haiti recovery
Haiti Recovery
International Child Care Ministries sponsors more than 8000 young people and supports 50 schools in Haiti. Along with others, the children, families and schools we assist were impacted by the January 12, 2010 earthquake. This video describes the work of recovery that has occurred since then.
Sean Penn talks Haiti recovery
Anderson Cooper talks to Sean Penn about Haiti's progress and obstacles following the 2009 earthquake.
UB NOW: Geographers Help Haiti Recovery
The University at Buffalo (UB) Landscape-based Environmental System Analysis & Modeling (LESAM) and the Chester F. Carlson Center for Imaging Science at the Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) partnered with UB's MCEER-Earthquake Engineering to Extreme Events and ImageCat Inc. in the collaborative National Science Foundation (NSF) funded Partnerships for Innovation (PFI) project entitled the "Information Products Laboratory for Emergency Response" (IPLER). This team of collaborators used RIT's Wildfire Airborne Sensing Program (WASP) sensor in Haiti at the request of IPLER with additional funds provided by the World Bank to provide airborne and satellite imagery for a spontaneously created Global Earth Observation-Catastrophe Assessment Network (GEO_CAN) of more than 500 volunteers - students, engineers, and scientists in more than 20 countries - to learn and contribute their time for a crowd-sourced building damage assessment. The results of the 4-day damage assessment campaign that covered more than 350 km2 are accessible through the MCEER and ImageCat. hosted Virtual Disaster Viewer (VDV).
Amy Wilentz Analyzes Haiti Recovery Efforts Two Years After Earthquake
Amy Wilentz is the author of The Rainy Season: Haiti Since Duvalier, Martyrs' Crossing, and I Feel Earthquakes More Often Than They Happen: Coming to California in the Age of Schwarzenegger. She is an award winning journalist and writer and her work has appeared in many publications including The New York Times, Time magazine, and Mother Jones. She is a former Jerusalem correspondent for The New Yorker, and a contributing editor at The Nation magazine and at the Los Angeles Review of Books. She also teaches at UC Irvine. She spoke with Uprising host Sonali Kolhatkar on January 12, 2012, on the second anniversary of the devastating Haiti earthquake. This video was recorded by Martina Steiner.
Haiti's Recovery
Javier Ciurlizza, Crisis Group's Latin America Program Director, comments on some of the factors affecting Haiti's recovery from the 2010 earthquake, including police reform and the proposal to reestablish a national army.
Haiti Recovery Report
Congresswoman Maxine Waters (D-Calif.), a strong advocate for the Haitian people in the US Congress, spoke on the House floor in support of HR 1016 - Assessing Progress in Haiti Act. The bill requires President Obama to report on the status of US post-earthquake relief, recovery, reconstruction, and development efforts in Haiti. May 10, 2011.
Haiti Recovery Bogged Down 6 Months After Quake
Six months after Haiti's devastating earthquake, hundreds of thousands of people remain homeless, living in refugee camps in the capital Port-au-Prince. (July 12)
Update on Haiti Recovery Efforts
President Clinton provides an update on the Clinton Foundation's efforts in Haiti to combat the cholera outbreak, provide shelters for the hurricane season, and continue efforts to help Haiti build back better.
Clinton Sees Progress in Haiti Recovery Effort
Former President Bill Clinton arrived in Haiti Monday with much needed medical supplies. He said the focus needs to be on keeping the sick and injured alive, and then look towards rebuilding the devastated nation. (Jan. 18)
Extra: Dr. Farmer's on Haiti's Recovery
Dr. Paul Farmer, who has been working in Haiti for nearly three decades, talks about the country's difficult recovery. His organization, "Partners in Health" runs 15 hospitals and clinics in the country.
Riz Khan - Haiti's recovery
Six months after a devastating earthquake struck Haiti, killing almost 300000 people and leaving 1.5 million homeless, signs of recovery seem few and far between, and billions of dollars of pledged foreign aid has yet to make it to the struggling country. What is the status of Haiti's recovery six months after the quake and what more needs to be done?
