DePaul University brings microfinance program to Haiti

DePaul University is collaborating on a microfinance program designed to increase investment in the country’s economy, DePaul Magazine writer Ruhan Memishi reports. Working with Vincentian organizations worldwide, DePaul hopes to lay the foundation to “give Haitians seed money to create and develop small businesses that will make a big difference.”

The program, called Zafen, is set to launch in April. Zafen means “our business” in Haitian Creole.

Vincentians are members of a Roman Catholic community inspired by the life and work of St. Vincent DePaul, a 17th century French priest who spent his life working among the poorest of the poor. Haiti is the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere and the seventh poorest in the world.

“DePaul, the Haitian Diaspora (Haitians and Haitian descendants who live outside Haiti) and Fonkoze, Haiti’s alternative bank for those who are not served well by traditional banks, all are playing key roles in the effort,” Memishi reports.

Fonkoze is the most successful microfinance institution in Haiti and is closely aligned with the values of St. Vincent, according to Laura Hartman, Vincent de Paul Professor of Business Ethics, who is spearheading DePaul’s role in the initiative.

The project is designed to increase investment in the Haitian economy and create jobs by building an Internet pathway between the international Vincentian family and the Haitian Diaspora. Hartman says businesses and projects that hold the best promise for bolstering Haiti’s economy will receive funds generated through donations.

The Internet pathway is a Web site that offers online tools for people to contribute money to specific sustainable projects, Hartman explains. The site also will provide Haitian entrepreneurs online access to funding, allowing them to overcome challenges posed by illiteracy, language barriers and access to technology. All projects, no matter their size, will be reviewed by a steering committee before being posted on the Web site.

A team from DePaul’s College of Computing and Digital Media designed and built the site. Dean David Miller and Associate Dean Martin Kalin wrote the code that built the site from scratch, and CDM faculty and students are testing it.

The site will be fully functioning in April. In the meantime, those interested in contributing to the program can find out how to do so now at zafen.org.

Chicago family buffeted by Haiti’s pain

Yakini Ajanaku-Coffy and Jean-Paul Coffy are teachers and musicians. They’re also both Haitian and Chicagoan. They own and operate a music-based pre-school called La Grande Famille in the city’s Kenwood area.
Like many Haitians in the U.S., they have loved ones affected by the Jan. 12 earthquake. Not knowing the fate of his parents and brothers and sisters amid the destruction and rubble, Jean-Paul went to Haiti to see for himself. Here’s been there since Jan. 22, negotiating for health care services and basic necessities for his mom and dad, who have no one else to depend on. He’s torn between family in Haiti and family in Chicago.
We interviewed Yakini, a wonderful singer, and she told us their Haiti heartache story. For more on this family’s saga, view and listen to the video above.
You can also read e-mails exchanged between Yakini and Jean-Paul and get updates on their family through their blog, Help Coffy.

Chicago black journalists discuss Haiti news coverage

Haiti media coverage

The National Association of Black Journalists-Chicago will host a panel discussion on news coverage of the earthquake in Haiti at its monthly meeting Thursday, Feb. 18. The meeting also will raise money for earthquake victims.

The discussion will begin between 6-6:15 p.m. following the Association’s business meeting at Red Kiva, 1108 W. Randolph, Chicago.

Stephanie Shonekan, a Columbia College professor, will moderate the discussion of current and past media coverage of the Haiti earthquake. The panelists are:

  • State Sen. Kwame Raoul
  • Evanston Ald. Lionel Jean-Baptiste of the Haitian Congress to Fortify Haiti
  • Patrick Brutus, co-founder of Haitian-American Professionals Network
  • Mary Mitchell, Chicago Sun-Times columnist
  • Marielle Sainvilus, Illinois State Department spokesperson
Proceeds from the event will go to the Haiti relief effort. Members attend free, but are encouraged to make a donation to help the victims in Haiti. Non-NABJ-Chicago members are asked to donate $5 (and any additional amount) to Haiti relief.

“We Are the World”–just for Haiti



Love this song. It’s timeless. Loved seeing Michael Jackson spliced in. Thanks to all the artists who participated.
Video is available for download on iTunes for $1.99.

Idaho Baptists showed un-Christian behavior toward Haitians

“The people of Haiti understand what these folks were trying to do—-steal babies. Whether it was to peddle their flesh or to bring to “the Lord” in Idaho these babies were stolen plain and simple and I am very glad that they are being charged and pursued.”–E.R. Brown, commenting on nytimes.com

Haitian officials on Thursday filed child abduction and criminal conspiracy charges against 10 Americans who tried to take 33 Haitian children out of the country last week. The Americans, most of them members of a Baptist congregation from Idaho, had not gotten the Haitian government’s consent to transport the children across the border into the Dominican Republic.
The group, led by Laura Silsby, a businesswoman and self-described missionary, claimed they were rescuing Haitian children left parentless after the Jan. 12 earthquake. The Americans, after being questioned, admitted they did not seek approval to remove the children from Haiti. Officials confirmed that several of the children have at least one living parent.
The Idaho Statesman reported that Silsby “had a history of failing to pay debts, failing to pay her employees and failing even to follow Idaho laws.” (That doesn’t sound much like Christian behavior to us.)
The Statesman went on to report: “Silsby has been the subject of eight civil lawsuits and 14 unpaid wage claims. The $358,000 Meridian house at which she founded her nonprofit New Life Children’s Refuge in November was foreclosed upon in December. A check of Silsby’s driving record revealed at least nine traffic citations since 1997, including four for failing to provide insurance or register annually.”
The mother of three, Silsby, 40, was CEO of an Internet business, personalshopper.com, and was named eWomenNetwork’s international businesswoman of the year in 2006.
Now, Silsby waits in a Haitian jail facing a potentially extended legal proceeding. If convicted, she faces three to nine years in prison.
Judging from comments posted on several Web sites we checked, Silsby and her group aren’t getting much sympathy for their rescue mission. And rightly so, we think. From the first reports, everything about the Baptists’ story seemed suspect to us. Claiming that they didn’t know they needed permission to remove the children was the first strike against them. They never said which orphanage in the Dominican Republic they were supposedly taking the children to yet they supposedly had gotten permission by the Dominican government.
And, now with revelations about Silsby’s personal troubles, her concern for Haitian children seems even less sincere and well-meaning. Child trafficking and not child rescue come to mind. Silsby and her group weren’t helping Haiti, they were helping themselves. And that’s not Christian charity by any means.

Public sentiment is not on her side if one scans the hundreds of comments posted on The New York Times. Here are a few:

“As an adoptive parent, these right wing evangelicals make me furious and disgusted. Now that the facts are coming out – thanks CNN – it’s quite obvious that the ringleader was only using a trip to Haiti to “rescue” children as a ploy to make money. As reported on CNN tonight, her home was foreclosed Dec. 24th, her business is in shambles, she has many lawsuits against her, and the “brochure” they were handing out in Haiti to desperate parents and caregivers is full of lies. She was only looking for a way to pay her bills via donations and to be seen as a compassionate Christian. Shame on her! I hope she rots in jail. These unscrupulous “christians” have now done irreperable damage to hundreds of thousands of parentless children around the world who wait for permanent families.”

“Somebody’s likely said it by now, but you gotta wonder how these same religious zealots and their crackpot defenders would have reacted if a few Haitians had taken a busload or two of New Orleans children to Haiti in the wake of Katrina.”

Tell us what you think of the Baptists’. Send your comments to: editor@sendhelp2haiti.com.