere.

Even though there are violent manifestations around the city, related to politics and related to an out lash against homelessness, joblessness, hunger and cholera, we have quietly distributed 5,000 bags of rice over these days to reassure decent people who are poor and stressed that it is worth holding out for better days.

For those who like to know this, it takes about $22 to save the life of a child from cholera. From sources I have seen online, cholera can have as much as 50% fatality rate in untreated cases. I think you will agree that $22 is not very much money to keep a child alive and give her back to her mother. That includes the treatment with azythromycin and about 5 liters of IV fluid on average and re hydration salts.To keep mom alive is even a better deal, about $20. Mom needs almost twice as much IV fluid, but the doxycycline mom needs is much cheaper than azythromycin. Let’s splurge. Its the right thing to do.

There are many organizations doing heroic things in Haiti at the moment. We are very proud of our staff, our volunteers, visitors and young adults we have raised from childhood, who are doing heroic things as well. We especially remember Fr Wasson whose charism we carry on, and ask his help from heaven. We are fully confident we will see better days.

As always, thanks for your prayers and your help!

Fr Rick Frechette

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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