Miami Herald

In Haiti, reunited family carries on 2 years after quake

- BY TRENTON DANIEL

CALEBASSE, Haiti — The U.S. missionari­es arrived in a beige bus in the days after the earthquake, promising a better life for the children of this village in the mountains above Haiti’s capital.

The Idaho-based Baptist volunteers said they wanted to rescue the boys and girls they believed were orphaned by the Jan. 12, 2010, quake. But their effort to spirit away 33 children to the neighborin­g Dominican Republic failed when they were stopped by police and then jailed on kidnapping charges. It later came out that all the children had parents.

Two years on, residents of Calebasse describe a tempered sense of hope for their returned children even as they struggle against hardship. A humanitari­an group has provided the families modest aid, and UNICEF has helped the children by building new schools.

“We still have problems but the children are able to eat and go to school,” said Lelly Laurentus, 29, a computer repairman who’s been unable to find work except as an occasional cab driver.

Laurentus, whose two daughters boarded the beige bus late that morning in January 2010, thought he was sending them to a better life.

A U.S. missionary accompanie­d by a Haitian transla- tor had circulated among the homes of Calebasse, offering to bus children across the border following the quake, which officials said killed 314,000 people and left more than a million homeless. In the Dominican Republic, the children would find shelter and a school, the missionary promised.

Laurentus couldn’t resist the offer. His home had just collapsed in the earthquake and he was forced to sleep outside.

Everybody wanted a seat on the bus, a ready-made escape from the desperatio­n that followed the quake, he said.

Neverthele­ss, Laurentus felt ashamed for sending away his daughters, Leila, now 6, and Soraya, 5. A man should be able to support his family, yet he was powerless in the aftermath of the quake.

But the children never made it to the Dominican Republic. Police took them into custody and handed them over to SOS Children’s Villages Internatio­nal, a global group that aims to keep families together by providing support.

The Haitian government and foreign relief groups reunited the children with their natural-born parents in March 2010, a month after the “orphan rescue” grabbed internatio­nal headlines amid an outpouring of legitimate efforts to help quake survivors.

The 33 were among more than 2,770 children returned to their families after the quake. At the time, UNICEF and other groups feared that child trafficker­s were taking advantage of the chaos and smuggling children out of the country.

Charges against all but one of the missionari­es were dropped and they returned to the United States. Laura Silsby, the group’s leader, was convicted of arranging illegal travel under a 32-year-old statute restrictin­g movement out of Haiti, but was later released and returned to Idaho.

SOS housed the children for a month as the government sought to locate their parents.

When their daughters were returned to them, Laurentus and his wife, Manette Ricot, 29, were given money from the organizati­on to pay this year’s school tuition along with food like spaghetti, rice, oil, milk and sardines.

The leg up amounts to about $1,400 total, said Karl Foster Candio, a Haiti spokesman for SOS.

Ricot earns some money as a tailor when she can find the work, and her husband drives a cab part-time.

“Even though the tuition is paid for, life is still heavy for us,” she said. “After two years, we’re fighting to survive, because everything was destroyed. It’s like we’re starting over.”

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