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This water reservoir
was built in Tite Place in a record 2 weeks,
with the help of the local population. The
33,000 gallon tank will supply drinking water to
15,000 people living in 8 villages on the dusty
plains 6 kms away. Currently, the inhabitants of
these dry coastal villages walk up to 3 hours
every day to fetch drinking water.
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AMURT has
focused on capturing water previously wasted,
and bringing it to nearby communities where
systems of reservoirs, basins, and water
stations help conserve and distribute it more
efficiently. This photo shows the installation
of water lines near Source Chaudes
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This is the
first drinking water fountain AMURT built in the
marketplace at Source Chaudes. Since then, many
villages have sent delegations to AMURT
requesting the innovatively designed fountain to
be constructed in their own villages.
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AMURT together
with the World Food Program are constructing
roads linking previously isolated mountain
villages with the plains. The road project has
proven to be extremely popular. This particular
section of road between Laobe and Tite Place is
2 kms long, and traverses steep ravines and
rocky mountain slopes.
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The completed
road between Laobe and Tite Place
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A storage area
in Source Chaudes for newly-manufactured
bio-sand filters. Over 1,000 families have
installed these filters in their own homes,
enjoying improved health as a result.
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Following
Hurricane Jeanne, which hit Haiti in October 2004, AMURT
sent a team to northwest Artibonite, thirty-five kilometers
north of Gonaives, to provide cooked meals to the hurricane
survivors. With food provided by the World Food Program, we
opened five centers feeding over 2,000 people daily,
primarily children and the elderly. The program lasted 7
months, and benefited 8 of the villages hardest hit by the
Hurricane.
Given the deprivation of this area, we decided to commit to
a long-term development program to help bring hope where
there was little. Our surveys of the village of
Point-de-Mangles indicated that 60% of the youth had
relocated elsewhere, looking for opportunities that were
non-existent in their native place.
AMURT has since undertaken the following programs:
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Rehabilitation of existing water supply systems
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Repair and
construction of roads
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Setting up
of local workshops to manufacture and install domestic
bio-sand filters
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Reforestation, watershed management and organic farming
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Rehabilitation of salt mines
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Construction of new irrigation canals
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Set up and
support of village cooperatives lending seeds and tools
to farmers
Establishing a village base
Our first priority was to move into one of the villages to
show our commitment to the area. AMURT believes that
development occurs best when people enter into a dialogue
that leads to mutual trust and respect. The leaders of
Source Chaudes kindly provided us with two buildings, an
abandoned soda factory and a smaller house that serve as a
residence and office respectively. Every day we receive
visits from many people in the area and also from the
occasional chicken! A recent volunteer from Italy had this
to say about our village base:
Women coming from neighboring villages would pass by AMURT’s
“headquarters” on their way to the market riding their
donkeys. They would stop to check us out: “How are you
doing?” “When are you coming to our village, to do
projects?” they would ask. Students organized in small
voluntary associations came with nicely prepared proposals
for social projects: latrines, a radio station, potable
water. Teachers would come to promote their schools. All
these people saw AMURT as a way to realize their own
projects and dreams and as an inspiration to imagine new
ones.
Working through committees
In order to provide more ownership to the community, AMURT’s
policy is to work through committees once, of course, the
original consultations have been made with the local leaders
and opinion makers. We provide training to committee members
so they are better equipped to undertake project
implementation. This strategy has so far proven successful.
Recently, the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), one
of AMURT’s major partners, provided us with an unsolicited
donation of black beans, seeds and tools for the seed banks
we helped set up through the local committees. According to
FAO, AMURT’s project was one of the few projects undisturbed
by the recent political upheavals in Haiti. Our
beneficiaries have ownership of the project, and know that
if they steal anything, they are stealing from themselves.
