Shocking Visit to Haitian Hospital
This morning we started out with a delicious breakfast of boiled eggs, fresh fruit, and toasted buns. We prayed with...
This morning we started out with a delicious breakfast of boiled eggs, fresh fruit, and toasted buns. We prayed with...
Day four of our project here at the Hats mission. Today we met the children for morning devotions before they...
Today was adventure day! We stared with some delicious pancakes made by the lovely Germaine, and then we got all...
Our first full day in Haiti began with all the usual sounds; anyone who has been here knows what I’m...
Well, we have arrived! After leaving Yarmouth, NS yesterday morning at 6 am Eastern time and arriving at the airport...
And we are back! Yup, Joan and I arrived back at HATS last evening. What a wonderful Easter break we had...
Golden Years When I was forty years old a friend asked me where I wanted to spend my Golden Years....
Photos from Sunday afternoon fun family time. Magdala Jonathan Sandra Karena, Anne and Sandra Double...
Thank you very much to the March team – Lynn, Lynda, Tachina, Francine, and Tony. You guys were great. You came from...
Today was just another normal chaotic busy noisy day at HATS. The kids finished exams so they started their Easter...
Hello from Linda, a teacher from Fraser Lake, BC, Canada, who gets to do our team’s final daily blog! It...
There are many experiences here. I tell you it is Hot!! From the Canadian weather to here that is pretty...
The team has almost completed their painting project. There is a little touch up to finish Monday morning. A job...
Barren lands and rice fields; azure ocean and mountainside slums; French and Creole – Haiti is a land of many...
Yesterdays ride from Port au Prince to the HATS compound represents three hours of my life I will never forget....
If you’ve ever considered sponsorship, now is the time to do it. Your donation truly does make a difference!
We have so enjoyed our time here. The work we have done has been fulfilling, the fellowship has been memorable and our hearts are forever impacted by the sweet, sweet children. A piece of HATS will always stay with each of us and who knows, maybe a few will return!
I had anticipated that I would enjoy spending time getting to know the children and being a part of Karen’s daily life in Haiti but I had not anticipated that it would capture my heart like it did. I will miss spending time with the children and Karen but I am hopeful that I’ll be able to see them all again in the not too distant future.
It is our last day and there is always a certain amount of sadness and joy when we come to the end of a trip . We look forward to our homes and loved ones but there is a part of us that wants to stay and be near these dear dear children. They open their hearts and arms to you when you enter the front gate. They give you laughter and tears all week long and then they cry and hug you when they know you are going away. Being near that kind of unconditional love effects us all very deeply. So we leave part of our hearts here and promise to return.
Thank you Karen for everything you do, all the hard work and dedication that you put into this place, all of the work behind the scenes. Thank you for putting up with all the craziness that we bring when we come to your house for the week, just thank you times a million and one for everything Karen. I can write about my week until I am blue in the face (maybe not write that long but if you know me I can definitely talk for that long), and can sing about kit kat bars until my voice gives out, but I cannot even begin to try and articulate in song, dance, or other random art forms how thankful and blessed I am to have been given this experience not only once but twice! Thank you – thank you – thank you – thank you!!!!!!!
Personally, this is my first time here. I’ve never done a mission trip of any sort before and I’ve certainly never been anywhere this hot before. I keep seeing things that are different from what I’m used to, and hearing about things even more unfamiliar to me. One of the most surprising things to meis how quickly I’ve grown to love all the people here. Everyone here is great, and the team is wonderful too. Watching everyone support each other warms my heart almost as much as the sun warms my skin. I’ve learned a lot from this experience, and I know that this trip has already had a profound impact on my life.
I have learned much about Haiti in my short stay here, much about generational, entrenched poverty, and much about hope. We can only be part of the bringing of hope if we become one small actor on the huge stage that is poverty. Thank you, Lynn Clark, for inviting me to share this life changing experience with you, and thank-you, Karen Huxter, for investing so much of your life in a work designed to bring hope to those who need it more than any Canadian could ever imagine.
I am going to try to explain why a trip to Haiti is life-changing. No-one can be thrown into a group of people who have the common purpose of doing something for someone less fortunate and not be changed in many ways. As with those I joined in each of the first four trips I made to HATS, my respect and affection for each of the team members grows daily. To those who wonder if your donations and prayers are actually making a difference, I will answer you in this way…there are about 300 children in front of me right now and some or many of them God will use in a great way to change the future face of Haiti and its people. YOU have helped make that possible — AND THAT, FOLKS — is a fact!
Such important work done with LOVE and commitment!
The time has passed so quickly. We know what we’ve done this week is important and makes a difference here at Hands Across the Sea. But it’s easy in Haiti to feel that anything we do here is simply a drop in the ocean. So much need on so many different levels: political, organizational, educational, social, spiritual…But we remind ourselves that each individual life is of infinite value so changing the life of one child and one family is worth the effort.
This morning, we woke up as the sun came up and as we all began to trickle downstairs; we were met with warm welcomes from the precious children. As the children arrived, we were deeply touched and came to the realization of how important the HATS organization is to this country. Many children who would not have had any opportunities are now well nourished, educated and have a loving home and a mother who loves them more than we could ever comprehend, Karen Huxter.
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