World

Haiti: Longing for life amid the pain of displacement


Displacement in the Caribbean nation has reached record levels, with nearly 600,000 people forced to leave their homes this year – double the number from last year. This makes Haiti the country with the highest number of people displaced by violence.

Support from NGO TOYA

Louise and Chantal* both receive support from Haiti’s NGO TOYA, a partner of the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), the regional arm of the World Health Organization (WHO).

People continue to flee their homes in Port-au-Prince because of gang-related violence.

© UNICEF/Ralph Tedy Erol

People continue to flee their homes in Port-au-Prince due to gang-related violence.

Louise, 47, is a single mother of five children. Currently, only one of her children, an 11-year-old, is with her, while the other four are scattered elsewhere in the country. “We were chased away by bandits; they burned our house,” she recounted in testimony collected by a PAHO official.

Her mother recently passed away from high blood pressure and stress from constant moving. “My mother had to move twice in a short period of time,” she lamented.

‘I took a big step back in my life’

Chantal, 56, a single mother of six children, shares Louise’s suffering. Her house was also burned. “The robbers raped me and my daughter. As a result, I became infected with HIV. They beat me and I lost four teeth. My children’s father is no longer able to take care of them. Now I’m broke. I took a big step back in my life and didn’t know how to recover,” she explained.

A funeral procession passes through the Great Cemetery in downtown Port-au-Prince.

A funeral procession passes through the Great Cemetery in downtown Port-au-Prince.

“Insecurity took everything from me; I was half crazy and half sane. I even thought about drinking bleach to commit suicide after the incident,” she testified.

Louise stayed in another relocation site before arriving at Carl Brouard Square in Port-au-Prince. During this time, the TOYA Foundation helped her by providing kits with essential items and money to allow her to start a small business.

However, this respite was short-lived. One day, “bandits” invaded the location in Carl Brouard Square and once again, she lost everything. “My business, my belongings, I couldn’t take anything in the attack,” she said.

Insecurity took everything from me; I was half crazy and half sane. I even thought about drinking bleach to commit suicide after the incident.
— Chantal

Chantal went to the TOYA Foundation facility, where she received psychosocial support, training sessions and funding.

‘Life is not over’

“During the training sessions, TOYA psychologists taught me what life is and its importance. They showed me that life is not over for me, that I can be what I want and that I am still valuable. I have received significant support from everyone at TOYA,” she emphasized.

She now lives with a relative and several children. Some of her children are in the provinces, including her teenage daughter who was also raped with her.

“Thank God she didn’t get HIV. But she’s been traumatized ever since. She doesn’t want to go back to Port-au-Prince. She was supposed to graduate this year but had to stop everything because of this incident,” Chantal said.

She said she faced a lot of discrimination from her family because of her HIV-positive status. “They thought I might infect them because I lived under the same roof,” she said, noting that she continued to take her medication without any problems.

Despite this difficult situation, she is still focused on life and how to earn money to send home to her children who are scattered in many places.

Women in Port-au-Prince visit a mobile clinic supported by UNFPA.

Women in Port-au-Prince attend a mobile clinic supported by UNFPA.

‘I want to see my child grow up’

For her part, Louise currently has no support because she has lost her only source of income, her business.

“All I wanted was to live in peace,” she said. “Life on the ground was really hard. The classrooms we slept in were flooded every time it rained. We had to wait for the rain to stop, clean up, find a small space to rest and try to sleep.”

It’s been a long time since Louise had the opportunity to visit some of the children she sent to the province. “I couldn’t go there because of the cost of living and the robbers extorting money from passengers on the way,” she explained. “I’m tired of running away under gunfire. We are always at risk of being attacked at any time.”

In this difficult context, Louise’s biggest goal “is to live”.

“All I want is to live,” Chantal repeated. She still has high blood pressure “because the tension in Haiti is truly unbearable.”

“But I still have to continue with my business because I have many mouths to feed. I want to “see my children grow up; I want to see them succeed in life,” she said.

*Character names have been changed to protect identity.

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