The Role of Voodoo in Haiti's Recovery
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Tavis Smiley's Video Blog - Haiti's Recovery | PBS
Tavis reflects on his conversation with Wyclef Jean and discusses the importance of not losing focus on Haiti. Check out Tavis Smiley on PBS. For more information, see www.pbs.org
US bishops outline proposals for continued Haitian recovery
Washington DC, Jan 13, 2011 / 01:09 am (CNA).- On the one-year anniversary of the Jan. 12, 2010 earthquake that devastated Haiti's capital, three committee chairmen at the US bishops' conference have outlined concrete steps to help the troubled island nation's recovery efforts. The three bishops --Bishop Howard J. Hubbard of Albany, Archbishop Jose H. Gomez of Los Angeles, and Archbishop Thomas G. Wenski of Miami-- made their proposals as they marked the first anniversary of the earthquake that killed 250,00 Haitians and left much of Port-au-Prince in ruins. A million residents of Port-au-Prince remain homeless, with many still living in emergency tent housing. Catholic Relief Services told CNA on Jan. 11 that the recovery was proceeding slowly due to a lack of infrastructure in the dangerously overcrowded city, which is still filled with rubble from collapsed buildings. Bishop Hubbard, chairman of the US bishops' Committee on International Justice and Peace, acknowledged the slow pace of progress in Haiti. He noted that recovery was "particularly challenging" for a country that has long faced "grinding poverty and its effects" in addition to the natural disaster and a subsequent ongoing cholera epidemic. Foreign aid, he said, needed to target Haiti's long-term needs and help the country to develop its own capacities. To this end, he urged the US Congress to reintroduce legislation similar to last year's "Haiti Empowerment, Assistance, and Rebuilding (HEAR) Act." A bill ...
Haiti Reconstruction Business Dialogue (Part 1 of 3)
Secretary of Commerce Gary Locke and Haitian Minister of Tourism Patrick Delatour give remarks on private sector involvement in rebuilding Haiti at the Haiti Reconstruction Business Dialogue event held at the US Department of Commerce in Washington, DC on April 20, 2010. (Part 1 of 3)
Rise_Up_Haiti.mp4
We at jobbro thank Esalaah. FYI the ending is a proverb in Kreyol - 'A borrowed drum is no good for dancing'. This is symbolic; jobs need to be created in a economic climate that is not reliant on donor assistance, and to show the importance of self worth, ownership. The proverb in clear, if you borrow a drum, the owner may just want it back, and in turn the dancing stops. Jobbro want to keep the beat going, and to hear the new tune of success. Please go viral and post, Jobbro needs the support and you are helping with Haiti's recovery.
CNN: Bill Clinton on Haiti reconstruction
Former president Bill Clinton talks specifics on Haiti reconstruction, including aid, economics, and rubble removal.
University of Chicago Haiti Recovery Team
In the week of Feb. 7, 2010, 22 volunteers from the University of Chicago Medical Center traveled to Haiti to help administer medical care to people injured and displaced in January's earthquake. On Feb. 6, the volunteers met for a preparation session and talked about their reasons for traveling to Haiti and the reactions of their families. For more, visit sciencelife.uchospitals.edu
Bill Clinton: Haiti Recovery Will Pick Up
Former President Bill Clinton said in an interview with the NewsHour's Judy Woodruff on Wednesday that rebuilding Haiti after the earthquake is taking a long time because housing construction is time-consuming, but things should pick up in the next few months, with a housing expo slated for October. View a preview excerpt of her interview.
MaximsNewsNetwork: HAITI RECONSTRUCTION FUND, BRAZIL & WORLD BANK.mpg
MaximsNewsNetwork: 12 May 2010 - THE WORLD BANK: Washington, DC - At a ceremony at the World Bank in Washington DC, Brazilian diplomat Antonio de Aguiar Patriota signed the 55 million dollars over to the Haiti Reconstruction Fund. The World Bank acts as the Funds trustee. SOUNDBITE (English) Antonio de Aguiar Patriota, Secretary-General, Ministry of External Relations, Brazil: This is probably the most ambitious, strongest manifestation of solidarity from Brazilian people ever. Manifestation without precedent we are glad to be here today. World Bank president Robert Zoellick lauded the Brazilian donation, saying it is a testament to the importance of multi-lateralism and neighborly support.SOUNDBITE (English) Robert Zoellick, President, World Bank: Brazils leadership, in supporting Haiti, also underscores an important feature of our multi-polar world where merging powers are taking on new responsibilities to assist those still struggling with major development challenges. Haiti is benefiting from Brazils experience and from its growing prosperity. The Haitian Reconstruction Fund will provide resources for recovery and development. The aim is to help the Haitian government longer term, by offering financing for future investments and support its budget needs. SOUNDBITE (English) Ambassador Raymond Joseph, Haiti, United States: We think that Haiti cannot do it alone, but with the help of Brazil first that Haitians are abroad all the time in soccer. I think we are going to ...
