Haiti: Cite Soleil, Where 2 UB Churches Collapsed

In Haiti, two United Brethren churches located in Cité Soleil collapsed during the earthquake. Here is an update from Samaritan’s Purse about their work in that part of Port-au-Prince.

Few populations are more vulnerable than the thousands of Haitians living in Cité Soleil, one of the largest slums in the capital. The sprawling shantytown has long been notorious for its filthy conditions and dangerous gang wars. The earthquake only deepened the misery, sending thousands into packed tent cities in the baking heat with few resources. Pigs wallow in a nearby riverbed overflowing with rotting trash, and children splash through open sewage.

On a hot afternoon, Jean Claude, an elder at Eglise Chretienne Des Cities, a local church of 1600, says people are coming to the church’s collapsed gate daily, begging for help. The church has little to give and tells people to wait. He says aid groups come only sporadically.

But within 24 hours, Samaritan’s Purse was formulating a plan to care for the residents in a tent city a few hundred yards from the church. The team will organize sanitation, clean water, food, and hygiene kits, and point residents to the nearby church for spiritual care, while also providing clean water and other relief in more remote areas outside the capital.

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