Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

In Haiti, living and dead very close

Relationsh­ip helps hide real toll of big earthquake

- By Mark Stevenson and Evens Sanon

LES CAYES, Haiti — Haiti’s unusually close relationsh­ip between the living and the dead has helped hide, in part, the huge toll of last weekend’s earthquake: People in Haiti want to be close to their deceased relatives, to the point of sometimes burying them in their front yards.

Haiti’s Civil Protection Agency puts the number of dead from the quake at almost 2,200. Questions had arisen about how such a large number of dead could have been handled or buried so quickly, but amateur burials and overflowin­g private funeral parlors may explain where all the bodies went.

The magnitude 7.2 earthquake injured more than 12,000 people, destroyed or damaged more than 100,000 homes and left about 30,000 families homeless, officials said. Schools, offices and churches — and even funeral homes and cemeteries — were demolished or badly damaged.

The quake also brought the living and the dead even closer in a nation which, like Mexico, celebrates a Day of the Dead holiday. In the countrysid­e outside the city of Les Cayes, some of the front yard burial crypts were broken open by the force of the quake, exposing coffins inside.

Government hospital morgues, like the one at the Les Cayes’ general hospital, are almost empty. That’s because, as the hospital’s director admits, they haven’t had working refrigerat­ion at the morgue for at least three months due to problems with the electrical equipment.

Instead, local residents know they have to take deceased to one of the dozens of small, modest private funeral homes in the area.

There, at least air-conditione­d rooms mean the bodies won’t decompose while relatives struggle to come up with enough money to meet burial costs that can run around $500, a fortune for people in the hemisphere’s poorest country.

Jean Eddy Montezima runs one such parlor, the St. Jaques funeral home in Les Cayes, on a shoestring, and he is overworked and fed up. As he spoke with journalist­s, another rickety, informal “ambulance” — actually just an SUV with a folding stretcher in the back — pulled up with another body, a woman who died of natural causes at a local hospital.

That’s good, because Montezima says he is no longer accepting the bodies of quake victims. He has 15 corpses crowding his small, air-conditione­d rooms. The woman’s body was carried into the parlor and relatives promised to come back later to make arrangemen­ts.

Montezima says he has taken in the bodies of at least 50 quake victims since Aug. 14 at his small building, where a noisy generator growls 24 hours a day to keep air conditione­rs running so the bodies won’t decompose.

“A lot of people may not have the money to bury them,” Montezima said. “If the families don’t come back, I will probably have to do a mass grave with them.” Such a solution is little short of a sacrilege in Haiti, but the beleaguere­d funeral home director has little choice.

“In some cases, the bodies were in such bad condition, we had to bury them immediatel­y,” he said, adding he can’t hand that task off to the government.

Eventually, though, the dead and the living have to part ways.

Serge Chery, the head of civil defense for the Southern Province, which covers Les Cayes, has the painful task of deciding, along with other authoritie­s, when to send in heavy machinery to clear the rubble, though he acknowledg­es it will “inevitably” result in churning up more bodies. Chery said that in the Les Cayes area alone, 300 people are still missing; many are probably still under tons of broken concrete and brick.

“We are planning a meeting to start clearing all of the sites that were destroyed because that will give the owner of that site at least the chance to build something temporary, out of wood, to live on that site,” Chery said, noting that “it will be easier to distribute aid if people are living at their addresses, rather than in a tent.”

He stressed the need to start engineerin­g inspection­s of buildings to find out which are safe. “If we want the schools and banks and hotels to start working, we have to give people confidence, because they don’t want to go back into those buildings now,” Chery said.

“In Haiti, it is something cultural; families are attached to their dead,” Chery said. “Culturally, even with cholera or COVID-19, people want their relatives to be buried in a nice grave.” But due to the mangled condition of many quake victims, many were buried immediatel­y.

That attitude is on display at the Marc Dor Lebrun funeral home, which he touts as the city’s cleanest and best equipped. Here, stainless steel refrigerat­ed body cabinets line one room and an air-conditione­d preparatio­n room lies nearby. But with the bodies of 17 earthquake victims, and 22 others, already filling his facilities, Lebrun says he cannot take any more.

For the families who can’t meet the costs of burials, Lebrun said he won’t turn them away or set a fixed price.

“This is the situation,” he said, referring to Haiti’s grinding poverty. “If a family can’t pay, we’ll help them out.”

 ?? FERNANDO LLANO/AP ?? People line up for food aid Friday in Camp Perrin, Haiti, six days after a 7.2 magnitude earthquake hit.
FERNANDO LLANO/AP People line up for food aid Friday in Camp Perrin, Haiti, six days after a 7.2 magnitude earthquake hit.

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