USAID Administrator Shah Delivers Remarks on Haiti Recovery
USAID Administrator Rajiv Shah delivers remarks on the Haiti recovery effort as the six-month anniversary of the earthquake approaches, at the National Press Club in Washington, DC on June 18, 2010. [Go to www.state.gov for text transcript and more video.]
MedShare Volunteers Sort Medical Supplies for Haiti Recovery
MedShare volunteers sort and pack medical supplies to prepare shipments for developing countries. In response to Haiti's earthquake, this particular group came together to pack supplies in support of Haiti's recovery efforts.
Haiti recovery: Overseas aid
United Nations, New York, 29 May 2010 - UN staff reflect on the work of the overseas rescue teams. Haitian people accept foreign aid while discussing how to help themselves. UN staff describe their experiences in the aftermath of the Haiti Earthquake on January 12th 2010. www.haitistanding.org
Brazil is First Country to Contribute to Haiti Reconstruction Fund
Brazil became the first country to contribute to Haiti's reconstruction fund, donating 55 million US dollars to help rebuild after the devastating January earthquake. At a ceremony at the World Bank in Washington DC, Brazilian diplomat Antonio de Aguiar Patriota signed the 55 million dollars over to the Haiti Reconstruction Fund. The World Bank acts as the Funds trustee. Antonio de Aguiar Patriota, Brazils Secretary-General of the Ministry of External Relations. 3 55 This is probably the mostglad to be here today. World Bank president Robert Zoellick lauded the Brazilian donation, saying it is a testament to the importance of multi-lateralism and neighborly support. Robert Zoellick, World Bank President 3 51 Brazils leadership, in supporting Haiti, also shows..growing prosperity. The Haitian Reconstruction Fund will provide resources for reconstruction, recovery and development. The aim is to help the Haitian government longer term, by offering financing for future investments and support the countrys budget needs. Raymond Joseph, Haitian Ambassador to the United States 3 59 We think that Haiti cannot do it alone, but with the help of Brazil first.I think we are going to get there. More donors are expected to sign their contributions to the Haitian Reconstruction Fund in the coming weeks.
Haiti recovery efforts by Mercy Ships
Mercy Ships answers when a 7.0 magnitude earthquake hits Haiti. Our Mercy Teams have carried vital medical and orthopedic supplies and even power generating equipment to aid the ongoing revitalization of this devastated region.
Ground Work : Recovery after Haiti's earthquake
We travel to Port-au-Prince, the capital of Haiti, to find out how The Salvation Army is continuing to help victims of the devastating earthquake, nearly two years on. This film is available on the DVD, "LINK 49". LINK is the video magazine of The Salvation Army in the UK and Ireland. Go to www.salvationarmy.org.uk to find out how to order a copy or call 020 7367 4975.
Six Months On: How the Red Cross is Helping Haitians Recover
Learn how the American Red Cross is transitioning from relief to long-term recovery efforts in Haiti. Learn more at www.redcross.org/haiti
Haiti - Disaster Recovery: Immediate and long-term issues
FIU faculty experts comment on the crisis in Haiti FIU professors who specialize in Haiti share their perspectives on the Haitian recovery effort, temporary protected status for Haitians, public health issues facing Haiti and the need for sustained attention to Haiti. Disaster Recover: Immediate and long-term issues Richard Olson, professor and chair Department of Politics and International Relations School of International and Public Affairs news.fiu.edu
MaximsNewsNetwork: HAITI RECONSTRUCTION: PRIME MINISTER MAX BELLERIVE & BILL CLINTON (MINUSTAH)
MaximsNewsNetwork: 17 August 2010 - UN MINUSTAH: Port-au-Prince, Haiti - Hoping international donors will make good on billions of dollars in pledges for Haiti's post-earthquake reconstruction, former US President Bill Clinton along with Haiti's prime minister Max Bellerive gave a presentation today in Port-au-Prince for $(USD) 300 million worth of reconstruction projects; the Interim Haiti Recovery Commission Co-chairs Bellerive and Clinton, who is the United Nations (UN) Special Envoy for Haiti, presented 23 projects ready to be launched. Seven months after the earthquake, officials say reconstruction remains all but idle and 1.6 million people remain homeless while disgruntlement and setbacks are becoming the norm. Among the proposed projects are a 70 million dollar sanitation project, a plan for reinforcement of agriculture rated at 200 million dollars and aimed at training 30000 farmers while raising their income by 25 percent. Talking to a panel of representatives of various International, National and Regional Organizations as well as members of the private sector, Bellerive and Clinton also took the opportunity to make the final adjustments for the working of the Commission. The proposed framework includes an internal regulation, an executive budget and an anti-corruption office. Bellerive estimated 38 million dollars needed for an educational package including return to school for children and repairs of 75 schools. Some 325000 children who were left out of ...
