Tuesday, January 19, 2010
'HELP HAITI' T-Shirts ON SALE NOW!
EchoChamber is selling these limited-edition 'Help Haiti' t-shirts to benefit the Cine Institute in Jacmel Haiti. 100% of the proceeds ($10 per shirt) go directly towards rebuilding these film schools which were all but destroyed.
These super-cool t-shirts, American Apparel 100% cotton fitted T's , in blue or red and were designed by our very own EchoChamber partners Shruti Rya Ganguly and Riddhika Jesrani. Buy one now to show your support for Haiti and get much-needed dollars to the Cine Institute - At a time like this young Haitians need to tell their stories even more.
Read more about the Cine Institute here.
Sunday, January 17, 2010
A brave soul
As fate would have it, a good friend, journalist Erik Parker, was in Haiti working on a story for VIBE and documenting pre-Carnival celebrations with photographer Daniel Morel on the days leading up to what the UN is now calling the worst disaster it has ever had on its hands. What he captured (above) were moments of pure joy as Haitians danced, sang, and enjoyed themselves freely on the streets of Port-au-Prince.
...Then disaster struck. He was able to get some unbelievable (you truly have to see the devastation to believe it) stuff and is now back in NJ safe and sound, with his family. Here is some raw footage taken from his iphone minutes after the quake hit:
Parker has been documenting the aftermath and recovery/relief efforts as they unfold and you can follow him via Twitter. [As a side note, Parker is one of the kindest people, and certainly one of the best writers and editors, I've ever had the privilege of knowing. He is currently pursuing a master's in journalism from Columbia and if you haven't already read up on his work, get familiar.]
Here's EP's latest message via Facebook:
"I am home and fine. Thank you all for the well wishes. Let's turn that into action for the people there."
Amen.
Saturday, January 16, 2010
A Message from Maxwell on Haiti
My heartfelt prayers go out to all my people of Haiti in the wake of this devastating earthquake.
I was honored to attend an emergency meeting organized by President Bill Clinton on Thursday. It was pivotal to me, and even uplifting. I was in a room with all kinds of incredible people from all sorts of different backgrounds, all working on solutions - artists, financiers, disaster specialists and Haiti experts like Dr. Paul Farmer, the public health specialist who is a United Nations Deputy Special Envoy to Haiti.
Everyone in the room was focused on solutions to Haiti's urgent and mounting problems. Many ideas were discussed that are at this moment being put into action. While the immediate focus is on humanitarian aid and saving lives, the ultimate goal is to rebuild Haiti so that all Haitians can make their country a better place to live for all. I have volunteered to assist President Clinton in any way that I can.
The most important thing I learned was that sending cash is the best way to help right now. The easiest way to do it is through text messaging, but other ways to help include donating to organizations such as the Clinton foundation, Unicef, Red Cross and Wyclef's charity YeleHaiti. There are links to those charities here.
Friday, January 15, 2010
Haiti and Gaza: Understanding Crisis and Resilience
Our dear friend Nitin Sawhney, a researcher at MIT and ardent activist, is currently in Gaza and wrote this wonderful blog post comparing it to Haiti. Stay safe, Nitin, and keep blogging!
Haiti and Gaza: Understanding Crisis and Resilience
Watching online coverage of the situation in
I can only imagine how families in
No place was safe in
I met an old woman in Beit Hanoun, still sitting outside her destroyed home having lost much of her family, living in a tin shack with only goats and bare essentials to sustain her. Leaving her after the interview, I tried to kiss her hand to express my grief for her (I had forgotten that this is simply not appropriate in the Arab world); she gently pulled away trying not to make me feel too awkward about that moment, but gazed deeply at me as if I were her own. Many such stories are happening in
Mond and I visited Mustafa, the 9-year old in Bait Hanoun again to the delight of his grandmother and friends. We spoke to his father about his eye surgery and tried to arrange a meeting with his local doctor to gain more details on his possible treatment abroad. I remembered to bring my small digital video camera and proceeded to show Mustafa how to use it. We were immediately surrounded by all the kids and elders in his neighborhood; its not easy teaching with everyone else giving their own instructions on where to shoot. Mustafa gradually warmed upto the challenge and started mastering the complex controls on this little device, learning to frame his shots, zoom and capture photos and videos of children playing marbles along the roadside. I showed a few other kids how to use the camera, but asked Mustafa to be their trainer from here onwards. He took on that responsibility easily despite his shyness.
The next day I took Mustafa along with me to one of my meetings at the
Mustafa had to leave early for a doctor’s appointment to have his eye examined. I subsequently posted a “cause” on Facebook to highlight his condition and help raise some funds for his surgery abroad: http://www.causes.com/causes/431052/about
Though I wonder with all that’s happening in
As part of my efforts to help establish a youth media program in
This spirit was exactly what we ought to promote in our own workshops with kids. I then went on to describe a story I heard from my meeting with Dr. Eyad Al-Sarraj, a noted psychiatrist in
After the session many trainers came up to me and insisted that we invest ourselves deeply in initiating such a program together in
Later that evening after a long and intense day, I met up with a friend at a seaside restaurant for dinner and we talked over the soothing sounds of the tide over sunset. As the chilly breeze swept into the outdoor patio and gas lamps turned on, I began to realize another reason why people in
You can follow Nitin's Gaza blog here.
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
Haiti - Artists for Peace and Justice
Dear Friends and Members of Artists for Peace and Justice--
As you undoubtedly already know, a devastating 7.0 earthquake has struck Haiti. Its epicenter was just 10 miles outside Port-au-Prince, where our friend, doctor and community organizer Father Rick Frechette runs two pediatric hospitals, street schools in the slums, an abandoned children's home and so much more. We've spoken to him and the news is terrible. Walls have tumbled like cards at his beautiful new children's hospital. Their old hospital, still functioning, has collapsed completely. The orphanage has also sustained considerable damage, but no lives were lost there. We don't know about any of the street schools we sponsor. It is even causing an old atheist like myself to pray. There is chaos everywhere. The sky has been described as filled with dust from the thousands of collapsed homes. Preliminary estimates are already placing the death toll at well over 100,000.
If you are asking yourself what you can do, they desperately need emergency cash - any amount. Get it to us, and we will get a hundred percent of it into the hands of Father Rick and his team, to help dig people out of the collapsed hospital and schools, to buy emergency medicine, to supply badly needed water and food, to help fly in doctors for the wounded children, and so much more.
To make an donation, please go to www.
To wire a payment immediately, please use the following information:
All my love,
Paul for the board of APJ
Help Haiti
Reports of the damage the earthquake caused are starting to trickle in. CNN reports that Haiti's capital Port-au-Prince has been all but destroyed, and Doctors Without Borders claims that virtually every hospital in the region is non-functional.
BBC News explains why the 7.0 magnitude quake was particularly devastating to a place like Haiti and, most important, MSNBC provides a list of relief organizations sending aid to Haiti. Please PLEASE make a donation today. We suggest Doctors Without Borders given the hospital crisis in Port-au-Prince, but there are dozens of orgs doing great work.
Stay tuned for more updates and please post any information you have in the comments.
Peace and safety be with our friends in Haiti.