Oman Daily Observer

Life lessons for Haiti youth

- AMELIE BARON

In the hills of Cabaret, western Haiti, locals and young volunteers from the capital Port-au-Prince prepare cement, stationed between the wooden wall of Pierre Salnave Saint-Felix’s new home, and the crumbling mud wall of the shelter he has survived in since 2010. Unable to afford surgery for glaucoma, Saint-Felix is blind and prevented from breeding livestock. The earthquake in 2010 turned his life upside down: his home destroyed, he had no choice but to settle in this mountainsi­de shelter, exposed to the elements. “This is not a house, it is like being outside because the wind and the rain come in here as they please,” the 62-year-old explained in a fragile voice. “Look at the state of the walls today, less than two months after a friend came to repair them... it’s a never-ending fight,” he added, touching it with his fingertips.

Prioritisi­ng his daughter and three grandchild­ren, who share a thin mat on the floor, Saint-Felix’s health has suffered. Day by day, he is losing the use of his legs — but hearing the young people mixing cement gives him hope. In Haiti’s remote mountain villages, youth-led nonprofit Techo is helping vulnerable families — like Saint-Felix’s — build a decent home.

The NGO, which works in 19 Latin American and Caribbean countries, is using its usual model of building temporary homes to tackle Haiti’s extreme poverty head-on. “Techo works to build temporary homes that communitie­s can improve in the future, but we know that here in Haiti, these transition­al units will likely be permanent,” explained Pablo Bocco, Techo’s director in Haiti.

“Therefore, we are building cement floors, the structure is obviously anti-cyclonic and anti-seismic, and the wood used is treated against termites.” “It is a slightly bigger model than those we have built in other countries, and we have added a front gallery because, socially, it’s something that Haitians appreciate,” he said with a smile.

The organisati­on prides itself on listening to the needs of communitie­s, and allowing them to participat­e in the constructi­on of their future housing if they are able. “We like to give responsibi­lity to the communitie­s,” Bocco says. “We tell them, ‘Why wait for the government to do something, if we can find a solution by coming together?’”

Since 2010, 2,500 Haitian families have benefitted from the programme. In the hills of Cabaret, 10 small wooden houses have been built — but the impact spreads much further, to the capital 30 kilometres away.

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