Amid Robust Recovery Efforts, Why Haiti Continues to Stumble
Two years after Haiti's devastating earthquake, politicians are still promising change and rebirth. For an assessment of the progress, delays and remaining challenges in Haiti's recovery, Jeffrey Brown talks with Nan Buzard of the American Red Cross and Dominique Toussaint of Mobilize for Haiti.
Haiti recovery: Rebuilding infrastructure
United Nations, New York, 29 May 2010 - Haitian people and UN peacekeepers work to rebuild the country's infrastructure. UN staff describe their experiences in the aftermath of the Haiti Earthquake on January 12th 2010. www.haitistanding.org
Building homes and hope in Haiti: Two years into the recovery
Habitat has served more than 40000 Haitian families since the January 2010 earthquake. Habitat's two-year video provides an overview of our recovery program and its impact on the people of Haiti. For more information, visit www.habitat.org
Haiti's Recovery: Are the people getting the help they need?
ZOE | www.zoelando.com ||| Defend ︻╦╤─ Haiti | www.facebook.com/zoemagltd ||| twitter | www.twitter.com/ZOEmagazine Citizens still living in tent cities and children still roam the streets and are not in classes. Are the Haitian people getting the assistance they need from their government, the NGOs or other groups?
President Clinton on Haiti Recovery Plan Pt. 2 on SIRIUS XM
Bill Clinton and Mark Thompson discuss Haiti relief efforts (part 2 of 2). on SIRIUS Left (SiriusXM Ch. 127).
Haiti Recovery: April brings Rainy Season to Haiti...
...how a Louisville, KY and Long Island, NY group have helped the Haitian people get back on their feet.
Secretary Clinton Signs Two Memoranda of Understanding on Haiti Recovery Projects
US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, Counselor and Chief of Staff Cheryl Mills, French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner, and Haitian Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive sign two memoranda or understanding on Haiti relief projects in New York, New York, September 20, 2010. [Go to www.state.gov for more video and text transcript.]
Recovering from the devastating earthquake in Haiti
How does Haiti recover from the devastation of the earthquake? A coordinated effort is required to start rebuilding Haiti says disaster recovery expert, Edward Blakely. He says it is important to start planning the recovery immediately despite the chaos. Edward Blakely is Honorary Professor of Urban Policy at the US Studies Centre, having previously served for two years as Executive Director of the Office of Recovery and Development Administration, the "recovery czar" for New Orleans following the devastation of hurricane Katrina.
Bill Clinton: What is the status of the Oasis Hotel project in Haiti?
www.bestinvestment2012pro.com The Top Investments and Best Investments for 2012 Buy Stocks, Buy Shares, How to Invest , Best IPO FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE May 9, 2011 Meg Galloway Pearce Phone: 202-572-4045 Email: Clinton Bush Haiti Fund Invests to Complete Construction of Haitian-owned Hotel and Conference Center in Port au Prince Project Expected to Create Hundreds of Jobs and Bring Many Long-term Economic Benefits to Haiti WASHINGTON, DC -- The Clinton Bush Haiti Fund announced today that it would invest $2 million to complete construction on a major hotel project in Haiti that was abruptly halted following the devastating 2010 earthquake. The 130-room Oasis Hotel was fully funded and construction was well underway prior to the quake. While the building itself remains structurally sound, work on the project ceased when several of the original Haitian shareholders perished while others suffered severe financial losses, making them unable to meet their investment commitments to the project. "The Oasis Hotel symbolizes Haiti 'building back better,' and sends a message to the world that Haiti is open for business," Clinton Bush Haiti Fund's Vice President of Programs and Investments, Paul Altidor said. "For Haiti's recovery to be sustainable, it must attract investors, businesses and donors all of whom will need a business-class, seismically-safe hotel." In addition to sleeping rooms, Oasis will have significant meeting space and other business amenities. Fewer than 100 hotel ...
