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Life changed dramatically in the 1960s, when the Haitian Government began rounding up the poorest of the poor from the capitol city of Port and deporting them to La Gonâve. This deportation was a government effort to “clean up” the mainland. During this era, the poor Haitian immigrants caused the population on La Gonâve to balloon to over 100,000. The sudden increase severely strained the natural resources necessary to sustain life on La Gonâve.
Conditions once again plummeted in the 1980s when La Gonâve was annexed under the jurisdiction of Port Au Prince. This allowed wealthy businessmen the right to strip the island of all natural resources; the people of La Gonâve were left with barren, rocky landscape. The trees form the heavily wooded island were harvested and exported, leaving the topsoil to erode from tropical storms. The once lush Caribbean island now better resembles the landscape of the moon.
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La Gonâve is considered part of Port Au Prince which means little-to-no funding is allocated to the island. There are no government education, healthcare, water-supply or road-construction agencies providing basic necessities to the La Gonâve people. No sustainable economy on La Gonâve means that unemployment is stifling. The average family lives on an annual income of $500 which translates to $1.36 per day. Families that create homes live in cinder-block or stick buildings with no water, electricity of proper bathroom facilities.
Many consider La Gonâve to be the poorest place in the world. Living conditions are so horrific that parents are known to abandon their children around the age of six by beating them or leaving them in the mountains so they cannot find their way home. These deserted children can be found in packs running free around mountainous paths attempting to fend for themselves.
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To change a culture you must start with one ingredient: hope. Hope must be instilled in the hearts of Haitians living on La Gonave before any lasting change can be created. There is an old Haitian proverb, “sak vid pa kampe” which means “an empty sack can’t stand up.” Without hope, how can they rebuild? We believe that we can bring the hope to the island, by sharing the love of Christ with the people of La Gonave. Although we are using physical means to assist them with everyday needs, our main focus is pointing them toward Christ to fufill their every need!