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AMURT has
established a regular system of community
meetings and information forums to gather input
and involve the local population in the
management of its projects. Such a grassroots
involvement has been crucial in building a
strong support for all initiatives, and ensuring
their sustainability over time. This photo shows
a community forum in Tite Place. |
Water, the source of life
Between July 2005 and March 2006, AMURT worked hard with the
committees of eight villages to improve water supply and
water quality, with the following results:
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Established a bio-sand water filter production facility,
building and installing 1,050 bio-sand water filters,
and benefiting 8,500 community members.
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Built
1,800 meters of new irrigation canals
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Rehabilitated seven water catchment systems
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Completed
eleven public water fountains, five washing facilities,
six public bathing facilities, and two public toilets,
benefiting 4,700 people.
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Built
three water reservoirs, benefiting over 20,000 people.
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Installed
3.8 km section of pipe linking 5 communities to
previously inaccessible water sources.
The bio-sand
filters have proven to be very successful, as they purify
water for drinking and other domestic use. Recently, a
delegation from the village of Lagon walked more than 14
miles to submit a request for filters to AMURT. Following
discussions, an assessment visit to the area, and a training
seminar, AMURT has begun an experimental filter production
operation which is managed by a local committee, with the
objective of further decentralizing the program. Karen, our
filter program coordinator, had this to share with us:
“We walked to Lagon, taking a scenic rocky path winding
through gorges passing small beautiful villages. I forgot my
water bottle, but somehow all I had to do was to ask in
every village whether they had one of our filters. People
would immediately lead us to the nearest house, and the
homeowners would proudly offer us their water, and even some
home-cooked food. The water was delicious, and I never got
sick in an area where water-borne sickness is the number one
threat to human health and life.”
Enthusiasm for trees
The Artibonite area has suffered from years of uncontrolled
clear-cutting of trees, primarily to sell as charcoal. This
has resulted in a barren landscape with subsequent soil
loss, gully erosion and dust storms. AMURT’s agronomists
have set up three tree nurseries and provided environmental
training to the villagers. The program has been very
successful with 25,000 fruit and shade trees planted in
private yards, and along ravines, roads, and water channels.
Less than 4% of the trees have perished. A further 32,000
tree seedlings are growing in preparation of the next
planting campaign.
One of our volunteers had this to say about a participant in
the reforestation program:
One old man, with a couple of months of school education in
his entire life, when asked to explain why he wanted the
trees, looked at me like I was a mentally retarded child,
then exhibited a patient smile of a few spare teeth and
said, “For the shadow.” And then, with a broad gesture
embracing the surrounding dusty hills added, “Because they
are beautiful.” As if it was obvious. And it surely was.
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Celistene, from
the village of Figuet, posing in front of the
coconut tree which he received from the AMURT
nursery in Tite Place. While AMURT focused its
first stage of its reforestation on individual
homeowners, the subsequent phases of the program
emphasized community scale projects such as
roadside planting and watershed protection. In
its third stage (from April to September of
2006) the project will create community forests
protecting the water sources of 5 villages.
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Economic Revival
The World Food Program is changing its strategies in Haiti,
seeking to promote domestic production of agricultural
products, rather than importing them. For example, the WFP
spends an estimated $10 million dollars a year importing
Canadian salt into Haiti. Now, the WFP wants to invest this
money in increasing local capacity. AMURT is one of WFP’s
Haitian partners in this program, developing the salt mining
industry of the coastal Artibonite area. We are currently
helping fifty salt mine owners rehabilitate their
hurricane-damaged mines. In the next phase we will establish
a pilot project to introduce the “rational” method of salt
production, and finally we will set up an iodizing factory.
The Future (in the Villages and the Capital)
The Canary Island (Spain) Municipal Fund has recently funded
our women’s programs in Port-au-Prince, focusing on
creativity (dance and crafts), economics (embroidery skills)
and hygiene (latrines).
AMURT is committed to working with the people of Haiti into
the foreseeable future to help them live out their dreams
for a decent life, which should be everyone’s birthright.
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