Amid Quake Recovery, Can Haiti Build a Different Port-au-Prince?
Eighteen months after the massive and devastating earthquake, Haiti is still reeling from the wreckage and a cholera epidemic. Ray Suarez and Dr. Paul Farmer discuss his new book, "Haiti After the Earthquake."
USTC360 No41 Haiti's Nursery of Hope
Ginger: Welcome to US Tzu Chi 360. I'm Ginger Chang. Today, we return to Haiti to follow-up on the progress of Tzu Chi's Moringa tree-planting project. Planting trees are not only vital to Haiti's recovery efforts; but it is one of the most effective ways to help Haiti mitigate the damage of future disasters. The Moringa plant is also one of the top foods to eliminate world hunger. Mrs. AmyJo Mattheis, the CEO of Solar Cookers International, is with us again to tell us about a similar tree-growing initiative SCI is working on but in Kenya. Welcome AmyJo, so can you tell me a little bit more about the tree-growing initiative that SCI is working on? AmyJo Mattheis: Yeah, I'd be happy to. So we became connected with two organizations that are also working together - The 4-H Million Trees Project and Trees for the Future. These organizations said to us, we don't want to plant these seedlings and teach farmers how to grow them up just to see them cut down to be used for firewood. So that's why we are introducing into what they call 'Green Villages'; we are introducing solar cooking and solar plus solutions. Ginger: Why has the Moringa been chosen to be part of the project, to be one of the main plants to be planted? AmyJo Mattheis: Well my understanding is that it is a tree that from every angle, from how its' roots give nutrients to the soil, to its bark, to the fruit that it produces, to the leaves -- all of it can be used in a way that promotes health for the soil and for ...
Haitian youths use hip-hop to inspire earthquake recovery
UNICEF correspondent Thomas Nybo reports on a group of young boys using hip-hop to inspire the process of rebuilding Haiti a year after the earthquake. INFO: Name of group: Coeur a Coeur (heart to heart) Name of song: Nap Decide (we're making up our mind) LYRICS: Haiti, love, peace, rap master, MC here's your challenge [Chorus] We're making up our mind, so that the country can work properly Everywhere we go they're talking about us Look now, what happened! We don't want to unify ourselves so that the country can work properly (two times) Verse one You didn't know me But this flow I drop Will let you know me from the foot to the head And you could even fall down And that's when you'll see I'm a rapper And You'll respect me as a Master And you, violence makers, it's time to use your conscience To change the country, and then we stop doing bad things Second verse Haitians get up, so that the country can be developed We have a nice country we're shaking it a like a curtain, We have a nice country we're treating it like trash The country can produce food We need to do exploitation but we're importing instead Haitians, get up. [Chorus] Third verse That's now they're making up their minds to take the country where it supposed to be Hand in hand we have to get up so that Haiti can change Let's collaborate together to have the children move forward Youths Hand in Hand so that Haiti can change Fourth verse Sometimes I'm thinking and crying for Haiti In country, they're called ...
Haiti Rebuilds - A Journey of Hope
Two years ago, over two million Haitians saw their lives change forever after a magnitude 7.0 earthquake rocked their country, killing over 200000 and displacing 1.5 million people. The world reacted quickly, sending in aid and recovery teams, pledging money and support to rebuild a country that already experienced high levels of poverty and inequality. Since the immediate earthquake aftermath the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) has been working with the Government of Haiti and a wide range of national and international partners, civil society organizations -- and especially with the affected communities, with Haitians at the centre of the recovery process. Haiti Rebuilds, a 20-minute documentary was created by recently graduated students from Ciné Institute, Haiti's only professional film academy in the southern coastal town of Jacmel. It was co-produced by UNDP and mentored and directed by award-winning documentary-maker Jonathan Stack. The film depicts the reconstruction process through the lenses of young Haitians who have witnessed the earthquake's devastation; but also the tremendous resilience of the Haitian people, taking the reconstruction of their country -- and their future -- into their own hands.
Music video: Haitian hip-hop group, Coeur à Coeur, sings a call to action on earthquake recovery
VIDEO: Watch a music video featuring Coeur à Coeur, an enterprising group of boys living at a UNICEF-supported residential care centre in Port-au-Prince. The boys are using hip-hop to inspire their fellow Haitians to rebuild the country in the aftermath of the January 2010 earthquake. Here they sing 'We're Making Up Our Minds,' a call to action on quake recovery. INFO: Name of group: Coeur a Coeur (heart to heart) Name of song: Nap Decide (we're making up our mind) LYRICS: Haiti, love, peace, rap master, MC here's your challenge [Chorus] We're making up our mind, so that the country can work properly Everywhere we go they're talking about us Look now, what happened! We don't want to unify ourselves so that the country can work properly (two times) Verse one You didn't know me But this flow I drop Will let you know me from the foot to the head And you could even fall down And that's when you'll see I'm a rapper And You'll respect me as a Master And you, violence makers, it's time to use your conscience To change the country, and then we stop doing bad things Second verse Haitians get up, so that the country can be developed We have a nice country we're shaking it a like a curtain, We have a nice country we're treating it like trash The country can produce food We need to do exploitation but we're importing instead Haitians, get up. [Chorus] Third verse That's now they're making up their minds to take the country where it supposed to be Hand in hand we have to get up so ...
Haiti Rebuilds - A Journey of Hope
United Nations, New York, February 2012 - Two years ago, over two million Haitians saw their lives change forever after a magnitude 7.0 earthquake rocked their country, killing over 200000 and displacing 1.5 million people. The world reacted quickly, sending in aid and recovery teams, pledging money and support to rebuild a country that already experienced high levels of poverty and inequality. Since the immediate earthquake aftermath the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) has been working with the Government of Haiti and a wide range of national and international partners, civil society organizations -- and especially with the affected communities, with Haitians at the centre of the recovery process. Haiti Rebuilds, a 20-minute documentary was created by recently graduated students from Ciné Institute, Haiti's only professional film academy in the southern coastal town of Jacmel. It was co-produced by UNDP and mentored and directed by award-winning documentary-maker Jonathan Stack. The film depicts the reconstruction process through the lenses of young Haitians who have witnessed the earthquake's devastation; but also the tremendous resilience of the Haitian people, taking the reconstruction of their country -- and their future -- into their own hands.
Wesleyan Professor Alex Dupuy on Anniversary of Earthquake: Haiti is a "Republic of the NGOs"
DemocracyNow.org - One year after the massive 7.0-magnitude earthquake that devastated Haiti, reconstruction efforts have barely begun. Democracy Now! speaks with Alex Dupuy, a professor of sociology at Wesleyan University. "There is a dramatic power imbalance between the international community—under US leadership—and Haiti. The former monopolizes economic and political power and calls all the shots," Dupuy writes. "This unequal relationship is reflected in the Interim Haiti Recovery Commission." The IHRC is co-chaired by Bill Clinton. For thevideo/audio podcast, transcript, to sign up for the daily news digest, and for our comprehensive coverage of the ongoing disaster in Haiti, visit www.DemocracyNow.org. Please consider supporting independent media by making a donation to Democracy Now! today, visit http
Haitian archbishop urges residents to take charge of recovery
Port-au-Prince Archbishop Guire Poulard marked the second anniversary of 2010's earthquake with a call for Haitians to build a better future for themselves and their country. Read the full story here: www.catholicnewsagency.com
AYIKODANS
AYIKODANS A little over a year ago, the Adrienne Arsht Center's President and CEO John Richard, alongside The Miami Herald's World Editor, John Yearwood, made a trip to visit disaster-strewn Haiti. On his journey to understand how the Arsht Center could make a meaningful contribution to Haiti's recovery, John was introduced to the country's premier dance ensemble, AYIKODANS, a company that was then on the brink of closing their business for good. With the help of passionate Miami community leaders, the Center was able to help save AYIKODANS - and has commissioned a new piece that will see its world premiere on May 25 & 26! ow.ly
One year after the Haiti earthquake, the long road from relief to recovery
UNICEF You Tube-9 January 2011 - UNICEF correspondent Jane O'Brien reports on relief and recovery efforts, and the challenges faced by children and families, in the year since the 12 January 2010 earthquake in Haiti. Produced by Bob Coen. For more information, please visit www.unicef.org
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